Five (1951)

Five (1951)
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One of the most pretentious "apocalypse" films ever made, Five is set in a lavish Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house--owned by Arch Oboler, the film's writer/producer/director. The "five" of the title are the only survivors of a nuclear disaster, all of whom have rather illogically converged in this house. William Phipps, the hero, was left untouched by the explosion because he'd been alone in an Empire State Building elevator! He is the first to arrive at the house, and is joined in quick succession by a pregnant woman (Susan Douglas), a fascistic soldier of fortune (James Anderson), an African American doorman (Charles Lampkin) and a shell-shocked bank clerk (Earl Lee). The clerk mercifully dies of radiation early on, leaving the remaining four to converse at great and boring length on all things philosophical. At long, long last, only the hero and the woman are left alive to do the "Adam and Eve" bit. Though Arch Oboler was one of the greatest radio writers of all time, Five proves that he was in over his head as a filmmaker; the dialogue evokes laughter rather than profound thought, and the plotline has logic holes big enough to drive trucks through. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
William PhippsSusan Douglas, (more)
Director(s):
Arch Oboler
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Five

One of the most pretentious "apocalypse" films ever made, Five is set in a lavish Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house--owned by Arch Oboler, the film's writer/producer/director. The "five" of the title are the only survivors of a nuclear disaster, all of whom have rather illogically converged in this house. William Phipps, the hero, was left untouched by the explosion because he'd been alone in an Empire State Building elevator! He is the first to arrive at the house, and is joined in quick succession by a pregnant woman (Susan Douglas), a fascistic soldier of fortune (James Anderson), an African American doorman (Charles Lampkin) and a shell-shocked bank clerk (Earl Lee). The clerk mercifully dies of radiation early on, leaving the remaining four to converse at great and boring length on all things philosophical. At long, long last, only the hero and the woman are left alive to do the "Adam and Eve" bit. Though Arch Oboler was one of the greatest radio writers of all time, Five proves that he was in over his head as a filmmaker; the dialogue evokes laughter rather than profound thought, and the plotline has logic holes big enough to drive trucks through. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
91 mins

Complete Cast of Five


Director(s):
Arch Oboler
Writer(s):
Arch Oboler
Producer(s):
Arch Oboler
Categories:
Sci-Fi & FantasyDramaAction / Adventure
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    George M.

    In B&W, this film seems to have been shot in the late '40's and features the usual quasi-melodramatic acting of the time. One of the earliest efforts to portray the human consequences from the use of atomic weapons, and interesting for its focus on just a handful of characters coping with daily life after an atomic war has killed off just about everyone else. Most later post-atomic war films seemed to focus on the destruction itself and/or monster mutations arising from the disaster. Compare with the later "The Day The World Ended" and to a lesser extent "Lord of the Flies"

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    Michael A.

    This was a good film, and I rented it because I had seen another movie I thought was named "Five", but I must have been mistaken. Same plot, but was in color, and was set in a large city instead of small towns and the hills. In the other movie there was Five people who survived, and it was almost identical to this one. So after watching this movie I'm glad I rented it to see the difference, or to see the original. Very interesting movie, and of course shows you the ignorance of people back then when it comes to radiation poisoning.

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    Megan E.

    Interesting concept of what would have happened if the cold war had ended in nuclear fall out. I enjoyed some of the philosophical perspectives but overall, rather amateurish movie effect. Worth watching once

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