33 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :- Perhaps the best B movie of all time?, 25 January 2005
Author:
Dire_Straits from United States
I'm a huge Charles McGraw fan. Every film he had a large part in, he
excels and makes the film better.
Having seen this film 4 or 5 times, my respect for it has grown over
the years.
The cinematography isn't perfect - the film probably could have
benefited by staying dark and grainy as it seems to be in the early,
night scenes.
The taut train scenes seem too bright, but there's nothing wrong with
it, simply my preference. A darker train would have made for a more
sinister film. Even so, there's plenty of excitement.
The crackling dialogue between Charles McGraw and Marie Windsor is
consistently sharp. Seriously, you will have a hard time finding
anything more bitter than those two. I'm not sure any other male-female
could have made the dialogue (which in a 1950's way is almost corny)
come off so terse, as they continuously bark at each other. Someone
needs to count the number of times McGraw tells Windsor to "Shut up!".
The film has some exciting twists and turns; you'll enjoy each one.
Great story, solid performances all the way around. This is a FUN
movie.
33 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :- Wow, 19 May 2001
Author:
Eric Chapman (caspar_h@yahoo.com) from Pittsburgh, PA
Fast, smart and tough. A real treat. Masterfully paced and scripted. Wow.
Holds up very very well. This movie sucks you in from the opening credits
and never lets go. It's also a bit of a mind game, with an interesting moral
dilemma at its center and a beautiful plot twist towards the end. Nobody
tells a hysterical dame to "shut up" quite like Charles McGraw and few femme
fatales can blow cigarette smoke quite like Marie Windsor (who looks
astonishingly like the present day actress Illeana Douglas). The two of them
have great smoldering chemistry together. Richard Fleischer's direction is
nearly flawless. A joy to watch. Can't wait to see it again. There's a lot
going on in this one. By no means, a routine thriller.
27 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :- A dark ride that's maybe the best passenger-train thriller of them all, 8 February 2004
Author:
bmacv from Western New York
Trains have it all over ships and planes when it comes to creating a
microcosm. On an airplane, everybody's crammed together; nobody can sneak
on or leave (except by parachute or defenestration). An ocean liner has its
private staterooms and public spaces, but, again, is an island, entire onto
itself. But trains stop regularly to take on and disgorge passengers, and
they run along their fixed and earthbound course, with windows looking out
on rivers and highways, at big cities at high noon and small towns in the
dead of night. And so they've always been the preferred vehicle for
suspense, with countless thrillers using the rails as their setting. One of
the tautest and most toothsome, in its modest, low-budget way, is Richard
Fleischer's The Narrow Margin.
It opens in Chicago, where a pair of Los Angeles police detectives are to
escort the widow (Marie Windsor) of a recently slain gang leader back to the
coast to testify before a grand jury. She's a hard case (`a 60-cent
special...poison under the gravy'), and guarding her is a dangerous job.
Sure enough, one of the cops takes a fatal bullet in the stairway of her
low-rent apartment house (she shows scant sympathy). Windsor's finally
smuggled aboard the train, in a Pullman car's locked compartment adjoining
that of her custodian Charles McGraw. Almost certainly, one or more
mobsters followed her. It's up to McGraw to smoke them out before they kill
Windsor, who knows too much. But he slowly learns that some vital
information has been deliberately kept from him....
Fleischer makes inventive use of the jostling in the cramped passageways
and of the all but vanished rituals of club cars and dining cars. He packs
the train with seasoned character actors, notable among them Jacqueline
White, Paul (`Nobody loves a fat man') Maxie, and Don Beddoe. The closely
worked script, by Earl Fenton (based on a novel by Martin Goldsmith, who
also penned the original material for Detour), doesn't stint on gaudy patter
for them to spout (it's a moveable feast of salty epigrams).
Best of all, The Narrow Margin offers the addictive Marie Windsor her
meatiest role, showcasing her tough-gal talents. Rolling her huge and
extraordinary eyes, she aims her exhaled smoke like a stream of deadly gas
and hard-boils her lines into hand grenades (to McGraw: `This train's headed
straight for the cemetery. But there's another train coming along a gravy
train. Let's get on it.'). It's one of Hollywood's more perplexing
secrets why Windsor toiled exclusively, with the possible exception of her
Sherry Peatty in Stanley Kubrick's The Killing, in the B-movie ghetto. But
she helped make that ghetto the liveliest part of Tinsel
Town.
