The Gun Runners

1958

Crime / Drama / Film-Noir / Thriller

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 33%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 33%
IMDb Rating 6.3/10 10 878 878

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Plot summary

Remake of "To Have and Have Not" based on Hemingway short story. Plot reset to early days of Cuban revolution. A charter boat skipper gets entangled in gunrunning scheme to get money to pay off debts. Sort of a sea-going film noir with bad girl, smarmy villain, and the "innocent" drawn into wrong side of law by circumstances.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 11, 2024 at 09:55 PM

Director

Top cast

Audie Murphy as Sam Martin
Jack Elam as Arnold
Richard Jaeckel as Buzurki
John Qualen as Pop
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
758.99 MB
1280*694
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 22 min
Seeds ...
1.38 GB
1920*1042
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 22 min
Seeds 8

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ctomvelu1 6 / 10

Barnacle Bill he ain't

WWII hero and busy actor stepped into Bogart and Garfield's shoes for a third version of a Hemingway story, "To Have and Have not." The film is bare-bones, budget-wise, but makes good use of its Florida locations to tell the story of gun runners and romance among the the coastal folk. Murphy isn't half-bad in the lead role of a charter boat captain caught up in a smuggling scheme, although I could not quite get used to Murphy in a boat captain's hat (I was so used to seeing him in Army helmets and cowboy hats). Eddie Albert plays a very convincing bad guy, and the film is loaded with familiar faces of the period, including Paul Birch, John Qualen, Jack Elam, Herb Vigran and Everett Sloane. Worth a look, mainly for Murphy/

Reviewed by mackjay2 7 / 10

Murphy, Siegel Shine in a Decent Hemingway Adaptation

If we compare Don Siegel's 1958 version of Hemingway's "To Have and Have Not" to the two earlier film adaptations, it may suffer in a few ways, but it's far from a complete loss. Siegel directs Daniel Mainwaring's adaptation here and it's a solid entry in the B movie genre. Perhaps more solid than many, because it allows plenty of time for the development of the main characters and because it has intelligence and a sense of humor. The casting of Audie Murphy is just about inspired. In complete contrast to gruff Bogart and volatile John Garfield, Murphy brings his own brand of quiet, brooding containment. This is a pretty convincing characterization coming from an actor whose acting record is spotty between this film and his screen debut in John Huston's RED BADGE OF COURAGE, seven years earlier. It had seemed that Murphy would never truly live up to his sublime first appearance in that great film. Saddled (all puns intended) with mostly mediocre, if entertaining, material in the intervening years, Murphy must have appreciated this chance to show a range and depth that even his fans may not have expected. Murphy rises to every dramatic occasion in this film, from a convincingly physical, erotic relationship with wife Patricia Owens (in the same year she screamed in multiple images for THE FLY), to the high drama aboard ship in the film's climax. If this film remains unavailable for general viewers, it's a disservice to Murphy as an actor. Along for the ride are some supporting actors who tend to garner the tepid terms "stalwart" or "dependable". But Everett Sloane, Jack Elam and Richard Jaeckel bring hefty conviction to this project. Elam only has two scenes, but he makes us remember he was in the movie. And Sloane, taking the role so indelibly played by Juano Hernandez in THE BREAKING POINT (1950) with Garfield, does away with any doubt about his casting in this role. As the villain Hanagan, we have Eddie Albert. In case anyone hadn't already known it, Albert was an extremely good dramatic actor. His usual affability is used in this role, and set aside when necessary, to make a very believable criminal. The film was shot on the California coast, and we are asked to believe one sequence takes place in Cuba. It all works just fine. Siegel directs with his usual economy and sense of drama, making every scene count. This is a neglected, if minor, movie gem that deserves to be seen every now and then to remind us how satisfying a mid-budget Hollywood movie could be.

Reviewed by gavin6942 7 / 10

Deserves More Recognition

A remake of "To Have and Have Not" based on the Hemingway short story. The plot is reset to the early days of the Cuban revolution. A charter boat skipper (Audie Murphy) gets entangled in gunrunning scheme to get money to pay off debts.

Director Don Siegel may be the third person to tackle this tale, but he is not working fro ma dry well. By updating the story to involve the Cuban Revolution (before its success), the film takes on new life and now works as not only a great story but something of a historical document. Assisting Cuban rebels in 1958 may have had a very different sense at the time than it does today after fifty-plus years of Castro.

This was the first feature from the fledgling Seven Arts Productions, before they went on to make "The Misfits" (1961), "Lolita" (1962), and several others, including a large number of co-productions with Hammer films.

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