Set in the 1920s Depression, a gang of half-witted small-time hoods led by Slim Grissom kidnap heiress Barbara Blandish and Slim proceeds to fall in love with her. Remake of the 1948 British film “No Orchids for Miss Blandish.” —IMDb
Robert Burgess Aldrich was born in Cranston, Rhode Island, the son of Lora Lawson and newspaper publisher Edward B. Aldrich. He was a grandson of U.S. Senator Nelson W. Aldrich and a cousin to Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller. He was educated at the Moses Brown School, Providence, Rhode Island, and studied economics at the University of Virginia. In 1941, he left university for a minor job at the RKO Radio Pictures, thus beginning his career as a cinéaste.
He quickly rose in film production as an assistant director, he worked with Jean Renoir, Abraham Polonsky, Joseph Losey and Charlie Chaplin, working with the latter as an assistant on Limelight. He became a television director in the 1950s, directing his first feature film, The Big Leaguer, in 1953. In that time, Aldrich was the rare American example of the auteur film maker, depicting his liberal humanist thematic vision in many genres, in films such as Kiss Me Deadly (1955), today a film noir classic, The Big Knife (1955), a cinematic… read more
This ridiculously anachronistic vehicle was sputtering along with inappropriate pacing and missed editing beats. With very little plot and even less character development, this was excruciating to watch. If you want a 1970s take on the Great Depression era, please watch "Thieves Like Us" or "The Sting," and skip this.
Not Aldrich's most stylish film . On the plus side there is a dynamite performance by Kim Darby as a kidnap victim who may or may not be starting to enjoy her grim predicament. On the minus side, the gang of kidnappers, a Ma Barker-type and her motley brood, simply is not threatening ENOUGH to make you believe Darby is in a lot of danger. I couldn't help wondering why she didn't just up and leave.
Claude Chabrol: "It's part and parcel of the Aldrich dialectic that this world, alas, is not made for weaklings. It's either him or us. Here are the titles of his last twelve works, his own 'dirty dozen':" The Grissom Gang is the first of Aldrich's "dirty dozen" I've seen. It could have been subtitled "Where Coppola Fears to Tread." I'm now on a crusade to see the next eleven.
Film: nouna thin layer of something on a surfacei.e. a film of dust/oil/grease, a film of smokedimness or morbid growth affecting the eyes