26 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :- Charles McGraw At His Best, 10 September 1999
Author:
gerrytwo from Queens, NY
While director Richard Fleischer gets plenty of credit for his role in
making the film noir classic "The Narrow Margin" on a shoestring budget, it
is hard to imagine this picture without actor Charles McGraw in the lead
role. As a tough cop escorting a witness to testify in Los Angeles,
McGraw's performance is what holds the picture together. Try to think now
of one actor around today who could portray a cop who is at times
calculating, other times sarcastic and almost always menacing. In the
Hollywood of the 1940s and 50s,Charles McGraw usually played secondary roles
in A pictures. In "The Narrow Margin," McGraw shows that with a competent
director, he could put on some performance as the star of a movie.
23 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- One of the best B movies ever..., 17 April 2003
Author:
JohnnyCNote from Jacksonville, FL
The Narrow Margin is excellent. It's too bad more of our new directors
have
forgotten how to make a great film with a minimal budget, using instead
inventive camera angles, good characters and dialog, and some surprises
along the way. I really loved Marie Windsor as the mobster's wife who's
going to LA to sing to the Grand Jury. She's one of the toughest broads
I've
ever seen! Charles McGraw does his standard tough cop role and turns in a
performance that sets the standard by which all others are
judged.
This is the original, and beats the heck out of the re-make.....
18 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :- "...Use Your Own Sink", 3 May 1999
Author:
Roger Zotti from Preston, CT.
Charles McGraw plays edgy cop Walter Brown. His job is to protect a dead
racketeer's wife, Mrs Neil (Marie Windsor) from the mob. She's a key
witness
in a grand jury probe, and also has a payoff list linking gang members to
the LAPD. Most of the film's action takes place on board the train taking
Brown and Neil to Los Angeles, where she will testify.In Mrs. Neil, played
to perfection by Windsor, the queen of B movies, the tough talking,
wise-cracking Brown meets his match. On the way to meet her, he glibly
tells
his partner, Gus Forbes that "She's the sixty cent special. Cheap. Flashy.
Sticky poison under the gravy." When he and Forbes, both from Los Angeles,
first meet her, she says, "How nice. How Los Angeles." Then looking Brown
up
and down, she snarls, "Sunburn wear off on the way?" My favorite wisecrack
occurs after Brown has finally had enough of her wise remarks and lashes
out, "You make me sick to my stomach." Her retaliation is a gem: "Well,
use
your own sink."
Unlike the banter between Nick and Noira Charles of The Thin Man series,
there's nothing the least sophisticated about the way Brown and Neil talk
each other. Director Richard Fleischer uses inventive camera work, the
sounds of the train rather than a music score, and the train's
claustrophobic atomsphere to create and sustain tension. An RKO picture,
The
Narrow Margin is an unpretentious, taut low-budget thriller, a minor
classic
far superior to the 1990 Gene Hackman-Anne Archer remake.
17 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- Windsor & McGraw: 2 Film Noir Hall-Of-Famers, 9 December 2005
Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
This was the "original" and, like its re-make "Narrow Margin" (the
"The" is missing), it is excellent. This is one of those rare cases in
which the old and the new versions both are top-notch.
In fact, it's interesting to compare the two versions. In this film,
there is a very unique twist as the end concerning the woman being
brought to Los Angeles. It was clever.
That woman in this 1952 version also is played by perhaps the First
Lady Of Noir, Marie Windsor. She had the best lines in the film and is
outstanding at playing the tough-talking moll of this genre. (See
Stanley Kubrick's "The Killing" to fully appreciate more of Windsor's
work.)
The film noir tough-guy male equivalent of her also stars in this film:
Charles McGraw. Few guys ever looked and sounded better in noirs than
McGraw. He and Windor were born to play in 'B' crime movies!
The short length of this film makes it a good one to watch anytime
although, to be frank, if I could only own one of the two "Narrow
Margin" films, I'd have to take the latter-day version with Gene
Hackman and Anne Archer, but it would a tough decision. Both have a lot
to offer.
13 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- An Overlooked Classic, 4 September 2006
Author:
jonathon_naylor from Manitoba, Canada
Here's an overlooked classic that more than holds its own over five
decades after its release. Two-fisted detective Charles McGraw must
protect a crucial witness (Marie Windsor) on a train trip from Chicago
to Los Angeles. Since keeping a secret is hard, bad guys who aren't so
keen on Windsor's testimony are also on board -- and will stop at
nothing to silence her. Further complexities are added to an already
tense situation when the hit men confuse another passenger as their
target.
