IMPRISON TRAITOR TRUMP.

Monday, April 30, 2012

No Down Payment - 1957



No Down Payment (1957) is an unblinking, fly-on-the-wall look at 1950s suburbia. This depiction has a sharp and beguiling quality of self-awareness, which one senses was careful and deliberate. There are issues raised, but no real messages that are not tempered the by the characters’ helplessness to be anything other than what they are.

The very examination of suburbia as a topic might be considered dated, as dated as the copper Jell-O molds on Sheree North’s kitchen wall, but the outlook of the movie is bravely modern. In some respects, issues discussed here, like the precarious financial balancing act in a credit-powered economy, are still strangling us today.

Long post. Spoilers ahead.

Just about four years ago we covered the movie Strangers When We Meet (1960) here. I wish I had known about “No Down Payment” at the time I wrote about that movie, because they would have made great companion pieces. They are both about suburbia in Southern California, the car culture, a young post-war population coming of age as the 1950s “Silent Generation”. They also have in common the actress Barbara Rush. In “Strangers” she plays the wife of Kirk Douglas, a woman comfortably settled in her suburban kitchen, but ambitious for her husband to excel and obtain even more for them. She is devastated to learn of his extramarital affair.

In No Down Payment, Barbara Rush is the more settled wife of Pat Hingle, who is a more modestly successful owner of an appliance store. They appear to have a happy marriage, though not without stress. The two movies have a couple of important differences, however. One is that “Strangers” is in color and has a more glossy look to it, a more soap-opera storyline. It is focused more tightly on the extramarital affair of Kirk Douglas and Kim Novak. The other characters are like satellites that bounce off their relationship.

No Down Payment was directed by Martin Ritt, who had a particular knack for introspective films. He was one of those directors who ran up against blacklisting in the 1950s (a couple of the screenwriters on this project were blacklisted), and we'll be covering at least two other Ritt-directed movies this summer.

This is an ensemble piece. The acting is very good, and the writing is excellent. It has a quiet, black and white look, and being the earlier picture by three years there is a less cynical view of the suburban jungle. However, the examination of this world is refreshingly straightforward, and manages to take what is a familiar landscape a turn it into a strange new world. The so-called Silent Generation may have been less political and more secretive about its anxieties, but we can see that there was a lot of self evaluation going on.


The film begins with a shot of interstate highways all forming a tangle of knots on which the flow of traffic is never ending. Jeffrey Hunter and Patricia Owens are a new a couple coming to live the in a housing development called Sunrise Hills, which is advertised on a billboard as “a better place for better living”. A moving van follows them. I love how they pass several billboards for several different kitschy-sounding housing developments, all promising bliss.

He is a young engineer, she is an attractive young wife for whom being an attractive young couple is very important. The veneer is what appeals to her.

It is Sunday, this moving day. They drive by a modern-looking church where the homogenous congregation, their new neighbors among them, file out into the morning sunshine. Mr. Hunter and Miss Owens beam at each other. Truly, they have come to the promised land.

Pat Hingle and Barbara Rush are solid, steady, nice people, who introduce our first set of cracks in the veneer of Sunrise Hills. Miss Rush brings their children home from church, annoyed to see Mr. Hingle washing their car where everyone can see him. He does not attend church with them and his son wonders if his father is going to hell.

Another couple is played by Tony Randall and Sheree North. He is a used car salesman. They have one son. Tony Randall is a man deeply dissatisfied with his luck, who wants to be Somebody, meaning Somebody Rich. He cares nothing for real achievement but wants the glitz and the gloss as fast as possible. He is also a charming and irritating alcoholic. Mr. Randall is a marvel in this movie. His work here is excellent. He is a desperate extrovert and a tragic loser, still possessing his comic vulnerability of the characters he played in Doris Day movies, but here it takes a darker spin.

Randall’s money troubles are a major theme for the 1950s suburban couple and hence the title of the movie.

“No money down. Nothing to lose. Just change your name. Go away. Hide. Quit your job. And the finance company will never know where you are…. We’re only 25 years in debt.”

Pat Hingle affably consoles Hunter on the worry of a mortgage, "Nobody in this housing development is allowed to own a home they can actually afford."

And these houses are cracker boxes.  What would they have thought of today's McMansions?

This is meant to be humorous party conversation but there’s also a very strong indictment against the new 1950s economy, which has implications today. Jeffrey Hunter, the new guy on the block, marvels “Twenty years ago none of us could have afforded a house like this. I think we were born in the right time.”

Pat Hingle has another viewpoint, maintaining that the Greatest Generation was perhaps the generation behind the eight ball. He talks of their youth of poverty, of going on relief in the Depression, “I don’t call that being born at the right time.”

But he concedes, “I guess we do have more security than our parents ever had,” and, “there’s not many guys that have to sweat for a living, not anymore, not in the States.”

