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Ace in the Hole (1951)
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling, Robert Arthur, Porter Hall, Richard Benedict
Screenwriter: Billy Wilder, Walter Newman, Lesser Samuels
Producer: Billy Wilder
Composer: Hugo Friedhofer
DVD Info
Release:
May 7, 2008
DVD Features:
- Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
- Dolby Digital Mono - English
Additional Release Materials:
- Audio Commentary - Neil Sinyard
- Featurettes - 1. "Portrait of a 60% Perfect Man"
- 2. Excerpts from a 1986 Wilder Appearance at the AFI
- Interviews - Walter Newman - Screenplay
- Trailers - Theatrical Trailer
Reviews
Douglas puts a perfect spin of self-loathing on his character in what is certainly one of his better performances.
As a filmmaker, the problem with being ahead of your time is that most audiences/critics/quasi-Luddites won't like your movie.
Quite possibly the most Billy Wilder-ey of all Wilder's films.
Not only did Wilder pillory the media in Ace in the Hole, he made monkeys out of everyone. Look at you, he said, you eat this drivel with both hands.
A lurid pulp indictment of exploitation, opportunism, doctored intelligence, torture for profit, insatiable greed, and shady journalism.
Wilder's cynical and uncompromising film of fame-seeking journalists, corrupt politicians, media circus, and the masses' appetite for live tragedy (a man trapped in a cave)was ahead of its time, which explains why it's one of his few flops.
As a diatribe against all that is worst in human nature, it has moments dipped in pure vitriol.
As dark and cynical as Wilder gets, Ace also features one of Douglas' very best performance. Nobody is sympathetic and nobody is likeable. That's why it's so great.
Douglas is wonderfully slimy as a scheming reporter in one of Wilder's most accomplished films.
Not unlike Fritz Lang’s equally misanthropic Scarlet Street, Ace in the Hole plays the squashing of one man’s human spirit for societal-weary gravitas.
The film is as grim and pitiless as the relentless drill that pounds away at the mountain top.
Ace in the Hole is badly weakened by a poorly constructed plot, which depends for its strength upon assumptions that are not only naive but absurd.
This 1951 film, about a cynical reporter who seizes on the plight of a man trapped in a mine shaft to promote his career, is cold, lurid, and fascinating, propelled by the same combination of moral outrage and sneaky admiration.


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