"The Narrow Margin" is known as a B movie, but you'd never know it from
watching it. True, the film isn't flashy, but it does make the most out
of everything it has. The story is original and full of twists, the
suspense terrific and the acting memorable. With its creative take on
what should be a simple story, and with its colorful characters and
sharp direction, it's all more than a bit reminiscent of the master
himself, Alfred Hitchcock. You won't regret picking this one up now
that it's available on DVD.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Perfectly written, taut edgy Film Noir!, 6 September 2000
Author:
madbomber03 from Kalispell, MT
This is a fast paced and edgy film noir which could be used as a perfect
example of the style. Crisp dialogue, hard characters and sarcastic humor
blend perfectly to create a wonderful movie that is over before you know
it.
This film is really a lost treasure.
17 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- Great camera work. Sensational Marie Windsor. Implausible story, though., 23 November 2004
Author:
pzanardo (pzanardo@math.unipd.it) from Padova, Italy
"The narrow margin" is a remarkable film-noir with great merits,
unfortunately marred by an implausible story.
There is a policeman (Charles McGraw) committed to protect a key
witness (Marie Windsor), in severe danger of life, along a train
journey. The only reasonable and likely behavior for the cop is to take
some sandwiches, lock in the cabin with the witness, and sit down with
a machine-gun on his lap. Of course, that would be the end of the film.
So, to get a story, McGraw goes everywhere and does everything on the
train, but staying with and protecting the witness. There is also a big
surprise at the end. That is really unexpected. But if we think back to
the previous events, this big twist makes the behavior of some
characters wholly illogical.
Well, enough with the faults of the movie. The merits of this
low-budgeted B-movie overcome its defects. The stylish cinematography
is first-rate, and the camera-work is outstanding. The (few) action
scenes are brilliant and filmed in a very original way. See, for
instance the play of mirrors in the finale. Marie Windsor is
sensational, and every scene with her is a treat. What a gangster moll,
gutsy tough gal she is! In my opinion, she is even better here than in
"The killing". Her lines are a perfect instance of cynical
wisecracking. McGraw and the rest of the cast make a good job, as well.
There is a good amount of suspense and no moments of bore.
Let me conclude with a somehow daring comparison. Independently by the
composers, classic music of the 18th century is always beautiful. In a
similar way, I think that American movies of the 1940s and early 1950s
are all good: that is just a question of style, and how I love this
style!
I recommend "The narrow margin", for its intrinsic merits, and to pay
homage to a great season of cinema.
Own the rights?
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33 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :-

Perhaps the best B movie of all time?, 25 January 2005
Author: Dire_Straits from United States
I'm a huge Charles McGraw fan. Every film he had a large part in, he excels and makes the film better.
Having seen this film 4 or 5 times, my respect for it has grown over the years.
The cinematography isn't perfect - the film probably could have benefited by staying dark and grainy as it seems to be in the early, night scenes.
The taut train scenes seem too bright, but there's nothing wrong with it, simply my preference. A darker train would have made for a more sinister film. Even so, there's plenty of excitement.
The crackling dialogue between Charles McGraw and Marie Windsor is consistently sharp. Seriously, you will have a hard time finding anything more bitter than those two. I'm not sure any other male-female could have made the dialogue (which in a 1950's way is almost corny) come off so terse, as they continuously bark at each other. Someone needs to count the number of times McGraw tells Windsor to "Shut up!".
The film has some exciting twists and turns; you'll enjoy each one.
Great story, solid performances all the way around. This is a FUN movie.
33 out of 38 people found the following comment useful :-

Wow, 19 May 2001
Author: Eric Chapman (caspar_h@yahoo.com) from Pittsburgh, PA
Fast, smart and tough. A real treat. Masterfully paced and scripted. Wow. Holds up very very well. This movie sucks you in from the opening credits and never lets go. It's also a bit of a mind game, with an interesting moral dilemma at its center and a beautiful plot twist towards the end. Nobody tells a hysterical dame to "shut up" quite like Charles McGraw and few femme fatales can blow cigarette smoke quite like Marie Windsor (who looks astonishingly like the present day actress Illeana Douglas). The two of them have great smoldering chemistry together. Richard Fleischer's direction is nearly flawless. A joy to watch. Can't wait to see it again. There's a lot going on in this one. By no means, a routine thriller.
