Big House, U.S.A

5 KILLER CONVICTS BREAK OUT!

6.5
19551h 23m

A tough and realistic crime drama unfolds as merciless kidnapper Jerry Barker (Ralph Meeker) demands ransom paid against a young runaway whose fate lands Barker in Casabel Island Prison.

Cast

Photo of Ralph Meeker

Ralph Meeker

Geraldo 'Jerry' Barker aka Iceman

Photo of Reed Hadley

Reed Hadley

Special FBI Agent James Madden

Photo of William Talman

William Talman

William 'Machine Gun' Mason

Photo of Lon Chaney Jr.

Lon Chaney Jr.

Leonard M. 'Alamo' Smith

Photo of Charles Bronson

Charles Bronson

Benny Kelly

Photo of Felicia Farr

Felicia Farr

Emily Euridice Evans

Photo of Roy Roberts

Roy Roberts

Chief Ranger Will Erickson

Photo of Willis Bouchey

Willis Bouchey

Robertson Lambert

Photo of Peter J. Votrian

Peter J. Votrian

Danny Lambert

Photo of Robert Bray

Robert Bray

Ranger McCormick

Photo of William Boyett

William Boyett

Ranger at Park Exit (uncredited)

Photo of Nelson Leigh

Nelson Leigh

Madden's FBI Supervisor (uncredited)

Photo of Gregg Martell

Gregg Martell

Accomplice on Fishing Boat (uncredited)

Photo of Jan Merlin

Jan Merlin

Tommy (uncredited)

Photo of Stafford Repp

Stafford Repp

Police Warden Machek (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Wilson

Harry Wilson

Inmate Who Starts Fight (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

10/10

I'm gonna kidnap a kidnapper for the money he kidnapped for.

Big House, U.S.A. is directed by Howard W. Koch and written by John C. Higgins, George George and George Slavin. It stars Broderick Crawford, Ralph Meeker, Reed Hadley, William Talman, Lon Chaney Jr., Charles Bronson and Felicia Farr. Music is by Paul Dunlap and cinematography by Gordon Avil.

A Kidnap, A Ransom and A Prison Break = Powder Keg.

Out of Bel-Air Productions, Big House, U.S.A. is a relentlessly tough and gritty picture. Beginning with the kidnapping of a young boy from a country camp, Howard Koch's film has no intentions of making you feel good about things. Deaths do occur and we feel the impact wholesale, tactics and actions perpetrated by the bad guys in the play punch the gut, while the finale, if somewhat expected in the scheme of good versus bad classic movies, still leaves a chill that is hard to shake off.

Split into two halves, we first observe the kidnap and ransom part of the story, then for the second part we enter prison where we become cell mates with five tough muthas. Crawford, Chaney, Meeker, Bronson and Talman, it's a roll call of macho nastiness unfurled by character actors worthy of the Big House surroundings. The locations play a big part in the pervading sense of doom that hangs over proceedings, Cascabel Island Prison (really McNeil Island Federal Penitentiary) is every bit as grim as you would expect it to be, and the stunning vistas of Royal Gorge in Colorado proves to be a foreboding backdrop for much of the picture.

Although it sadly lacks chiaroscuro photography, something which would have been perfect for this movie and elevated it to the standard of Brute Force and Riot in Cell Block 11, Avil's photography still has the requisite starkness about it. While Dunlap scores it with escalating menace. Not all the performances are top draw, more so on the good guy side of the fence, and some characters such as Chaney's Alamo Smith don't get nearly enough lines to spit, but this is still one bad boy of an experience and recommended to fans of old black and white crims and coppers movies. 8/10

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