Double Jeopardy (1955) Poster

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6/10
B-movie stalwarts help redeem overlooked, low-budget late noir
bmacv12 August 2003
Double Jeopardy is a Republic crime drama that seldom makes even the most inclusive lists of film noir, even though, in all its grunginess, it's a little better than many that do make the cut. Its director, R. G. Springsteen, churned out umpteen dozen forgotten horse operas (and his most notorious credit was The Red Menace). That doesn't inspire confidence, but he does more than a passable job on a passable story.

`Stumblebum' Robert Armstrong hasn't worked for years, but manages keep himself in whiskey and occasionally to pay rent on the one-room flat he and his unfaithful wife (Gale Robbins) share with the $500 bucks he gets every month from a mysterious stranger. Meanwhile, on the much better side of the tracks, the stranger (John Litel) is putting together the financing for a new housing development but, to the bafflement of his lawyer and future son-in-law (Rod Cameron), won't consider low-interest government loans.

Their two worlds, existing in uneasy truce, collide when Robbins, conspiring with her used-car-salesman lover (Jeff Calder), goads Armstrong into strong-arming Litel for a big payoff (when he gets it, the adulterous couple plan run off to Mexico together). But in the deserted canyon where blackmailer and victim had their rendezvous, Armstrong's body is found inside a wrecked car; Litel is charged with his murder. Cameron starts sniffing around to find the truth in what the police think is an open-and-shut case.

There's a fair amount of crummy atmosphere in this low-rent, late noir, abetted by a seasoned cast of Hollywood B-movie veterans (Minerva Urecal as a meddlesome landlady and Dick Elliott as Calder's boss Happy Harry also appear). It's no Double Indemnity, but it passes the time.
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6/10
Late Noir B-Reel Is Cut Above
AudioFileZ29 August 2021
This could have been a better film if some money and more time was given to it. It has a solid story as well as better than passable acting. It's a bit of victim of it's time and studio. Republic Pictures had to cut back as TV was taking more revenue leaving less to go around for the motion picture industry. Republic was hard hit. That said the studio delivers a pretty decent late period noir flick. It feels like it was squeezed for time thus some story and character development is rushed. It gets the basics if it moves predictably fast not leaving a lot for the imagination. Definitely a solid enough story to trump most of it's short comings.
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6/10
Good Cast In Late Noir
boblipton29 January 2020
Robert Armstrong is a drunk ex-con. He's getting $500 every month from real estate developer John Litel. Armstrong is married to floozy Gale Robbins, who's carrying on with Jack Kelly. Kelly and Miss Robbins want to run to Mexico, so she persuades Armstrong to get ten grand from his mysterious benefactor; the lovers will take the money and run. However, when Litel meets with Armstrong, he says there will be no more money and leaves. Kelly, who's been watching, comes up to Armstrong and tries to take the money he thinks he has, then kills him. Soon enough, the police trace Litel's connection to the dead man and arrest him. Now it's up to Litel's attorney, Rod Cameron, to try to prove him innocent.

It's certainly sleazy enough and complicated enough for a film noir, even though R.G. Springsteen directs it more for speed than atmosphere. The fine cast - which also includes Allison Hayes as Litel's daughter/Cameron's girlfriend and Minerva Urecal as a Marjorie-Main-style landlady, give solid performances. Armstrong is quite convincing as a drunk, Litel as a plutocrat. While CMeron looks a bit too much like a muscular half-back, and the resolution seems a little abrupt, this it a solid little movie.
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7/10
When love comes with a price.
mark.waltz10 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In the mid-1950's, most of the big melodramas at Republic Studios went to. Vera Hruba Ralston, the heavily accented wife of the boss, and while she wasn't quite the Norma Shearer of the top B studio in the movie industry, she starred in at least three movies each year. If she was busy on another product, husband Herbert Yates looked elsewhere. There are two major female roles in this film-the money hungry Gale Robbins as the wife of the older Robert Armstrong (ending up dead possibly because he's been blackmailing John Litel) and Alison Hayes as Litel's daughter. I guess Ralston could have made a guest appearance as the nosy landlady, played comically by Minerva Urecal here, but she wouldn't have made the same impact eavesdropping on her tenants from the dumbwaiter.

The film starts off with great scenes between Robbins (best known for supporting singing performances singing in MGM musicals) and Armstrong, 22 years after going up against King Kong. Robbins is obviously having an affair with the younger Jack Kelly, so her declaration of her love for Armstrong isn't exactly on the up and up. It's up to Litel's attorney, Rod Cameron, to find out how Armstrong died when Litel is arrested for murder, and visits to Robbinsvare only aided by snoopy Urecal who allows Cameron to eavesdrop as long as she gets to join him. The plump and always jolly Dick Elliott is amusing as Kelly's boss. This is really good for a late era film noir, and really good for a Republic film, with a witty and sly screenplay, great performances and very fast pacing. Hayes gets to be the good girl for once, and Robbins is a terrific femme fatale. I love when B movies turn out to be just as good, and often better, then the big eight pictures. This one is a really fun surprise.
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6/10
Worth a Viewing.
counterstriving-8150727 January 2021
Yes it's a 'B' movie, probably a 'C', but for those who like a cinematic touch of the tawdry and sad underside of life, this movie isn't half bad.
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7/10
classic to be "valued"
kbl-4818818 April 2022
Not in the top 10 of classic film noir but worth watching for 75 minutes.

No cell phones.

