The Man Who Died Twice
The Man Who Died Twice
| 06 June 1958 (USA)
The Man Who Died Twice Trailers

An innocent nightclub singer becomes mixed up in illegal drug dealings shortly after witnessing her husband's death and the murder of a couple of narcotics agents.

Reviews
GazerRise

Fantastic!

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CrawlerChunky

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Grimossfer

Clever and entertaining enough to recommend even to members of the 1%

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Edwin

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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bsmith5552

"The Man Who Died Twice" was a late Republic Pictures film Noire starring Rod Cameron and the infamous Vera Hruba Ralston. The film's title removes any mystery surrounding the murder of T. J. Brennan (Don Megowan) at the beginning of the story.Anyway, T.J. Brennan is believed to have perished in an over the cliff car accident. His widow Lynn (Ralston) is distraught. She witnesses the murders of two narcotics agents then goes into shock. Brennan's brother Bill (Cameron), who is a cop from Kansas City, arrives on the scene. He is seconded to the L.A. Police Force to aid in the solving of the mysteries.The cops discover a cache of heroin hidden in a statue in the Brennan apartment. They replace the drug with a simple powder, replace the statue and wait to see who tries to pick it up. Meanwhile, the Chicago "syndicate" sends two thugs, Hart (Gerald Milton) and Santoni( Richard Kartan) to retrieve the drugs which T.J. had tried to abscond with. Santoni murders the snoopy old informer Sally Hemphill (Jesslyn Fax) who had been assisting the police.Suddenly T.J. appears and tries to take off with the statue but.....................................................................................This film was one of the last to be released by Republic Pictures which went under in 1959. It was ably directed by Republic veterasn Joe Kane who directed just about every film made by the studio since the 40s. I couldn't help but notice the strong resemblance between Rod Cameron and Don Megowan who play and look like brothers. As far as I know, this was their only film together. The best that can be said about Vera Ralston is that as an actress, she was a good figure skater.

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mark.waltz

I give Vera Hruba Ralston credit for hanging onto her career even though her films were pretty much overlooked and underviewed. She lasted nearly two decades as the favorite of Republic studio head Herbert J. Yates, pretty much the Norma Shearer to his Irving Thalberg, or basically the Marion Davies to his William Randolph Hearst. Hers was a career guided by the boss and for 17 years, misguided as a film star. I've been fascinated by her for a while now, finding more of her rare films. She's a wooden actress, rather bland looking yet there's a fascinating aura about her that doesn't excuse her lack of talent, but it's difficult to take your eyes off of her.Not many actors lose their accent when they sing, but Ralston does. I've seen her sing in a few films, and it never fails to hear her slow speaking accent and then hear a non accented singing voice. Ralston is a sudden widow who witnessed a murder involving narcotic agents and has a breakdown. She's quizzed by tough talking Rod Cameron, protected by dumb as nails (but no one I'd want to mess with) Mike Mazurki, and possibly hiding something. Ralston doesn't have the ability to express anything really, so you have to go along with the idea that she's either a complete innocent or totally bad to the bone and able to hide her feelings simply by closing off her mind to the meaning of everything she says or does. I give the writers credit for playing around this lack of ability, and it doesn't hurt that the black and white photography and editing are above average. What's unfortunate is the slow pacing and often stagnant acting by minor actors.

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alancmiller

This is one of those noir films that is salvaged from ignominy by the fine work of actors in minor roles. Rod Cameron, the male lead does a workmanlike job, but leading lady Vera Ralston is almost unwatchable. The script calls for a traumatized woman, but she gives us a helpless and annoying whiner. This would have been a much better film had she been replaced by a Marie Windsor, Caroline Jones, or Jane Randolph. Unfortunately, Ralston was married to the the boss of Republic Pictures, so she managed to mess up a lot of movies before she retired. Fortunately there are several good character actors here including Louis Jean Heydt as police captain Andy Hampton, Mike Mazurki as the lovesick bartender Rak, Jesslyn Fax as the snoopy old lady, and Gerald Milton & Richard Kaplan as the quarrelsome hit men. Its not The Blue Dahlia, but I'd give this film a 6.5 on a scale of ten.

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southfar

This is an important movie in regards to the history of Republic Pictures. Starting in 1957, Republic technically didn't make films anymore, but released or distributed films made by independent companies. But only one of these independent companies was made up of personnel from the original Republic Pictures, Ventura Productions. The Man Who Died Twice was the last film of seven or eight made by Ventura (December 1957), released by Republic in June 1958. So technically, this was the last real Republic Production, with Republic regulars at the helm: Joseph Kane, director, Jack Marta, director of photography, Bob Mark, makeup supervision, Rudy Ralston, Producer, etc. The two top stars were Republic stalwarts, Rod Cameron and Vera Ralston. It has a good story, is paced well, as usual, by Kane (named by Gene Autry to be the John Ford of B movies) and photographed beautifully in black and white and Republic's wide screen process, Naturama, by Marta. It is Vera Ralston's last film and Kane's last film for Republic. He moved on to directing westerns on TV and then in the mid 60s did some directing and 2nd unit directing for films. Republic collapsed in mid 1959, more valuable for the land its studio was sitting on and for its film library. Do your best to try and see the 70 minute film. It has a great supporting cast headed by Mike Mazurki (who appeared with Vera and John Wayne in 1945's Dakota from Republic, also directed by Kane).

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