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The Shadow on the Window (1957) Online

The Shadow on the Window (1957) Online
Original Title :
The Shadow on the Window
Genre :
Movie / Crime / Drama /
Year :
1957
Directror :
William Asher
Cast :
Philip Carey,Betty Garrett,John Drew Barrymore
Writer :
David P. Harmon,John Hawkins
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 16min
Rating :
6.3/10
The Shadow on the Window (1957) Online

Three teenagers, led by psychopathic Jess Reber, break into an isolated farmhouse and murder its prosperous owner whose secretary, Linda Atlas, witnesses the crime. The three thugs decide to hold her hostage. Detective Tony Atlas, perplexed by the sudden disappearance of Betty, his estranged wife, tries desperately to locate her.
Cast overview:
Philip Carey Philip Carey - Detective Sgt. Tony Atlas (as Phil Carey)
Betty Garrett Betty Garrett - Linda Atlas
John Drew Barrymore John Drew Barrymore - Jess Reber (as John Barrymore Jr.)
Corey Allen Corey Allen - Gil Ramsey
Gerald Sarracini Gerald Sarracini - Joey Gomez
Jerry Mathers Jerry Mathers - Petey Atlas
Sam Gilman Sam Gilman - Sgt. Paul Denke
Rusty Lane Rusty Lane - Capt. McQuade
Ainslie Pryor Ainslie Pryor - Dr. Hodges
Paul Picerni Paul Picerni - Bigelow
William Leslie William Leslie - Stuart
Doreen Woodbury Doreen Woodbury - Molly
Ellie Kent Ellie Kent - Girl

Blake Edwards was originally signed to direct.


User reviews

LiTTLe_NiGGa_in_THE_СribE

LiTTLe_NiGGa_in_THE_СribE

Curiosity value concerning the appearance and acting skill of Barrymore (John's son and Drew's dad) will likely draw several viewers to this minor crime drama, a sort of "Despondent Hours". Garrett, separated from her policeman hubby (Carey), takes a job steno-graphing for an elderly man with her young son in tow. When three toughs break in to rob the man, but accidentally kill him, Garrett's son (Mathers) slips into a degree of catatonia and wanders off along the highway. Eventually, Carey, Garrett's husband, is reunited with the mute boy and it's a race against time to find Garrett before the punks have their way with her or kill her. The hoods are played by Barrymore, Allen and Sarracini. Carey reacts to his estranged wife's disappearance with all the concern and terror that he might have if, say, his shirt were ironed too long and got a triangle-shaped stain on the pocket. Though impossibly big and reasonably handsome, he lets his stoicism as a police officer take too much precedence over any human emotion. Garrett (pushing forty, but playing 27 and referred to as "girl"!) does a decent enough acting job, but, in keeping with the times of the film, behaves pretty foolishly more often than not. She does try to come up with a few futile attempts at escape, though. Mathers is in over his head in his tiny part and would do much better later that year in "Leave it to Beaver" where murder wasn't a part of the storyline. Barrymore is very animated and quite handsome. He leans toward the hammy aspects of acting that so many James Dean imitators were going for at the time, but his portrayal is surprisingly polished (and this isn't exactly a strong screenplay he's dealing with!) Allen (who worked with James Dean in "Rebel Without a Cause") gives the most believable and natural performance of the hoods and is very attractive in a boy-next-door way. In fact, these two "vicious criminals" do their dirty work in pullover knit sweaters and cardigans!!! They are quite a contrast to Marlon Brando in "The Wild One". The third boy is played by hulking Sarracini and he is more authentic-looking (ironically, this actor died the year this film was made from the results of a fight!!) There are so many hilariously bad bit players in the film whose dialogue and performances are side-splitting. One lady mutters that her husband doesn't like anything as much as corned beef while he is shown romancing a blonde tart in a bar. Still, the direction is surprisingly adept and there is a memorable rooftop shootout that continues into the subway which is quite impressive. A little more enthusiasm/fret from Carey might have kicked it up a notch.
Flocton

Flocton

Starring Jerry Mathers as the shell-shocked child who witnesses an assault on his mother, Shadow On the Window is a decent 'B' film with a solid cast and a decent script. Jerry's dad, a police officer, is played stoically by Phil Carey and mom is Betty Garrett, decent as a woman under constant threat from three stereotypical teen bad boys. One of the boys is played by Corey Allen, who revisited the role in the similarly themed Key Witness (1960), and the others are John Drew Barrymore--apparently channeling the spirit of an evil Dobie Gillis--and lovable lunk Gerald Sarracini. Beach Party director William Asher displayed his serious side here, and cinematographer Kit Carson got some nice set-ups during the climactic chase scene across roof tops and through subway tunnels. I'd love to know where this was filmed--perhaps somewhere in the Imperial Valley of California?
Coiron

Coiron

This film has the feel of a TV drama made into a B film. Saw it on cable recently as a curiosity since a young Jerry Matthews was in it. The drama, directed by William Asher, was a surprise.

