Hot Cars Explained

Hot Cars
Director:Don McDougall
Producer:Howard W. Koch
Screenplay:Don Martin
Richard H. Landau
Starring:John Bromfield
Carol Shannon
Joi Lansing
Ralph Clanton
Mark Dana
Charles Keane
George Sawaya
Music:Les Baxter
Cinematography:William Margulies
Editing:George A. Gittens
Studio:Schenck-Koch Productions
Bel-Air Productions
Distributor:United Artists
Runtime:60 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Hot Cars is a 1956 American film noir crime film directed by Don McDougall and written by Don Martin and Richard H. Landau. The film stars John Bromfield, Carol Shannon, Joi Lansing, Ralph Clanton, Mark Dana, Charles Keane, and George Sawaya. It was released on November 2, 1956, by United Artists.[1] [2]

Plot

Nick Dunn, a used car salesman, can't close a deal with customers Karen Winter and Arthur Markel, so he is fired. A sympathetic Markel has a car lot of his own and offers a job to Nick, who quits after discovering Markel's disreputable sales methods.

Nick and wife Jane have a financial dilemma when their son falls ill. Swallowing his pride, Nick asks for his job back with Markel, who promotes him to manager. But the criminal activity continues, until Nick becomes convinced that Markel has even ordered his henchman, Smiley Ward, to murder Davenport, a detective.

Jane is appalled by Nick's new line of work. He seeks solace in the company of the beautiful Karen, but when the cops come to investigate Davenport's death, Karen refuses to give Nick an alibi. Now a suspect, he tracks down Ward, who during their struggle at an amusement park falls from a roller coaster to his death. Nick tries to explain the hot-car racket to the police, implicating Karen and Markel.

Cast

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hot Cars (1956) - Overview - TCM.com. Turner Classic Movies. 24 October 2014.
  2. Web site: Hot Cars. TV Guide. 24 October 2014.