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Suddenly (1954)

Suddenly (1954)
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Suddenly is the name of the small town invaded by professional assassin Frank Sinatra and his henchmen. Taking a local family hostage, Sinatra sets up a vigil at the second-story window of the family's home. From here, he intends to kill the President of the United States when the latter makes a whistle-stop visit. The film's tension level is enough to induce goose pimples from first scene to last. Sinatra is outstanding as the disgruntled war vet who hopes to become a "somebody" by killing the president. The parallels between his character and Lee Harvey Oswald's are too close for comfort, so much so that Suddenly was withdrawn from local TV packages for several years after the JFK assassination. Sinatra would claim in later years that he himself engineered the removal of Suddenly from general distribution, though in fact he'd lost whatever rights he'd held on the film when it lapsed into public domain. Be sure and miss the notorious colorized version of this black-and-white thriller, wherein Sinatra is transformed into Ol' Brown Eyes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Frank SinatraSterling Hayden, (more)
Director(s):
Lewis Allen
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Suddenly

Suddenly is the name of the small town invaded by professional assassin Frank Sinatra and his henchmen. Taking a local family hostage, Sinatra sets up a vigil at the second-story window of the family's home. From here, he intends to kill the President of the United States when the latter makes a whistle-stop visit. The film's tension level is enough to induce goose pimples from first scene to last. Sinatra is outstanding as the disgruntled war vet who hopes to become a "somebody" by killing the president. The parallels between his character and Lee Harvey Oswald's are too close for comfort, so much so that Suddenly was withdrawn from local TV packages for several years after the JFK assassination. Sinatra would claim in later years that he himself engineered the removal of Suddenly from general distribution, though in fact he'd lost whatever rights he'd held on the film when it lapsed into public domain. Be sure and miss the notorious colorized version of this black-and-white thriller, wherein Sinatra is transformed into Ol' Brown Eyes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
75 mins

Complete Cast of Suddenly


Director(s):
Lewis Allen
Writer(s):
Richard Sale
Producer(s):
Robert Bassler
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Violence, Questionable for Children)
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Member Reviews
 
John H.

This is a lost gem from the early 1950's. Frank Sinatra does an excellent job portraying a lunatic would be assassin.

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TONY C.

I saw this for the first time in the late 1990"s on a very late movie. I happened upon it within the first 5 minutes. I was glued for the enitre movie. Agreat film and one that was shelved because of the JFK assanation by Sinatra. Please rent it, watch it and enjoy!

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Keith G.

Intense, sometimes hokey thriller of small time hoods led by a surprisingly good Frank Sinatra, paid to assassinate the president when he stops in a small town. They take family hostage, and cat-and-mouse game ensues. Sometimes obvious, some weak supporting performances, stagy. But stll more fun and tense than most modern Hollywood thrillers.

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