The film is a police drama where a young mother, working as a free lance secretary for a farm owner, gets tangled in a break in that ends badly. Her young son, playing innocently outside watches the whole thing. What young Petey witnesses produce in his little mind a trauma that makes him run from the scene until he is found by two truckers going to market.

The movie was a product of the era in which takes place. Betty Garrett, as Linda, is perfect for the part. Also good was Phillip Carey, an actor that never had great opportunities in films. The scene stealer is Jerry Matthews, who played Beaver in the old series.
Samut

Samut

When the film begins, a group of punks are tormenting some people at a farmhouse. Soon, they kill the old man who lives there and the lady who is visiting (Betty Garrett) is being held captive...and all this is seen by her very young son (Jerry Mathers) who has been playing outside. Naturally, the boy is traumatized and he wanders off in a catatonic haze. Eventually he's found wandering along a highway and the kid is taken to the police. The boy is recognized-- -he's the son of one of the cops! The woman, apparently, is the cop's ex-wife. Can the police figure out where the woman and these sickos are in order to rescue her?

This is a tense and reasonably well made film. I particularly like the scene where the woman attempts an escape--it's surprisingly brutal. Well worth seeing and currently posted on YouTube.
Drelalak

Drelalak

Better than expected thriller about a home invasion robbery gone wrong. Jerry Mathers plays a young boy who witnesses a murder at a home where his mother (Betty Garrett)is working. In shock, the boy wanders off before being picked up by a passing truck. He is dropped off with the police where it so happens the boy's father, Phil Carey, is a detective. Unable to get the boy to talk, the police begin a city-wide dragnet hoping to grab up someone who might know the location of Garrett. John Barrymore Jr., Corey Allen and Gerald Sarrcini are the not so bright hoods holding Garrett. Having murdered Garrett's boss during the robbery they must decide whether to kill her as well. Several gun battles and a couple of more bodies are piled up before Carey saves the day with a just in time rescue. OK time-waster.
Cyregaehus

Cyregaehus

SHADOW ON THE WINDOW starts out promisingly enough with JERRY MATHER witnessing a violent crime through a window, but then starts to sag as the police try to pry information from the dazed boy.

The male lead is detective PHILIP CAREY who gives such an indifferent performance when he learns his ex-wife is being held captive by some thugs that he fails to give the rest of the story any real sense of urgency. Nor does BETTY GARRET as the captured secretary who has to contend with three foolish young thugs, one of whom is played by JOHN BARRYMORE, JR. Unofortunately, all of the capture scenes are played with low-key intensity and suffer from a poor script.

What should have been a gripping police drama involving thugs and a victimized little boy and woman victim, is a tepid, almost amateurish attempt at suspense that produces more yawns than thrills.

Trivia note: Best performance among the thugs comes from COREY ALLEN, who played "Buzz" in the James Dean flick, REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE. His chase scene provides the only real tense moments in the film.
Levaq

Levaq

"The Shadow on the Window" is a rather anonymous and insignificant 50s drama/thriller, but it's engaging enough for as long as it lasts, thanks to a few interesting story ideas and a decent cast. I'm sure that director William Asher envisioned making a fantastic hostage thriller with film-noir echoes, in the vein of "The Desperate Hours" that was released two years earlier, but he eventually had to settle for a modest B-movie without spectacular action footage or Humphrey Bogarts in the cast. Little 7-year-old Petey accompanies his mother to a large and remote farmhouse. It's her first working day as a secretary for a wealthy, elderly businessman, while Petey plays outside in the garden. Unfortunately enough, three ruthless young thugs decided that today they would invade the home of the old man and rob him. Just when little Petey looks through the window, he witnesses how the man is brutally killed by the assailants. Petey promptly goes into a severe state of shock, runs off into the streets and gets picked up by friendly truck drivers. While his mother is kept hostage by unprepared but extremely dangerous criminals, Petey is reunited with his father – and police detective – Tony Atlas but he remains in shock and unable to explain what is happening to her. It's definitely a good plot for a tense and forceful "race-against-the-clock" thriller, but the screenplay nevertheless suffers from a couple of defaults and clichés. I really don't understand, for example, why the hoodlums remain in the house or why one of them has to be a sensitive one. The leader of the pack, John Drew Barrymore, tries really hard to look handsome and nihilistic, and he probably dreamed of becoming the next James Dean. The little kid who portrayed Petey, on the other hand, became quite famous thanks to his role in the TV-series "Leave it to the Beaver".
fire dancer

fire dancer

When it started out it seemed like it could be decent watching. It became tedious and boring because the three robbers/kidnappers were incredibly stupid. Made me uninterested in movie. The acting, overall, is below par. There is nothing much to recommend this movie.;
Qwert

