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IMDbPro

Get Outta Town

  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
156
YOUR RATING
Jeanne Baird, Marilyn O'Connor, and Doug Wilson in Get Outta Town (1960)
CrimeDrama

In this obscure B potboiler, a longtime criminal returns to his native Los Angeles, determined to avenge his brother's murder.In this obscure B potboiler, a longtime criminal returns to his native Los Angeles, determined to avenge his brother's murder.In this obscure B potboiler, a longtime criminal returns to his native Los Angeles, determined to avenge his brother's murder.

  • Director
    • Charles Davis
  • Writer
    • Bob Wehling
  • Stars
    • Doug Wilson
    • Jeanne Baird
    • Marilyn O'Connor
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    156
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Davis
    • Writer
      • Bob Wehling
    • Stars
      • Doug Wilson
      • Jeanne Baird
      • Marilyn O'Connor
    • 11User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast22

    Edit
    Doug Wilson
    • Kelly Olesen
    • (as Douglas Wilson)
    Jeanne Baird
    • Jill
    Marilyn O'Connor
    • Claire
    Tony Louis
    • Rico
    Frank Harding
    • Sgt. Wills
    Steve Bradley
    • Officer Kemper
    Beppie De Vries
    Beppie De Vries
    • Mrs. Olesen
    • (as Beppi DeVries)
    Tommy Holden
    • Squirrel
    Lee Kross
    • Tony
    Pete Lopez
    • Cisco
    Gene Terry
    • Alex
    Sam Chiodo
    • Rocky
    Frank McCully
    • First Bartender
    Robert Biggers
    • Second Bartender
    • (as Bob Biggers)
    Edith Clair
    • Waitress
    • (as Edith Clarie)
    Fred Chiodo
    • Ace
    John O'Hara
    • Drunk
    Val Casey
    • Prostitute
    • Director
      • Charles Davis
    • Writer
      • Bob Wehling
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.1156
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    Featured reviews

    7adrianovasconcelos

    Short and snappy noir thriller

    I had never heard of Charles Davis, but he directed GET OUTTA TOWN with a sense of purpose, dynamic sequences and crisp dialogue in a strong script by Bob Welling.

    I had also never heard of Douglas Wilson, the male lead, but his broken boxer-like nose lends him authenticity.

    The female characters are quite interesting: Wilson, playing good for nothing criminal Kelly Olesen - a Nordic surname - has a mother who looks and talks like an Italian, and she has no time for her prodigal son. I came away with the impression that she was the most fatale of all the femmes in the movie.

    Cute Jeanne Baird used to be Olesen's girl but in his protracted absence in the docks of San Francisco she took up with his younger brother, who got iced by some bad company that Olesen used to keep. Like his mother - who even lives in the same building - Baird does not want to give him the time of day.

    Perhaps the most eye-catching female is dishy Marilyn O'Connor playing the cheating wife of Ricco, the thug who Olesen used to hang around with to perpetrate robberies and other felonies. O'Connor just can't keep her hands off Olesen, to add to all the problems piling up on his lap.

    Olesen is trying to tell mother, former girlfriend, the law, and even his former partners in crime that he is a changed man - but not even the cops who cannot pin any crime on him want him in town.

    Boasting competent cinematography and a cast of unknowns, this unpretentious short 63' C grade flick moves along at breakneck speed - alas, the downside robbing it of 3 stars is the pointless, open ending that left me feeling like a mouse running in a perpetually turning wheel. Too much ado for nothing.
    7planktonrules

    Amazingly good considering that it's a super-low budget film.

    "Get Outta Town" is an amazing film. After all, it features a leading man who only made six films (this was his last) and isn't exactly the Hollywood type. It also features a lot of other rather unknown actors. It also has a budget that appears to be negligible. Yet, inexplicably, it's a very good film! I love seeing films like this--little hidden gems just waiting to be discovered.

    The plot of "Get Outta Town" is very, very similar to that of the Michael Caine film "Get Carter". However, its character is a bit different and the resolution very different.

    It all begins when Kelly learns that his younger brother died. Kelly was a hood and the last time he was in his hometown, folks were afraid of him. Not surprisingly, his mother and ex-girlfriend want nothing to do with him--he's bad news. Yet, he insists that he's changed and wants to turn his life around once and for all. However, his resolution to change is challenged when he learned that his brother MIGHT have been murdered--and he's out for revenge.