The women were not only sensual and elegant but beautiful in those days.
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6/10
ROUTINE REPUBLIC STUDIO CRIME FLICK...GOOD ACTING...MOVES QUICKLY...BUT UNREMARKABLE
LeonLouisRicci27 August 2021
Some Above Average B-Movie Acting keeps Rather Routine Story Alive while Nothing Much in the Way of Action or Suspense Happens.

Republic Studios Completely Shut-Down Four Years Later in 1959. But at this Point was Still Maintaining a Good Looking Low-Budget Production.

The Voluptuous Allison Hayes is Slightly Miscast as a Bland Daughter/Fiance, with Rod Cameron also Askew from His Rugged Screen Persona Playing a Corporate Lawyer.

Robert Armstrong of "King Kong" (1933) Fame is Hardly Stretching it as an Alcoholic and Blackmailer. Jack Kelly is the Antagonist along with Gale Robbins as a Femme Fatale.

It's All Rather Unremarkable but Passable. But Not Much to Recommend.

Allison Hayes is a Couple of Years from Her Iconic Role as a 50 Foot Woman.
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5/10
Republic Pictures Last Gasp Crime Programmer
Henchman_Number117 August 2014
When real estate developer Emmett Devery (John Little) is charged with the murder of his alcoholic, unhappily married, former business associate (Robert Armstrong) who had been shaking him down to keep quiet about past dealings, his lawyer and future son-in-law Marc Hill (Rod Cameron) steps in to prove his innocence. Hill and his fiancé (Allison Hayes) try to unravel an extortion scheme launched by Armstrong and his gold-digging wife (Gale Robbins)

Double Jeopardy was helmed by veteran Republic Pictures director R. G. Springsteen. Springsteen who was better known for directing a string of Republic B-Western programmers, most notably the Rocky Lane series, does a good job in this gritty crime drama. Complete with blackmail, murder and duplicity, Double Jeopardy has the all the elements of later cycle noir. While the director, cast and crew do a nice job, the point A to point B script and short run time doesn't provide for much mystery or suspense.

By the mid 1950's Republic Pictures had been beset with a financial downturn due to the growing popularity television. Republic had dropped the number of productions down to almost half of what it was only a few years before. Bogged down by it's low budget, even by Republic standards, Double Jeopardy, while technically competent, just doesn't ever seem to be able to get much traction, making for a passable but nondescript movie.

5 of 10*
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8/10
A nice lesser-known noir.
planktonrules8 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Apart from a minor problem, that the two leading ladies look too similar to each other, this is a dandy lesser-known example of film noir. Like noir often is, it features second-tier actors and excels when it comes to realism.

When the story begins, a drunk (Robert Armstrong) arrives home with about $500 in cash. It seems he has some benefactor who pays him $500 each month and by the end of the month he's drunk most of it away. Naturally, his pretty younger wife resents it and the marriage is on the rocks. She also has a lover and sooner or later she's planning on splitting.

Eventually, the woman and her lover's greed get to them and the husband ends up dead. Unfortunately, the man who's been paying the drunk each month is assumed to be the killer...and most of the evidence points his way. Can his lawyer manage to help straighten all this out or is the payee destined for the hot seat?

Well acted, very well written...this is a clever and enjoyable crime film with some nice twists and turns. Well worth seeing.
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Bland crime movie
lor_30 March 2024
Robert ("King Kong") Armstrong gets this very dull Republic Pictures movie off to a promising start playing a drunken low-life who gives his wife Gale Robbins a hard time. Unfortunately, it's all downhill after that opening reel.

The script by Don Martin (when I see that name I immediately think of the great Mad Magazine cartoonist, but this writer offers nothing in the way of entertainment) is bland, with an uninteresting central premise of John Litel as a real estate developer with a dark secret. His daughter is played by the great B-movie superstar Allison Hayes, who should be cast as a femme fatale but is wasted here as a "good girl".

She's going to marry lawyer Rod Cameron. Instead of a film noir hero, he is almost a Dudley Do-Right goody two-shoes hero, so boring I simply was waiting for him to earn his paycheck with a tiny bit of acting. Worse yet, Jack Kelly as a one-dimensional bad guy is preposterous casting of that so likable future Maverick who did so many cool & smooth leading roles on TV for series like Kraft Suspense Theatre.

The "who cares?" quotient for this picture is nearly 100%.
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5/10
PAULA KYLE IN A MINOR ROLE IN THIS TENSE MOVIE
larryanderson22 January 2022
Actress PAULA KYLE, who was originally from Toronto, Canada, moved to Hollywood and became a star...or at least she thought she was. After leaving Canada in her XKE Jag, she landed many small roles and fizzled away in obscurity like so many other "B" grade actresses. Fabulous legs and blonde hair made her a natural for a career in modelling and some movies. Larry Anderson.
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8/10
A bad woman married to a bad man with a criminal past with on-going consequences
clanciai22 June 2023
It's a noir all right, but you can feel the increasing hollowness of the decline and impending fall of the noirs, at least of the great noirs. This is a small aftermath, and although well directed and well acted with terrific music as well, the classic enthusiasm and atmosphere of the noirs is gone, as the television was taking over the attention of the audiences, and the companies were getting broke from lack of audiences, having little left to afford for great noirs. The greatest actor here is Gale Robbins as the woman spider at the centre of the web, causing all the intrigues. She is perfectly lovely, you can't resist her charm, and you can well understand the obsession with her of both her men, her miserable drinking husband and her young dashing lover. The film is worth watching for her sake, and the intrigue could have been made into something by someone like Hitchcock, but here time and money truncate the possibilities.
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