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  • 'Ambush' is a semi-noir with some very interesting credits. The script is by S.J. Perelman and his wife Laura, whose screenwriting careers are entirely associated with comedies, yet they acquit themselves respectably in this thick-ear drama which features an uneasy blend of comedy. Kurt Neumann was an extremely talented director who never acquired the commercial success (nor the critical attention) which he deserved. The leading lady in 'Ambush' is Gladys Swarthout, an opera star who here attempts a straightforward dramatic role in which she never sings a note. (And she does reasonably well.)

    'Ambush' is similar in mood to the much better 'Jeopardy' (starring a much better actress, Barbara Stanwyck). Both films play out their stories from the premise of an ordinary person being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    Mr Gibbs is the mastermind of a gang of bank robbers in need of a getaway vehicle. They kidnap a secretary named Jane (Swarthout), whom they intend to use as a hostage. Then, in this film's least plausible sequence, they force her to hijack a lorry and its driver. The driver - a prole named Tony - is well-played by Lloyd Nolan, clearly pleased to be portraying an honest guy for once. Jane and Tony will be spending some time in forced togetherness, at gunpoint ... so it's obvious how they're going to end up.

    The single biggest flaw in 'Ambush' is the casting of Ernest Truex in the key role as Gibbs, the 'brains' of the heist ring. I've never liked Truex in any of his film or television appearances. He always seems indecisive, evasive, often effeminate, with awkward little bits of physical business which I quite find alienating. Bluntly, Truex just doesn't have the chops to play a criminal mastermind ... even one whose plans go awry, as here.

    There are some welcome appearances by supporting actors whom I associate with comedy far more than with noir or suspense. Broderick Crawford, William Frawley and Polly Moran are all good here. George Melford, more successful as a director than as an actor, acquits himself well as the president of the bank Truex robs. I recognise Rufe Davis from cheap westerns and 'Petticoat Junction' repeats; this is the first 'normal' film in which I've seen him, and he's quite good here in his bit part. The ending of 'Ambush' is obvious, but this is a creditable attempt to tell a story in an unusual way, with an unusual blend of comedy and suspense. It's not altogether successful, but I'll give it credit for trying. I'll rate 'Ambush' 7 points out of 10.
  • A gang headed by the the malign Ernest Truex has just robbed the Bank of the Pacific. While police inspector William Frawley goes through a police procedural to identify them, they're looking for a ride out. Innocent Gladys Swarthout, the sister of one of the gang who has been shot, recruits truck driver Lloyd Nolan to get through the police blockade.

    There's some potentially interesting casting against type, including Broderick Crawford in an eyepatch, but this definite B picture from Paramount relies on a script by S. J. Perelman and his wife, and the wan appeal of the leads. It's a pleasant time-waster.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This late 1930's crime drama is your typical caper thriller, utilizing a script that is filled with action but unfortunately weak as far as characterization is concerned. It's just one of many crime films where a female sibling tries to help their brother out of a jam and finds himself in the jelly instead. Gladys Swarthout is a clerk in a bank who recognizes the truck that robbed them as one she's seen her brother (William Henry) in.

    Swarthout ends up in the getaway truck with Henry and his gang which also includes Lloyd Nolan and Broderick Crawford, and must do everything she can to prevent them from killing her and her brother (who has been injured) and the police on their tail from doing the same. The gang ends up in a rickety plane where they start to turn against each other, but with Police officer William Frawley on the verge of catching up, it's only a matter of time before things go awry.

    There's plenty of action including the plane sequence and some car chases, but unfortunately, these characters are cliched and none of them is really interesting enough to find any believable motivation in. This is the type of film that would have been a perfect crime doesn't pay series, and Paramount had their own series of B films that dealt with similar issues period but those ones were much more interesting than this one which just seems too rushed and two concerned with action which makes it a disappointing drama. It flies by in just an hour, but it will only take the time of one reel of the film to forget it afterwards.