Out In The
Red Scare Cold War Night- Sterling Hayden’s Five
Steps To Danger
DVD Review
From The Pen
Of Frank Jackman
Five Steps to
Danger, Sterling Hayden, Ruth Roman, 1957
Recently in reviewing
a 1940s black and white melodrama, Daisy
Kenyon, I noted that looking back into the film archives for such films gave
us a feel for the social sensibilities of the times, in that one a glimpse at
the subject of adultery and subsequent divorce proceedings in the then hard
divorce state of New York. The film under review, 1957s 5 Steps To Danger, can serve the same purpose as a glimpse at the political
sensibilities of the times, the high-end hard red scare Cold War night. To somebody
looking at the film today who was born say in 1980, maybe a little before, and
certainly after whose world view has been shaped by the demise of the Soviet Union
the whole thing might seem a mystery sealed with seven seals as to what the big
deal was. Yet any viewer, young Saturday matinee double-feature attendee or
adult night viewer, would have immediately recognized the dreaded Soviet bad
guy versus good FBI –CIA guy struggle of the titans played out in the film.
That Cold War adversarial theme played pretty straight up here invaded all kinds
of films from science fiction with its aliens (read “reds descending’) to, by
implication, the myriad J.D. (juvenile delinquent) films put out by Hollywood
when every golden age of America parent was worried to perdition about sullen uncommunicative
sons and daughters being loss to freedom’s cause.
Here is the straight
up “skinny” on this one. Average citizen riding the roads home to see his folks
out in the great Western night, John (naturally), played by the rugged and
non-nonsense Sterling Hayden gets into some car trouble and after one thing or another
ditches that car and gets a ride from Ann (naturally) played by seemingly sensible
Ruth Roman who is heading his way, part way anyway, toward Santa Fe. Driving on
a mission it will later turn out. Ann seems like an ordinary pretty girl and so
John hops in.
Then the mysteries
begin. John is stopped at truck stop diner by a woman who says she is a nurse
and that the seemingly sensible Ann is really, well, off-balanced, and needs
help. Then they are stopped by guys who say they are cops looking for her in a
murder case. From there Ann starts to come eye-drop at a time clean with John.
Tells him she is an emissary from the anti-Soviet resistance in Germany, which could
mean from East Germany, trying to get top secret information to a German scientist
who obviously was working at top secret atomic site Los Alamos or its environs.
From there
the chase is on as John has been enlisted by Ann in her scheme, enlisted in the
fight against the red menace night, and incidentally into her charms which even
in the deepest part of the red scare night Hollywood could not help throwing in
as a romantic element, here including a marriage of convenience. Needless to
say as the plot unfolded it turned out that the doctor who was treating Ann was
actually a Soviet spy looking for that information which was to be forwarded by
Ann to the so-called America friendly German scientist. Needless to say as well
that the good doctor was foiled in his efforts once the American spy-catchers got
to work and took him out, took him out permanently, of the equation. John, an
average American citizen and Ann now also an average American citizen
thereafter go off to live their happy lives after they did their bit to curb
the Soviet menace. I watched this film when I was one of those Saturday afternoon
matinee double-feature attendees and remember I bought into the whole good FBI-CIA
guys theme. Yeah, the world was fresher then, for good or evil.
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