27 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :-

A dark ride that's maybe the best passenger-train thriller of them all, 8 February 2004
Author: bmacv from Western New York
Trains have it all over ships and planes when it comes to creating a microcosm. On an airplane, everybody's crammed together; nobody can sneak on or leave (except by parachute or defenestration). An ocean liner has its private staterooms and public spaces, but, again, is an island, entire onto itself. But trains stop regularly to take on and disgorge passengers, and they run along their fixed and earthbound course, with windows looking out on rivers and highways, at big cities at high noon and small towns in the dead of night. And so they've always been the preferred vehicle for suspense, with countless thrillers using the rails as their setting. One of the tautest and most toothsome, in its modest, low-budget way, is Richard Fleischer's The Narrow Margin.
It opens in Chicago, where a pair of Los Angeles police detectives are to escort the widow (Marie Windsor) of a recently slain gang leader back to the coast to testify before a grand jury. She's a hard case (`a 60-cent special...poison under the gravy'), and guarding her is a dangerous job. Sure enough, one of the cops takes a fatal bullet in the stairway of her low-rent apartment house (she shows scant sympathy). Windsor's finally smuggled aboard the train, in a Pullman car's locked compartment adjoining that of her custodian Charles McGraw. Almost certainly, one or more mobsters followed her. It's up to McGraw to smoke them out before they kill Windsor, who knows too much. But he slowly learns that some vital information has been deliberately kept from him....
Fleischer makes inventive use of the jostling in the cramped passageways and of the all but vanished rituals of club cars and dining cars. He packs the train with seasoned character actors, notable among them Jacqueline White, Paul (`Nobody loves a fat man') Maxie, and Don Beddoe. The closely worked script, by Earl Fenton (based on a novel by Martin Goldsmith, who also penned the original material for Detour), doesn't stint on gaudy patter for them to spout (it's a moveable feast of salty epigrams).
Best of all, The Narrow Margin offers the addictive Marie Windsor her meatiest role, showcasing her tough-gal talents. Rolling her huge and extraordinary eyes, she aims her exhaled smoke like a stream of deadly gas and hard-boils her lines into hand grenades (to McGraw: `This train's headed straight for the cemetery. But there's another train coming along a gravy train. Let's get on it.'). It's one of Hollywood's more perplexing secrets why Windsor toiled exclusively, with the possible exception of her Sherry Peatty in Stanley Kubrick's The Killing, in the B-movie ghetto. But she helped make that ghetto the liveliest part of Tinsel Town.
26 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :-
Charles McGraw At His Best, 10 September 1999
Author: gerrytwo from Queens, NY
While director Richard Fleischer gets plenty of credit for his role in making the film noir classic "The Narrow Margin" on a shoestring budget, it is hard to imagine this picture without actor Charles McGraw in the lead role. As a tough cop escorting a witness to testify in Los Angeles, McGraw's performance is what holds the picture together. Try to think now of one actor around today who could portray a cop who is at times calculating, other times sarcastic and almost always menacing. In the Hollywood of the 1940s and 50s,Charles McGraw usually played secondary roles in A pictures. In "The Narrow Margin," McGraw shows that with a competent director, he could put on some performance as the star of a movie.
23 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :-

One of the best B movies ever..., 17 April 2003
Author: JohnnyCNote from Jacksonville, FL
The Narrow Margin is excellent. It's too bad more of our new directors have forgotten how to make a great film with a minimal budget, using instead inventive camera angles, good characters and dialog, and some surprises along the way. I really loved Marie Windsor as the mobster's wife who's going to LA to sing to the Grand Jury. She's one of the toughest broads I've ever seen! Charles McGraw does his standard tough cop role and turns in a performance that sets the standard by which all others are judged.
This is the original, and beats the heck out of the re-make.....
18 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :-
"...Use Your Own Sink", 3 May 1999
Author: Roger Zotti from Preston, CT.
Charles McGraw plays edgy cop Walter Brown. His job is to protect a dead racketeer's wife, Mrs Neil (Marie Windsor) from the mob. She's a key witness in a grand jury probe, and also has a payoff list linking gang members to the LAPD. Most of the film's action takes place on board the train taking Brown and Neil to Los Angeles, where she will testify.In Mrs. Neil, played to perfection by Windsor, the queen of B movies, the tough talking, wise-cracking Brown meets his match. On the way to meet her, he glibly tells his partner, Gus Forbes that "She's the sixty cent special. Cheap. Flashy. Sticky poison under the gravy." When he and Forbes, both from Los Angeles, first meet her, she says, "How nice. How Los Angeles." Then looking Brown up and down, she snarls, "Sunburn wear off on the way?" My favorite wisecrack occurs after Brown has finally had enough of her wise remarks and lashes out, "You make me sick to my stomach." Her retaliation is a gem: "Well, use your own sink." Unlike the banter between Nick and Noira Charles of The Thin Man series, there's nothing the least sophisticated about the way Brown and Neil talk each other. Director Richard Fleischer uses inventive camera work, the sounds of the train rather than a music score, and the train's claustrophobic atomsphere to create and sustain tension. An RKO picture, The Narrow Margin is an unpretentious, taut low-budget thriller, a minor classic far superior to the 1990 Gene Hackman-Anne Archer remake.
