
The Sound of Fury (1950)
1h 25m | PG-13
A family man – desperate for a job – latches onto a friend who encourages him into being a criminal.
Director: Cy Endfield
Studio: Robert Stillman Productions
Genre: Crime, Drama
Video: 720p
Cast

Frank Lovejoy
as Howard Tyler

Kathleen Ryan
as Judy Tyler

Richard Carlson
as Gil Stanton

Lloyd Bridges
as Jerry Slocum

Katherine Locke
as Hazel Weatherwax

Adele Jergens
as Velma
Reviews
With another baby on the way, the jobless "Tyler" (Frank Lovejoy) is desperate to find work. Repeatedly rejected, he ends up doing some driving for the small-time thief "Slocum" (Lloyd Bridges) and after a few heists, their financial situation improves markedly. His wife "Judy" (Kathleen Ryan) thinks he's got a nightshift somewhere but boy does she get a shock when it emerges that her husband is now implicated in the brutal murder of the young son of a wealthy man. When his body is found the police apprehend both "Tyler" and "Slocum" and soon, spurned on by the sensationalising journalist "Stanton" (Richard Carlson), an angry mob is outside the police station - and it is baying for blood. For much of this film, it's a standard petty crime goes wrong drama and neither Lovejoy nor Bridges really stand out. It's the last half hour where this film comes into it's own a little more. Carlson is good as the odious newspaper man who cares little about anything but his task to increase circulation and with the increasing tension inside a police station besieged by a determined mob, Cy Endfield manages to create a denouement that shows just how thin the line between lawfulness and lawlessness can be - especially when goaded and galvanised by a sense of righteousness. Oddly enough, the conclusion still resonates quite effectively even now, and for thirty minutes - at least - this is a thought-provoking film to watch.