Qwert

Several years before this came out, Columbia had made an above average thriller called "The Night Holds Terror", a definite copy-cat of "The Desperate Hours" where a traveling businessman ends up giving a lift to a group of thugs who hold his family hostage, and here, it happens again, albeit with several dramatic changes. It's "All in the Family" for Philip Carey (who once played Archie Bunker's gay football player friend in a first season episode) and Betty Garrett (Archie's nemesis, Irene) who are separated due to her desire to go back to work. The opening scene has their son (Jerry Mathers, as different as Beaver as you can get!) spying his mother being thrown to the ground during a struggle with a group of thugs and the old man who has hired her for the day being killed. He runs off in a daze, is picked up by some truckers, and ends up in police custody where ironically his father is called in after another officer recognizes him. Garrett's whereabouts are a mystery to everybody who knows her, and it is only through some clever calculating that her location is discovered, hopefully in the nick of time.

While this is a very enjoyable thriller, it seems like there is a lot of padding added to make this even get to its 72 minute running time, pretty short for a movie of the late 50's. That indicates that it was a second feature, a breed slowly dying out at this time, but there is enough action to keep it moving. The problem is the variety of existential characters added, from the drunken warehouse foreman whom the truckers dumped Mathers on and his awaiting wife (not to mention his mistress), and the dead old man's niece and her husband who obviously only keep in touch with him so they'll end up in his will.

What is very interesting is how Garrett manages to manipulate the three men holding her hostage, gaining the sympathy of one of the men who knows that his partner (John Drew Barrymore, billed simply as John Barrymore Jr.) is a violent psycho. Of course, when you get the criminals arguing with each other, it is pretty obvious that they will eventually turn on each other. Carey ends up in a chase with the third thug, leading to an emotional scene with that gangster's mother and a chase on the apartment rooftop that leads to more clues but also leads to a violent finale.

This was a far different role that Broadway musical legend Betty Garrett had ever played in, having been mostly in a handful of musical films like "On the Town", "Take Me Out to the Ballgame", and most recently, "My Sister Eileen". She only has one scene with husband and son Carey and Mathers, but obviously had worked with them for family photos which Carey finds still up when he visits his former home to find some clues. "One Life to Live" fans will be delighted to see the future Asa Buchannan in this major part, a reminder that he was once one of the busiest action/western stars in films, not just a future soap patriarch. Mathers is very touching (and convincing) as the mostly quiet kid, scared into silence by the violence he's witnessed. Yet, there's no confusion that this is none other than the future Beaver Cleaver from his very first shot, wearing cowboy gear, and clicking a toy gun. This is definitely worth a look for how 1950's thrillers of all types could engross you even though they could have easily been made for the then popular genre of Anthology shows which were all over the T.V. airwaves of the 1950's and 60's.
Gelgen

Gelgen

***SPOILERS*** A pre "Leave it to Beaver" 8 year old Jerry Mathers as Petey Atlas finds himself in the middle of a murder & kidnapping when he stumbles across these three juvenile delinquents, which they were known as back in the 1950's, who after beating the owner of the house Ben Canfield, Watson Downs, to death took his mom Linda Atlas, Betty Garerett, who was there looking for a job hostage. Traumatized by what he saw Petey loses both his voice & memory of the tragic incident and is picked up, aimlessly walking down the highway, by a couple of truckers who take him to the nearest truck depot in order to both identify him and find his parents. As it turned out the cop who's in charge, or better yet took charge, in finding Petey's mom is non other that his dad Officer Tony Atlas, no relations as far as I can see to Charles, played by that handsome hunk or a man Phil Carey.

Back at the Canfield house the three juveniles lead by psycho Jess Reber, John Barrymore Jr, and his two pals the sensitive but at the same time maniacal Joey Gomaz, Gerald Sarracini, who in fact brained Mr. Canfield to death and all American looking Gil Ramsby, Cory Allen, try to make their way out with the $6,000.00 they ripped off the murdered Mr. Canfield. But with them facing the San Quentin gas chamber, for murder & kidnapping, their chances of surviving a major police as well as FBI manhunt aren't that good.

