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711 Ocean Drive

1950

Action / Crime / Drama / Film-Noir / Romance / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Cleo Moore Photo
Cleo Moore as Mal's Date
Edmond O'Brien Photo
Edmond O'Brien as Mal Granger
Don Porter Photo
Don Porter as Larry Mason
Joanne Dru Photo
Joanne Dru as Gail Mason
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
936.06 MB
968*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 41 min
P/S ...
1.7 GB
1440*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 41 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by blanche-27 / 10

Noir set in LA

"711 Ocean Drive" is an interesting '50s film noir set in Los Angeles. Edmond O'Brien stars as Mal Granger, a nice telephone repairman who is into a bookie for some gambling debts. The bookie makes a deal with him and, since he's a technician, has him do some modernization on the illegal gambling in the area that uses the wire service. The O'Brien character turns out to be pretty ambitious and greedy and starts making his way up the ladder in the syndicate. He does well until some guys from the East coast show up and want some of his action.

The O'Brien character really changes from the beginning, when he's a relaxed, friendly guy. Then he becomes ruthless and murderous. O'Brien does a great job in making this change believable. There are also very good performances from Howard St. John as a police officer, Bert Freed as a hit man, and Otto Kruger as a mob boss. Joanne Dru is the object of Mal's affections, although she's married to someone else.

Seeing Los Angeles in the '50s is one of the best parts of this film. Recommended for Edmond O'Brien, the scenery, and the noir style.

Reviewed by MartinHafer7 / 10

A good, solid Noir effort from O'Brien

This film stars Edmund O'Brien as a scheming and brilliant mobster--a far cry from the good guy roles in Film Noir films such as DOA and WHITE HEAT. It seems that although at the beginning of the film he's a simple worker for the phone company, he is an expert with electronics and phone lines, so he's able to help a small California mob grow until it controlled the entire state's bookmaking operation. Not content to be just a bit player, he works his way up to the top of this mob until the "big boys" back East recognize his worth and they want a piece of the action. At first, things work out well for O'Brien and he becomes very rich with this new arrangement. However, over time, this relationship sours. Eventually, O'Brien's greed and feelings of invulnerability take their toll--leading to a stirring finale at Hoover Dam.

As expected, O'Brien did an excellent job and he was one terrific actor--particularly in his gangster films. O'Brien's love interest is Joanne Dru, who plays a screwed up lady who wants to see O'Brien go straight but does nothing to actually change him and also does a lot to excuse his excesses. The national syndicate is headed by veteran actor Otto Kruger, who does a nice job playing the "sophisticated and cultured" thug. Oddly, Howard St. John plays the honest and determined police detective bent on stopping O'Brien--since in most films St. John plays heavies or weak-willed jerks.

Overall, it was a very engaging and original Noir film. In particular, the electronics angle was very, very high-tech for 1950 and still was intriguing today. Also, while this film isn't so violent or full of colorful Noir lingo, it does have enough to satisfy fans of the genre. Overall, it's a very good film but a far cry from the greatness and excitement of the better examples of Noir due to its occasionally heavy-handed "crime does not pay" message. As for me, I prefer my Noir a bit more on the cold side.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle6 / 10

from workman to kingpin

Mal Granger (Edmond O'Brien) is a simple telephone man. His bookie Chippie suggests a way to make some money. Chippie connects him to gangster Vince Walters who wants to tap into a horse race system and get the results early. He forces himself into a minority stake. When Vince gets killed, he is suddenly the new kingpin.

I'm willing to buy this workman forcing himself into the syndicate. I would be willing to give him a slice of the pie but just a smaller piece. When he turns into full gangster, I wonder if it's realistic. I think he needs an early show of force. The audience needs to see his inner demon even when he's a nobody. This still works as long as one leaves the regular workman behind. It ends with a chase in Boulder Dam. While the location is interesting, it needs to be more imaginative and thrilling. They should at least throw a dummy off the side.

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