17 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-
Windsor & McGraw: 2 Film Noir Hall-Of-Famers, 9 December 2005
Author: ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
This was the "original" and, like its re-make "Narrow Margin" (the "The" is missing), it is excellent. This is one of those rare cases in which the old and the new versions both are top-notch.
In fact, it's interesting to compare the two versions. In this film, there is a very unique twist as the end concerning the woman being brought to Los Angeles. It was clever.
That woman in this 1952 version also is played by perhaps the First Lady Of Noir, Marie Windsor. She had the best lines in the film and is outstanding at playing the tough-talking moll of this genre. (See Stanley Kubrick's "The Killing" to fully appreciate more of Windsor's work.)
The film noir tough-guy male equivalent of her also stars in this film: Charles McGraw. Few guys ever looked and sounded better in noirs than McGraw. He and Windor were born to play in 'B' crime movies!
The short length of this film makes it a good one to watch anytime although, to be frank, if I could only own one of the two "Narrow Margin" films, I'd have to take the latter-day version with Gene Hackman and Anne Archer, but it would a tough decision. Both have a lot to offer.
13 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

An Overlooked Classic, 4 September 2006
Author: jonathon_naylor from Manitoba, Canada
Here's an overlooked classic that more than holds its own over five decades after its release. Two-fisted detective Charles McGraw must protect a crucial witness (Marie Windsor) on a train trip from Chicago to Los Angeles. Since keeping a secret is hard, bad guys who aren't so keen on Windsor's testimony are also on board -- and will stop at nothing to silence her. Further complexities are added to an already tense situation when the hit men confuse another passenger as their target.
"The Narrow Margin" is known as a B movie, but you'd never know it from watching it. True, the film isn't flashy, but it does make the most out of everything it has. The story is original and full of twists, the suspense terrific and the acting memorable. With its creative take on what should be a simple story, and with its colorful characters and sharp direction, it's all more than a bit reminiscent of the master himself, Alfred Hitchcock. You won't regret picking this one up now that it's available on DVD.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Perfectly written, taut edgy Film Noir!, 6 September 2000
Author: madbomber03 from Kalispell, MT
This is a fast paced and edgy film noir which could be used as a perfect example of the style. Crisp dialogue, hard characters and sarcastic humor blend perfectly to create a wonderful movie that is over before you know it. This film is really a lost treasure.
17 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

Great camera work. Sensational Marie Windsor. Implausible story, though., 23 November 2004
Author: pzanardo (pzanardo@math.unipd.it) from Padova, Italy
"The narrow margin" is a remarkable film-noir with great merits, unfortunately marred by an implausible story.
There is a policeman (Charles McGraw) committed to protect a key witness (Marie Windsor), in severe danger of life, along a train journey. The only reasonable and likely behavior for the cop is to take some sandwiches, lock in the cabin with the witness, and sit down with a machine-gun on his lap. Of course, that would be the end of the film. So, to get a story, McGraw goes everywhere and does everything on the train, but staying with and protecting the witness. There is also a big surprise at the end. That is really unexpected. But if we think back to the previous events, this big twist makes the behavior of some characters wholly illogical.
Well, enough with the faults of the movie. The merits of this low-budgeted B-movie overcome its defects. The stylish cinematography is first-rate, and the camera-work is outstanding. The (few) action scenes are brilliant and filmed in a very original way. See, for instance the play of mirrors in the finale. Marie Windsor is sensational, and every scene with her is a treat. What a gangster moll, gutsy tough gal she is! In my opinion, she is even better here than in "The killing". Her lines are a perfect instance of cynical wisecracking. McGraw and the rest of the cast make a good job, as well. There is a good amount of suspense and no moments of bore.
Let me conclude with a somehow daring comparison. Independently by the composers, classic music of the 18th century is always beautiful. In a similar way, I think that American movies of the 1940s and early 1950s are all good: that is just a question of style, and how I love this style!
I recommend "The narrow margin", for its intrinsic merits, and to pay homage to a great season of cinema.
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