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Man in the Vault

William Campbell , Karen Sharpe , Andrew V. McLaglen    NR (Not Rated)   DVD

Price: CDN$ 10.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

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A film noir set-up unfolds in the opening minutes of Man in the Vault: while relaxing one night at a bowling alley, a humble locksmith named Tommy Dancer (William Campbell) finds himself dragged into a bank heist plot because of his dexterity with lock-picking. It only takes 72 minutes for Tommy's nightmare to unfold, and yet the storyline seems uncommonly convoluted; rival gangsters are involved, Tommy strikes a volatile match with a slumming Beverly Hills dame (Karen Sharpe), and a moll plays a seemingly extraneous role--not that there's anything wrong with that, when the moll is the young Anita Ekberg. The ultra-cheap production values deflate the effort to put some noir atmosphere into the thing, but the main problem is leading man Campbell, who was a cross between Vince Edwards and a young Tony Curtis, but without the attitude. (He had been in The High and the Mighty--like this film produced by John Wayne's Batjac company--and went on to many TV roles.) Still, there are moments, and director Andrew V. McLaglen tries to work some ingenious visual touches into the mix. Berry Kroeger makes a truly decadent villain, while Batjac regular Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez gives comic relief. The film comes very early in the credits of McLaglen and screenwriter Burt Kennedy, both of whom became associated with Westerns later in their long, fruitful careers. The movie keeps returning to the bowling alley ("Art Linkletter's La Cienaga") thereby setting up one of the strangest scenes of noir menace ever filmed. --Robert Horton

Product Description

Tommy Dancer (William Campbell) is an ordinary man - thrust into an extraordinary situation. Dancer, a locksmith, is involuntarily forced into a heist by ruthless mobster Willis Trent (Berry Kroeger)and Trent's two-timing, double-dealing moll (Anita Ekberg). The target? A cash-laden safe-deposit box inside a local bank. And locksmiths have both the smarts and the tools to crack just about any type of lock, right? But Tommy is extremely reluctant to enbrace a life of crime - unitl his innocent girlfriend Betty (Karen Sharpe), is swept into the dangerous, risky scheme. Thrills abound in this harrowing thriller from John Wayne's Batjac Productions

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 2.8 out of 5 stars  4 reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars a reasonably-good crime thriller Sep 30 2007
By Byron Kolln - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
MAN IN THE VAULT, produced by John Wayne's Batjac production company, is a well-paced and impressively-cast crime thriller, which reunited "High and the Mighty" co-stars William Campbell and Karen Sharpe.

Tommy Dancer (William Campbell) is an unemployed professional locksmith, forced into assisting a daring bank raid, after his girlfriend Betty (Karen Sharpe), a feisty society debutante, is swept up into the plot.

Filled with some great performances, MAN IN THE VAULT is an enjoyable excursion into a shady world of corruption and greed, and never wears out it's brisk 70-minute running time. Both William Campbell and Karen Sharpe are attractive and well-used in the leads; with Anita Ekberg, Paul Fix and Barry Kroeger in strong supporting roles.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Crime movie Feb 1 2013
By Rick Lane - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a good Crime movie starring William Campbell, Karen Sharpe, Paul Fix, Berry Kroeger, Mike Mazurki and Anita Ekberg. This movie is presented in B&W, Full frame formant and runs for about 73mins (1hr 13mins). This might not be the best plot, but Andrew V. McLaglen direction is great! Overall this is a good movie and I would recommend it.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars No, it isn't so great Sep 2 2009
By PTR - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
Other reviewers are quite right -- this is sub-par noir. Although one wouldn't want it to linger much further beyond 72 minutes, the character development and plot resolution do seem rushed. In fact, quite a bit of the acting and interacting seems to be ritualistic, like the players are aware that they're making a noir picture, so that they must strike a certain stance or pose in keeping with the genre. Self-conscious noir doesn't work.

I will say that the scenes in the vault itself are pretty tense. The final scenes in the bowling alley are just lame and ill-conceived.

And again, everything gets sewn up in a tidy little package at the end - gangsters knock off other gangsters and get caught by the police. How convenient!

Skip it. Certainly don't buy it.

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