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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Production  





4 References  





5 External links  














The 49th Man






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The 49th Man
Theatrical poster
Directed byFred F. Sears
Screenplay byHarry Essex
Based onIvan Tors
Produced bySam Katzman
StarringJohn Ireland
Richard Denning
Narrated byGerald Mohr
CinematographyLester White
Edited byWilliam A. Lyon

Production
company

Columbia Pictures

Distributed byColumbia Pictures

Release date

  • May 20, 1953 (1953-05-20)

Running time

73 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The 49th Man is a 1953 American film noir crime film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring John Ireland and Richard Denning. It was released by Columbia Pictures. The Cold War thriller was based on a story by Ivan Tors and the screenplay written by Harry Essex.

The film's title is a cryptic reference to the men in the film hired to smuggle 48 nuclear weapons components into the United States as part of a secret war game and the unexpected 49th man, using the war game as cover, smuggling in a real atomic bomb as part of a plot to destroy an American city.

Plot[edit]

After a fatal car crash in Lordsburg, New Mexico, investigators find a mysterious machine component that they turn over to the nearby Los Alamos National Laboratory for identification. Scientists there declare that it is one component of an advanced portable nuclear weapon designed by an unknown, presumably hostile power. The discovery prompts Paul Reagan (Richard Denning), chief of the Security Investigation Division (SID), to send agent John Williams (John Ireland) to investigate the source of these components and to prevent them from being assembled into a functioning weapon. As more parts are smuggled into the United States, the investigation expands and a pattern begins to emerge which points to Marseilles, France.

After uranium is found welded to the hull of a U.S. Navy submarine in New London, Connecticut, Williams continues his investigation aboard that submarine, now bound for the French port, undercover as a naval officer preparing a training film. While in Marseilles, he learns that civilians Margo Wayne (Suzanne Dalbert) and her husband Leo Wayne (Peter Marshall) are working with clarinet player Buzz Olin (Richard Avonde) and an unknown member of the submarine's crew to smuggle the parts in special metal cases built by Pierre Neff (George Dee). After a fight near the dock, Williams believes that Lt. Magrew (Mike Connors) and Commander Jackson (Robert Foulk) are in on the plot. He orders them arrested, only to be betrayed by his colleague, agent Andy (Robert Hunter), and taken into custody himself.

Arriving in Washington, D.C., Williams escapes from his captors and contacts Reagan at SID headquarters where he finds Jackson and Magrew waiting for him in Reagan's office. The whole exercise was a war game, put on in secret by the Defense Department to test the nation's readiness for a subversive attack. However, the Waynes and Olin are not part of the war game. They have used Neff to construct 4 cases, in addition to the 48 ordered by the naval officers, and smuggled their own portable nuclear weapon into the United States. With less than 48 hours before the bomb's scheduled detonation at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Williams and his team track Buzz Olin and the Waynes to the San Francisco area. After a desperate attempt to escape with the bomb and destroy San Francisco by air, Leo Wayne is killed and Jackson has just two hours to attempt to defuse the bomb while Williams flies towards Nevada. This fails and with less than a minute to go the bomb is dropped from the plane to detonate over Frenchman Flat at the Nevada Test Site. Crisis averted, the film ends with the narrator intoning, "...and three o'clock is just the middle of another afternoon in the life of a city."

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

References[edit]

  • Smith, Richard Harland. "The 49th Man". Nuclear Thrillers. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  • "The 49th Man (1953)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  • "Satire on Oriental Melodrama Enjoyed". Los Angeles Times. May 28, 1953. p. B9. Retrieved August 1, 2011. Ireland is excellent as are also Richard Denning, Suzanne Dalbert, Rohert S. Foulk, and the others.
  • "Capitol Theatre". Meriden Record. June 6, 1953. p. 11. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_49th_Man&oldid=1186721129"

    Categories: 
    1953 films
    1950s action thriller films
    American black-and-white films
    American spy films
    American crime thriller films
    American action thriller films
    Cold War spy films
    Columbia Pictures films
    Films about nuclear war and weapons
    Films directed by Fred F. Sears
    Films produced by Sam Katzman
    Films set in Nevada
    Films set in Washington, D.C.
    Films set in New Mexico
    Films set in Connecticut
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    Films set in San Francisco
    1950s English-language films
    1950s American films
    English-language action thriller films
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    This page was last edited on 25 November 2023, at 01:47 (UTC).

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