The Steel Cage (1954) Poster

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6/10
One good story with two poor
gordonl5624 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Death row in San Quentin is the home for a pair of less than friendly types, John Ireland and Lawrence Tierney. The pair, along with fellow death row resident Lyle Talbot, are planning a prison break. All they need is a weapon. Tierney has arranged for a gun to be smuggled in. Charles Nolte, who plays Ireland's brother, just happens to be a trustee in the prison infirmary. Tierney fakes an appendicitis attack in-order to allow Nolte to slip the gun into death row. Tierney and the boys wait till a group of prison board members come through on a visit. Out comes the gun and up go the hands. The two board members, Morris Ankrum and Don Beddoe, are shoved into an empty cell along with guard Stanley Andrews. A call is made to the warden, Paul Kelly, for a car and a two-hour head start. Needless to say Kelly turns down the request. Tierney decides that an example of what noncompliance means needs to be made. He puts one in Andrew's head and sends his body down in the elevator. Kelly comes up to the cell block and offers himself as a hostage in exchange for Ankrum and Beddoe. By this time, Ireland, Talbot and Nolte have realized that Tierney is seriously around the bend. Ireland knows the break is a bust and wants to make a deal for his brother. "We forced him to join," he tells Kelly. Our man Lawrence, now in full nut-bar mode, shoots Talbot dead and badly wounds Nolte. Ireland goes after Tierney with a shank and manages to dispatch him though he takes two in the guts. Nolte is rushed to the clinic and the break is over. Short, sweet and to the point.

This is the one of 3 segments from the 1954 film, THE STEEL CAGE. The other two where not much but this one really stuck out. (b/w)
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4/10
Inside jail times three again
JohnHowardReid14 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This bland sequel to Duffy of San Quentin was also based on Warden Duffy's book. Again, the portmanteau format is used to tell three prison-based stories. Paul Kelly and Maureen O'Sullivan repeat their roles of Warden and Mrs. Duffy respectively. This time the three eps are clearly marked and even have separate script credits. From the lack of production values, the over-zealous use of close-ups and the piffling nature of the stories themselves, it's pretty obvious that this follow-up was primarily intended for TV. It's sad to see fine actors like Walter Slezak and Alan Mowbray reduced to this level of banality. Director Walter Doniger followed up with yet another jail drama, The Steel Jungle (1956), after which he worked mainly in TV, returning to features in 1962 with a baseball yarn, Safe at Home, and yet another inside-jail drama, House of Women.
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