Hell's Half Acre (1954 film)

{{Short description|1954 film by John H. Auer}}

{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Hell's Half Acre

| image = HellAcrePoster.jpg

| alt =

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = John H. Auer

| producer = John H. Auer

| screenplay = Steve Fisher

| narrator =

| starring = Wendell Corey
Evelyn Keyes
Elsa Lanchester
Marie Windsor

| music = R. Dale Butts

| cinematography = John L. Russell

| editing = Fred Allen

| studio = Republic Pictures

| distributor = Republic Pictures

| released = {{film date|1954|2|26|New York City|1954|6|1|United States}}

| runtime = 90 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Hell's Half Acre is a 1954 American film noir black and white crime film directed by John H. Auer starring Wendell Corey, Evelyn Keyes and Elsa Lanchester.{{IMDb title|id=0047074|title=Hell's Half Acre}}. It was produced and distributed by Republic Pictures.

Plot

A woman whose husband is declared missing in action after Pearl Harbor flies to Hawaii after the war to conduct her own investigation.

Her husband, ex-racketeer Chet Chester (Corey), is actually still alive but changed his identity due to his own criminal activities. However, he is being blackmailed by his former criminal partners, including Roger Kong.

Chester's girlfriend Sally (Nancy Gates) kills one of his enemies, but Chester takes the blame, assuming that he still has enough clout to escape with a light sentence.

The Chief of Police confirms to the wife that the husband was killed at Pearl Harbor and tears up his criminal record to protect his family from shame.

Cast

Reception

=Critical response=

The New York Times gave the film a tepid review with backhanded compliments: "Betwixt the start and the finish, an undemanding spectator will find enough sequences of merit to hold his interest. And the story of destined doom and back-alley murder is not entirely implausible. Miss Keyes, an innocent caught in the tangled web, is a luscious young thing who certainly earns her "A" in acting. She shines nicely in contrast to the denizens of Hell's Half Acre, ostensibly a very unsocial area of Honolulu. John Auer, the director, makes his camera capture the most in picture value of what appears to be some very dingy neighborhoods with a resultant atmosphere that creates a certain element of suspense. His method of direction, aided and abetted by Steve Fisher's economical script, is one of sensible brevity without unnecessary frills."[https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=1&res=9904E4D61638E23BBC4F51DFB466838F649EDE&oref=slogin The New York Times]. Film review, February 27, 1954. Last accessed: February 7, 2008.

References

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