Jeffrey Hunter, a GI-Bill college graduate is involved in automation, a science which involves inventing things to make fewer employees necessary, and about which he feels guilty. That is his cross to bear. He will have others before the film is over.

He fixes Tony Randall’s son’s radio, pulling out a screwdriver from his inner suit coat pocket -- must be a trait of engineers -- and tinkers with something magical called a transistor. No microchips yet, but we’re getting there.

We old movie buffs love to watch classic films as an insight to a particular era gone by, but most of these films, whether it’s a movie about the 1930s or the 1940s or any era, are not self aware or self-conscious about that era. When Buster Keaton chases a streetcar he is not saying to the camera “look -- it’s the 1920s and there are not going to be streetcars in another 20 years.” “No Down Payment” is totally, deliciously conscious of its era. It’s almost as if they are picking things out of the air on purpose and putting them in the box and saying, “This is what we’re going to seal up in a time capsule to tell people what we’re like in 1957.”

The floor plan in the houses is identical, right down to where they choose to put their television sets. Their children sit in front of the TVs like zombies.  Ten years later they will "tune in, turn on, drop out," but that Zen-like self indulgence and self absorption all began cross-legged in front of the TV when they were kids.

Tony Randall spends money he does not have to buy his son a bike, because every new thing his son gets is a trophy to announce to others his own success.

The wives welcome the new neighbors with the manta that their development is a “A great place to raise children.” It truly is an incubator of sorts.

When Hunter and Owens tour the empty rooms of their new home, which is situated cheek-by-jowl with other houses on the street, they see the last couple of the group, played by Cameron Mitchell and Joanne Woodward -- through their large windows, cuddling in their bedroom. The scene reminded me of a passage in William Manchester’s narrative history of the 20th century, The Glory and the Dream (Bantam Books:NY, 1974) p. 782 - “Picture windows became windows for looking in.”

Much later in the movie, when preparing for bed, Patricia Owens meticulously pins their bedroom drapes closed.

Cameron Mitchell and Joanne Woodward are, in a sense, almost for what passes like the “wrong side of the tracks” couple in this housing developing that has no tracks and therefore supposed to be egalitarian. They are both originally from Tennessee and came out to Southern California during the war. (Tony Randall even teasingly refers to them as Daisy Mae and Li’l Abner.) Mitchell is a highly decorated World War II vet, who saw action in the Pacific theater. He runs a gas station in their community, but he has ambitions to be their village chief of police.

At home, he fills the walls of his garage with his memorabilia from the war, Japanese flags and swords and his medals pinned to a board. He misses being in uniform and having authority. Joanne Woodward displays again her remarkable facility for displaying a character almost as if she were a holding up her adopted personality like glass ball and we can see right through it all sides. Her ability to thoroughly crawl into the skin of her characters might make her a candidate for being called the Meryl Streep of her day. Except that I think Meryl Streep’s process for developing a character is entirely cerebral, whereas Joanne Woodward’s seems to be an intuitive and playful sense of the emotional palette of her characters.

Her character has no children, desperately wants children, and is so much like a child herself, the babysitter of the children in the neighborhood. She is bouncy, joking and goofy. Like her husband she has very little education, and like him, she is sensitive about that. She is delighted that the upwardly mobile and beautiful Patricia Owens befriends her. She feels unworthy. We are told that she had a child before they were married, but at his insistence she gave it up for adoption. We later discover that he believed that the child was not his.

When we first see them, they appear happy with each other, but later on his dissatisfaction with his life manifests itself into dissatisfaction with her.

The new neighbors are introduced at a barbecue, the suburban tribal ritual. The men check out each other’s wives, and check out each other’s wartime service.

A subplot to the movie involves one of Pat Hingle's employees named Iko, played by Aki Aleong. Like the other men in the neighborhood, he is a former GI, but because of his Japanese ancestry, he is discriminated against in this restricted neighborhood. Housing developments restricted to whites only was common as dirt in the 1950s. Iko has a wife and children, and a television set, too, but he wants more. He wants to live closer to his job, and upward mobility like everyone else. He appeals to Hingle to help him make an application to the council and here we see Hingle’s greatest conflict. He likes Iko. Hingle and his wife have had dinner at Iko’s house. He wants to help, but he hesitates.

So torn by the issue, and perhaps upset with himself more than anyone, he picks a fight with his wife about racial prejudice. She likes Iko and his family as well, but echoes the same concerns about breaking conformity that Hingle has but doesn’t want to admit.

"How can you call yourself a good Christian and speak like that?" he shouts, still mad at her for wanting him to go to church.

"Don't you bring the church into this."