    Except for a few problems with the ending (it came a bit too quickly and Kelly behaved a bit oddly when confronted by the police), it was a very good film. I liked the dialog and Wilson's acting was surprisingly strong. If you like film noir, this is up your alley. While it isn't quite as dark as many films in the genre, it is a nice tough little picture.
    6richardchatten

    Kelly's Return Home

    Carrying a 1960 copyright date but with a decidedly 50's feel, the plot, mood and vivid use of locations of this ultra cheap gangster movie shot out and about in Los Angeles all remarkably anticipate 'Get Carter' ten years later.

    Aided by excellent photography by Larry Raimond and second unit cameraman Meridith Nicholson and a rousing jazz score by Bill Holman, Bob Wehling's script is crammed with crackling film noir dialogue. Maybe too much; good as much of the talk is it's at the expense of visual exposition, it's rather slackly paced, and the tremendous dialogue is not always done justice by the frequently amateurish acting.

    Described by cop Frank Harding as "Rough as a stucco bathtub", co-producer Douglas Wilson as ex-safe cracker Kelly Oleson looks rather middle-aged in the lead, and almost as old as the actress playing his mother. But we meet some hot chicks along the way, hottest of all being gangster's moll Marilyn O'Connor, who we're expected to believe Kelly slept with solely in the line of duty (like James Bond and Fiona Volpe in 'Thunderball').
    6scsu1975

    A cast of no names manages to inject some life into this quickie

    A former hood (Doug Wilson) returns to his old stomping grounds to find out who killed his brother. The cops aren't too happy to see him; one of them tells him to get outta town because he stinks. He refers to Wilson as "rough as a stucco bathtub." Wilson's mother isn't too happy to see him and tells him to get outta town. Wilson's former girlfriend (Jeanne Baird) tells him to ... well, you get the idea. Wilson decides to look up his old pals (with classic names like Rico and Tony), but first he runs into Rico's wife (Marilyn O'Connor). The two quickly go to her apartment for some tonsil hockey, and, for a change, she doesn't tell him to get outta town. As the plot develops, we meet a goon named Rocky and a jerk named Squirrel. Meanwhile, Wilson and O'Connor exchange more saliva. Then Wilson collects some bruises and contusions because somebody wants him outta town. Eventually, we find out what happened to his brother, and Wilson gets outta town.

    Wilson is decent in the lead, although the way his hair protrudes over his head was a bit much. All the babes in the cast (including extras) are great looking ... except for the crone playing Wilson's mother. The jazz score is snappy, and the script is pretty good.
    6AlsExGal

    A no name cast in a pretty lively film

    This quickie is about a former hood (Doug Wilson) who returns to his old stomping grounds to find out who killed his brother. The cops aren't too happy to see him; one of them tells Kelly to get outta town because he stinks. He refers to Wilson as "rough as a stucco bathtub." Wilson's mother isn't too happy to see him and tells him to get outta town. Wilson's former girlfriend (Jeanne Baird) tells him to ... well, you get the idea.

    Wilson decides to look up his old pals (with classic names like Rico and Tony), but first he runs into Rico's wife (Marilyn O'Connor). The two quickly go to her apartment for some tonsil hockey, and, for a change, she doesn't tell him to get outta town. As the plot develops, we meet a hood named Rocky and a jerk named Squirrel. Meanwhile, Wilson and O'Connor exchange more saliva. Then Wilson collects some bruises and contusions because somebody wants him outta town. Eventually, we find out what happened to his brother, and Wilson gets outta town.

    Wilson is decent in the lead, although the way his hair protrudes over his head was a bit much. All of the babes in the cast (including extras) are great looking ... except for the crone playing Wilson's mother. The jazz score is snappy, and the script is lively and fast moving.

    Nationwide, this flick was on a double bill with The Amazing Transparent Man. That film was promoted with a million dollar contest in which moviegoers were asked what they would do with the invisible ray featured in that film. Get outta town!!!

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Kelly Olesen: I made love to Rico's wife so I could kill him. How many fish do I have to unload to pay for that?

    • Connections
      Featured in Best in Action: 1960 (2018)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 25, 1962 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gangster's Revenge
    • Filming locations
      • Minnewaska Hotel aka The Dome, 201 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, California, USA(Jill's & Mrs. Olesen's apartments, demolished)
    • Production company
      • Davis-Wilson Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 2m(62 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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