- Flamingo Road (film)
Infobox Film
name = Flamingo Road
caption = Original theatrical poster
director =Michael Curtiz
producer =Jerry Wald
writer = Play:Robert Wilder Sally Wilder
Screenplay:Edmund H. North
narrator =
starring =Joan Crawford Zachary Scott Sydney Greenstreet David Brian
music =Max Steiner
cinematography =Ted D. McCord
editing =Folmar Blangsted
distributor =Warner Bros.
released = flagicon|United States6 May ,1949
runtime = 94 min.
country = USA
language = English
budget =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id = 1:17724
imdb_id = 0041373"Flamingo Road" (1949) is a
Warner Bros. feature film starringJoan Crawford ,Zachary Scott ,Sydney Greenstreet andDavid Brian in a story about small town political corruption. The screenplay byEdmund H. North was based upon a play by Robert and Sally Wilder. The film was directed byMichael Curtiz and produced byJerry Wald . "Flamingo Road" has been released to VHS and DVD.Plot and cast
Lane Bellamy (Crawford) is a hootchie-kootchie dancer stranded in a small town in the
Southern United States . She becomes romantically involved with Fielding Carlisle (Scott), a deputy sheriff whose career is controlled by Sheriff Titus Semple (Greenstreet), a corrupt political boss who runs the town. Titus dislikes Lane and mounts a campaign against her. She has difficulty finding work and is arrested on a trumped-up morality charge. Eventually, she finds work as a hostess at aroadhouse run by Lute Mae Sanders (Gladys George ). There, she meets Dan Reynolds (Brian), a political opponent of Titus. She charms Dan into marrying her, and the couple moves to the town's best neighborhood, Flamingo Road. A drunken Fielding then calls on the couple and commits suicide, giving Titus another weapon in his bid to ruin Lane and her husband. Lane confronts Semple and accidentally kills him. At the end, Lane is in prison awaiting a ruling and Dan indicates he will stick by her. Cast includesVirginia Huston ,Fred Clark , andGertrude Michael .Reception
Howard Barnes in the "New York Herald Tribune" wrote, "Joan Crawford acquits herself ably in an utterly nonsensical and undefined part...It's no fault of hers she cannot handle the complicated romances and double crosses in which she is involved." [Quirk, Lawrence J.. "The Films of Joan Crawford". The Citadel Press, 1968.]
Cultural impact
The film was adapted into a 1980s American television series, "
Flamingo Road ".ee also
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Joan Crawford filmography References
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