Suddenly (1954)

Suddenly is a 1954 black and white American noir crime film directed by Lewis Allen with a screenplay written by Richard Sale. The drama stars Frank Sinatra and Sterling Hayden, and features James Gleason and Nancy Gates.

DirectorLewis Allen

WriterRichard Sale (written for the screen by)

Cast
Frank Sinatra as John Baron
Sterling Hayden as Sheriff Tod Shaw
James Gleason as Peter “Pop” Benson
Nancy Gates as Ellen Benson
Kim Charney as Peter “Pidge” Benson III
Willis Bouchey as Dan Carney, Chief Secret Service Agent
Paul Frees as Benny Conklin (also voice of TV announcer)
Christopher Dark as Bart Wheeler
James O’Hara as Jud Hobson (credited as James Lilburn)
Ken Dibbs as Wilson
Clark Howat as Haggerty
Charles Smith as Bebop
Paul Wexler as Deputy Sheriff Slim Adams
Dan White as Burg
Richard Collier as Ed Hawkins
Roy Engel as first driver
Ted Stanhope as second driver
Charles Wagenheim as Kaplan
John Berardino as trooper

Watch “Suddenly” (1954)

Plot

In post-war America, a train carrying the president of the United States is scheduled to make a stop in the small town of Suddenly, California. Claiming to be FBI agents checking up on security before the president’s arrival, three men arrive at the home of the Bensons: Ellen, a widow, her young son “Pidge,” and her father-in-law, “Pop” Benson. The house is on top of a hill that looks down on the station where the presidential train is scheduled to stop, making it a perfect perch from which to shoot the president when his train stops. However, it soon becomes clear that the men are not Government agents but assassins, led by the ruthless John Baron, who take over the house and hold the family hostage, planning to shoot the president from a window in the home which has a good view of the railway station.

Sheriff Tod Shaw arrives with Dan Carney, the Secret Service agent in charge of the president’s security detail. When he does, Baron and his gangsters shoot Carney dead and a bullet fractures Shaw’s left arm. Baron straightens his arm and lets him go to the bedroom. Mrs. Benson puts his arm in a sling and they all return to watch the events unfold.

Baron boasts about the Silver Star he won in the war for killing 16 Japs. (He later changes the story to killing 27 Jerries.) They set up a G/K.43 service rifle at the window, secured to a metal table. Baron explains he has nothing against the president but he is being paid $500,000 to kill him and money is his only motive. He has been paid half up front.

Pop broke the TV earlier and the TV repair man arrives amid the scene. All are threatened that the kid will be shot if they do not obey.

Baron sends Benny, one of his two henchmen, to check on the president’s schedule, but shortly after confirming to Baron that the train is scheduled to stop in Suddenly at 5 p.m., Benny is killed in a shootout with the police. Meanwhile, Jud, a television repairman, has shown up at the house and also becomes a hostage. Pidge goes to his grandfather’s dresser to get some medication and notices a fully loaded revolver which he replaces with his toy cap gun.

When the hostages try to appeal to Baron’s patriotism, it becomes clear that he has none: he has been hired to kill the president for money. But when Baron is confronted by the sheriff on the risks of killing the president, including whether he will ever see (let alone live to enjoy) his money, Baron’s remaining henchman begins to show some reluctance to go through with the assassination. For Baron, however, these are the very least of his concerns, and it soon becomes clear that he is a psychopath whose pleasure comes from killing – who he kills and for what reason being of little importance to him.

In the meantime, the assassins have mounted a WWII German sniper rifle onto a metal table by the window overlooking the train station. Jud, under the guise of fixing the TV, discreetly hooks the table up to the 5000-volt plate output of the family television. Pop Benson then intentionally spills a cup of water on the floor beneath the table. Although the hope is that Baron will be shocked and killed in this way, it is his remaining henchman who touches the table first and is electrocuted, reflexively firing the rifle repeatedly and attracting the attention of police at the train station. Baron shoots and mortally wounds Jud, disconnects the electrical hook-up and aims the rifle as the president’s train arrives at the station, only to see the train pass straight through. As an utterly surprised Baron says “[i]t didn’t stop,” Ellen Benson shoots Baron in the abdomen, and Shaw picks up a gun and shoots him a second time. Baron, having dropped to the floor, begs for mercy —— “No, don’t…no, please…no, no, no” —— and dies.

In the aftermath of the harrowing incident, outside the local hospital Shaw confirms to Ellen that Jud “didn’t make it.” Telling Ellen that he needs to go back to his office, Shaw then makes plans to meet Ellen after church the next day, and they kiss. After she leaves, a driver stops to ask for directions and then asks for the name of the town. When Shaw says it is “Suddenly,” the driver notes that “that’s a funny name for a town.” After the driver pulls away, Shaw says to himself, “Oh, I don’t know. I don’t know about that.”

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