"What good is the church if it can't teach a person to lend a helping hand to some human being that really deserves it." She throws the prejudice right back in his face where it belongs. The problem of racial prejudice may exist in society, and it may exist in the town council, but first and foremost, he must wipe it out in himself and have the courage of his convictions. First one must have courage, and then one must have convictions.

Another passage of William Manchester, who refers to the Alexis de Tocqueville’s 19th century assessment of a young America,

“Though Americans took great pride in talking about their individualism, he [de Tocqueville] noted, their special genius -- and the source of their greatest potential weakness -- lay in their ways of cooperation with each other…creating a dictatorship of the majority. ‘In times of equality,’ he wrote, ‘no matter what political laws men devise for themselves, it is safe to foresee that trust in common opinion will become a sort of religion, with the majority as the prophet.’”

Though social conformity is a strong force, the money angle is what drives them more fiercely. Tony Randall, tragic with a drink in his hand and a smile on his lips and that wonderfully giddy giggle, "what this country needs is easy credit. No man should have to pay cash for anything. No money down is the secret to prosperity...if only the banks would loosen up, every man could have anything he wants, not when these old and washed up -- now, when he's young and washed up."

Interesting that at their backyard barbecue they first dance to a song on a hi fi called “Something's Got to Give,” a 1940s swing number here in a more sedate arrangement. These people are not kids. Rock n’ roll is not their era. However, later on in the movie they dance to a “rock” number called “The Drive-in Rock.” Car culture and rock n’ roll in one flick of the switch by the director.

They march into each other’s homes, dance with each other’s wives, open each other's refrigerators. There is a sense of community and camaraderie. A very interesting scene when a seed is planted for later plot development -- Tony Randall dances with Jeffrey Hunter's wife, and gets a little smarmy because he's been drinking. Hunter stands by watching, angry but does nothing. He is passive, looking for some social clue as to how to behave in this new setting.

It is Cameron Mitchell who takes over and comes to the rescue in a manly and authoritative way. He cuts in on Tony Randall and begins to dance with Patricia Owens himself, a proper and gentlemanly dance. She is grateful and thanks him, and his “Not at all, Ma’am,” is a sign of his Southern courtliness. He has saved her, and at the same time humiliated Hunter by taking action. Later on however, flushed with his success and how good being a hero has made him feel, he begins to pursue Patricia Owens on his own.

More observations on contemporary society by Joanne Woodward who recalls a little brother who died of pneumonia, "Just think, today he could've taken one shot of penicillin and he could've gotten over it like a cold."

No babysitters. They leave their kids with each other or leave them alone. Tony Randall gets into trouble with a shady business deal and runs away in the middle of a party at his house, and his wife and Pat Hingle follow. The party continues in their home without them, their neighbors unconcerned about their absence. Their little boy gets up and wants a drink so the presiding grownups give him a bottle of Coke.

Today we might hesitate over a myriad of legal repercussions of staying in a neighbor's home, unasked, with their child unattended by the parents. Today we would hesitate giving 8 ounces of sugar and caffeine in the middle of the night to a small child, knowing we would have to probably scrape him off the ceiling.

Sheree North has finally had it with Tony Randall and tells him to get a steady job and stop his get rich quick schemes. "You're never going to make a million, so stop dreaming about it!" It is the worst thing she can ever say to him, the cruelest thing and yet the kindest thing. She is effectively telling him and us the American dream is not for everybody. We cannot all be rich. Some of us will just be lucky if we can pay our bills.

Cameron Mitchell is turned down for the job of chief of police, and he becomes surly. He has no college degree. Instead of trying to step up into society, he now declares it his enemy. He also goes after Patricia Owens.

Hingle makes a prescient remark, "Pretty soon a guy’s going to have to have a master's degree to clean toilets."

Mr. Mitchell also kicks in the TV tube. Now we know that the earth is cracking. When you've destroyed your TV, your whole world is shot.

When Hunter is away on a business trip, Cameron Mitchell comes calling on Patricia Owens, and we are meant to conclude that he has raped her. She runs not to the police, but to the neighbors. Hingle immediately wants to call the police, but she tells him not to. Barbara Rush suggests they call her doctor, but Owens refuses that as well. They let her stay the night and offer comfort and protection, but there is no suggestion of seeking justice.

By the way, another subtle point being made by the scriptwriter and director: the little daughter of Hingle and Rush interrupts while they are trying to comfort and get the story out of Patricia Owens. She refers to the new neighbor lady by her first name. Author William Manchester also had an observation on this:

“The term ‘polite society’ fell into disuse because society wasn’t polite any more. The increasing use of first names was extraordinary. Once it had been limited to family and friends…the suburbanite who arrived home to find her bathroom being used by a strange boy might be greeted, ‘Hi, Doris.’ In suburbia, this was looked upon as just friendliness. Any objection to it would be regarded as snobbish and resented.” (pp.782-783.)

