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Erik Nielsen Movies

1957  
 
The opening episode of Dragnet's seventh TV season finds police detectives Friday (Jack Webb and Smith (Ben Alexander) rounding up a group of draft-dodging teenage dropouts who have turned to thievery. The kids hope to use their ill-gotten gains to establish their own country on an uninhabited island off the California coast, and have even gone so far as to draft their own self-serving "constitution." Although Friday puts the punks in their place with another of his long-winded patriotic speeches (backed up with a stirring rendition of America the Beautiful), it takes an ironic final plot twist to convince the youngsters that they've messed up. "The Big Constitution" was later updated as "The Big Make", an episode of the late-1960s Dragnet revival. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1957  
 
Beaver (Jerry Mathers) thinks it's real "creepy" that his brother Wally (Tony Dow) is spending less time with him and more time with his girlfriend Penny Jamison. But this state of affairs ends abruptly when Wally and Penny quarrel and break up. Now concerned only with his brother's best interests, Beav tries to patch the romance back together -- with the unexpected assistance of his pet toad, Herbie. Penny Jamison is played by Carol Sydes, who later changed her name to Cindy Carol and essayed the leading role in the 1963 theatrical feature Gidget Goes to Rome. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Carol SydesBarbara Dodd, (more)
 
1952  
NR  
The tougher postwar screen image of James Stewart is given a good workout in the fact-based Carbine Williams. In 1952, the world at large knew Marsh Williams as the developer of the US Army's M-1 carbine rifle. The film builds up to this event by detailing Williams' previous existence as a bootlegger and embittered prison inmate, sentenced to 30 years at hard labor for killing a revenue agent. After enduring the rigors of chain-gang life and solitary confinement, Williams (Stewart) gets his mind off his troubles by dreaming up a new type of automatic-gun piston. He is encouraged in this endeavor by prison warden H. T. Peoples (Wendell Corey), previously Williams' bitterest enemy. As Williams continues to develop his innovative weaponry notions, his wife Maggie (Jean Hagen) and Warden Peoples try to overcome penal bureaucracy to win a pardon for Williams. Some TV prints of Carbine Williams have been colorized by computer; despite this artistically offensive practice, the strong dramatic and human values of the story still shine. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
James StewartJean Hagen, (more)
 
1951  
 
Upon beginning production on his Korean-war drama I Want You, producer Sam Goldwyn lamented "I've just brought those boys back from the war, and now I have to send them out again!" Goldwyn, of course, was referring to his Oscar-winning "homecoming" drama Best Years of Our Lives. He'd hoped that I Want You would be 1951's "answer" to that post-WW II classic, and while the later film falls short of that goal, it still has much to recommend it. The scene is a small town in the Eastern United States, where the outbreak of hostilities in Korea has a profound effect on several people. WW II veteran Martin Greer (Dana Andrews) wants to re-enlist, much to the dismay of his wife Nancy (Dorothy McGuire). Draftee Jack Greer (Farley Granger) fears that his military service will permanently shelve his plans to marry Carrie Turner (Peggy Dow). Jack's mother Sarah (Mildred Dunnock), having already lost one son in the war, resents the pro-American jingoism of her husband Thomas (Robert Keith). And George Kress, Jr. (Martin Milner) must contend with his possessive father George Kress, Sr. (Walter S. Baldwin), who'll do anything to keep his son out of uniform (Incidentally, both Dana Andrews and Walter S. Baldwin had previously appeared in Best Years of Our Lives). Screenwriter Irwin Shaw adapted I Want You from a series of human-interest articles by Edward Newhouse, which first appeared in The New Yorker. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Dana AndrewsDorothy McGuire, (more)