The Woman on Pier 13

Her beauty served a mob of terror whose one mission is to destroy!

5.3
19501h 13m

Communists blackmail a shipping executive into spying for them.

Production

Logo for RKO Radio Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Woman on pier 13 trailer  Robert Ryan

Woman on pier 13 trailer Robert Ryan

Cast

Photo of Laraine Day

Laraine Day

Nan Lowry Collins

Photo of Robert Ryan

Robert Ryan

Bradley Collins / Frank Johnson

Photo of John Agar

John Agar

Don Lowry

Photo of Janis Carter

Janis Carter

Christine Norman

Photo of Richard Rober

Richard Rober

Jim Travers

Photo of William Talman

William Talman

Bailey, younger henchman

Photo of Paul E. Burns

Paul E. Burns

J.T. Arnold

Photo of G. Pat Collins

G. Pat Collins

Charlie Dover

Photo of Fred Graham

Fred Graham

Grip Wilson

Photo of Harry Cheshire

Harry Cheshire

J. Francis Cornwall

Photo of Iris Adrian

Iris Adrian

Waitress

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

You can't quit. They wont let you!

The Woman on Pier 13 (AKA: I Married a Communist) is directed by Robert Stevenson and collectively written by Charles Grayson, Robert Hardy Andrews, George W. George and George F. Slavin. It stars Robert Ryan, Laraine Day, John Agar, Thomas Gomez, Janis Carter, Richard Rober and William Talman. Music is by Leigh Harline and cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca.

Brad Collins (Ryan) was a one time member of the communist party. Now married and thriving in business, his world is turned upside down when the CPUSA come to seek him out for influential favours.

It wasn't easy for director Stevenson, what with RKO mogul Howard Hughes interfering as he forced home his anti-communist slant, so much so the whole pic comes off as an almost there type of piece. Casting aside that it's all a bit daft these days, with its red hysteria leanings (though it serves as a most interesting social document of the era), there's a number of tight scenes and enough moody atmospherics to keep this out of basement hell.

Characterisations are rich in noir traditions, a protag whose past is back to bite him, a slinky femme fatale, a dutiful wife in the dark, and villains of substance. Be it Gomez's weasel Commie boss stomping around like a malevolent tyrant or Talman's fairground working hit-man for hire, the latter with a dress code as mirthful as it is strangely unnerving, the baddies offer up some sort of balance in a screenplay that's not sure where it ideally stands. The violence hits hard, with shocking deaths, and in good dark noir style the finale holds court for the right reasons.

Add in a cast who don't let anyone down and the great Musuraca showing his photographic skills (though not as much as we would like), then it's a more than decent viewing experience. But the proviso is that you do have to let the propaganda go above your head to get to those decent rewards. 6/10

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