****SPOILERS**** It's the crazed jess Reber who tries to take command of the trio who's crazy actions ends up doing both Gomez & Ramsby in with them never living long enough to see the end of the movie. Gomaz ended up getting killed, by him trying to protect Mrs. Atlas, by Reber and Ramsby getting shot by the police in refusing to give himself up when surrounded by them! Reber the one who planned to go down in a blaze of glory ended up meekly giving himself up and releasing Mrs. Atlas when he saw that his goose was cooked with her husband Officer Tony Atlas pointing a gun to his head after slapping him silly! As for the "Beaver" or Petey Atlas in the end he was not only reunited with his parents, who also reunited after being divorced, but also got his voice and memory back as well.

P.S Actor Cory Allen who co-stared with James Dean in "Rebel without a Cause" had the unenviable distinction of not only having his co-star James Dean in the movie die tragically in a car accident a week before the film was released but also had his co-star here Gerlad Sarracini tragically die in trying to prevent a mugging outside a Manhattan night-club restaurant some eight months after the movie "the Shadow in the Window"-that he stared in with Sarracini-was also released!
Alsardin

Alsardin

Interesting crime drama from Columbia Pictures that stars John Drew Barrymore as Jess, a psychotic criminally minded teenager that leads two of his friends, Gil(Corey Allen)and Joey(Gerald Sarracini)into a not-so-well planned robbery. The trio force their way into and kill a well-to-do homeowner after robbing him. There are immediate problems right off the bat. Witnesses...a secretary, Linda Atlas(Betty Garrett)and her son Petey(Jerry Mathers). The young boy manages to escape the house and is mute after witnessing the shocking events. Linda's husband happens to be Detective Sgt. Tony Atlas(Phillip Carey);and he is a determined cop with the safety of his family on the line.

Garrett actually shows the better acting. Although Barrymore is pretty flawless as a psycho teen. Carey is diligent and stoic. Rounding out the cast: Paul Picerni, Rusty Lane and Sam Gilman. William Asher directs.
Gunos

Gunos

Very predictable hostage crime drama but nonetheless entertaining.
Matty

Matty

"The Shadow On the Window" was another of those tight little 80 minute film noires turned out by Columbia Pictures in the 1950s. It has a good cast and provides a lot of excitement.

A little boy, Petey (Jerry Mathers) witnesses a murder and the abuse of his mother through a window of an isolated house where the mother Linda Atlas (Betty Garrett) had gone to work as a stenographer. The crime was committed by a gang of three youths, Gil Ramsay (Corey Allen), Jess Reber (John Barrymore Jr.) and the simple minded Joey Gomez (Gerald Sarracini). Petey goes into shock and wanders aimlessly down the highway where he is picked up by a trucker and brought to the police.

The gang had broken into the home of a wealthy senior citizen to rob him. When he resisted, he was killed. The gang is unaware of the boy and thinks that his mother is bluffing. The boy's father Tony Atlas (Phil Carey) just happens to be a police detective. Together with his colleagues he begins to try and find his wife while at the same time, trying to reach his son.

At the house, the gang is deciding what to do next. Having no car they are unable to leave. They ponder over "what to do with the dame". Jess favors doing away with her, while Gil the leader, does not. Neither does the hulking Joey who threatens bodily harm to anyone who touches her.

Tony identifies the members of the gang through police work. In the meantime, Gil leaves to obtain a car but is surprised by Tony and the police. Back at the house, Jess gets a hold of the murdered man's gun and...................................................

Phil Carey was never able to achieve "A" player status in the movies. He did get the occasional lead as here, but was mostly as a supporting player in westerns and cops and robbers dramas. He did however, achieve success on TV in the soap opera "One Life to Live" for the last 30 years or so of his life. Betty Garrett had a good career in the 40s in various musicals and comedies. She was however, married to actor Larry Parks ("The Jolson Story") who was blacklisted by House on Un-American Activities Committee (HUDAC) in the early 50s. She, by association was also put on the black list for a number of years. Her casting in this film was only her second film in years. John Barrymore Jr. was the son of the famous actor who's behavior was erratic to say the least. He changed his name to John Drew Barrymore in 1968 and is the father of actress Drew Barrymore.

Also in the cast were Sam Gilman, Rusty Lane and Paul Picerni as various cops and Angela Stevens and Mort Mills as the dead man's niece and husband. Jerry Mathers of course, will be forever known as "the Beaver" in the hit television series, "Leave it to Beaver" (1957-63).