When Jeffrey Hunter learns of the attack he tries to avenge her, unsuccessfully. He tries also to comfort her in a nice speech about sharing each other's burdens. For the 1950s this was probably a very loving and affirming scene. He reminds her that she need not be ashamed or feel defiled. Today, however we might look at it with a different viewpoint. Instead of telling her she has the right to feel angry and the right to seek justice for the crime of violence done to her, it looks as though she is merely being forgiven by a loving husband for being damaged goods.

No charges are brought against Cameron Mitchell. Instead, the old stock movie solution of having him be killed. This is so much more convenient in movie terms. Her shame is not brought out into the open with a public trial, and he goes away. It is a disappointment, but great strides have been taken in this movie to explain the 1950s, so perhaps we can't expect them to be too forward-looking. It is enough to deal with the problems of the present.

Hingle considers all of this, Randall’s alcoholism and his money problems chasing the dream, Cameron Mitchell's violent reaction to not measuring up in post-war society, the racial prejudice that faces Iko.

"I guess owning a house with a deep freeze is not the answer." He wants to know how they got to be where they are. "Whatever it is that makes us afraid to help Iko. That makes Jerry afraid that he's not going to make it big. That makes Troy afraid he's going to be a nobody unless he's wearing some kind of uniform. Afraid, afraid. Now if we can find out what that is, I think we've got the answer."

We are escorted out of Sunrise Hills on another lazy Sunday, watching new widow Joanne Woodward moving out of her home. At the church we see that Pat Hingle has finally joined his family, and that Iko and his family are new parishioners. It's all lovely and homogenous. If you don't look too hard for the cracks.

I would have like to have seen the effort Hingle made in council to get Iko accepted. I would like to know what denomination this now less homogenous congregation represents. I’d like to know where Joanne Woodward is going, as her taxi speeds by the billboard for Sunrise Hills and up the exit ramp to the interstate.


*********
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Memories in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century. Her newspaper column on classic films, Silver Screen, Golden Memories is syndicated nationally.

25 comments:

Kimberly J.M. Wilson said...

Whenever I think of the 1950s I see images of Levittowns--planned communities with cheap housing designs that all looked alike. While I've never seen No Down Payment, I know of it. It does sound like an excellent example of the booming 1950s consumer culture that took over America. It really is a time capsule piece.

Caftan Woman said...

I was thinking about "No Down Payment" last week and wondering where it has gone because it is one of those movies seen in younger years that I wanted to revisit in my maturity. Now I don't have to - you've done it for me. Movies can do much to help us walk in another's shoes.

One thing that stood out in my memory was that the Hingle-Rush relationship felt very real.

Your comments on Joanne Woodward's acting style give much to consider as it relates to both her appeal and her talent. Here is a "somewhat crude" remark on her appeal from my hubby when Ms. Woodward was on "Inside the Actor's Studio": "Hey, finally a guest who isn't an asshole." Obviously, he holds Joanne in high regard.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Yes, ladies, it's a real bit of popular history effectively documented.

CW, I know what you mean about seeing a movie in younger days and wanting to revisit it with the perspective and emotional and intellectual tools maturity gives us.

Your beloved husband is a discerning chap. He really puts his finger on it.

Grand Old Movies said...

Really great, perceptive post. Interesting how the movie captures the nuances of middle-class life in a microcosm of the era. Wonder how this film would compare to Douglas Sirk's look at middle-class life in his 50s films (eg, All That Heaven Allows).

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Thanks, GOM. The 1950s seems to have been an era for self-analysis.

policomic said...

Another great review/analysis, Ms. Lynch. I have to see this! Also, every American with an interest in where we have been and how we have become what we are should read that Manchester book.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Thanks, policomic. I agree that Manchester's book is an excellent survey of the 20th century. I've enjoyed re-reading it so much that my own copy is falling apart.

ClassicBecky said...

Just a wonderful, insightful post about this movie, Jacqueline. Very impressive. I haven't seen it in a very long time either, and I don't know why it isn't shown anymore, at least not that I know of. It was truly wonderful ensemble acting.

The story reminded me of Colleen McCullough's book "The Women's Room" -- the story of the protagonist as a 5o's suburban housewife. Certainly McCullough's book was of a different era, one that did not revere the 50's in any way, but the characters are very similar.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Thank you so much, Becky. Interesting comparision with the "The Women's Room", which I don't think I ever read, though I've read other McCullough works. We think of the 1950s as complacent, but there was a lot of fireworks there under the surface.

Shari D said...

Loved your review ~ quite insightful. Jeffrey Hunter's character was quite conflicted, along with the others of course, but when he pulls out that screwdriver from his inside jacket pocket, the first thing I thought of was he is the embodiment of the new "nerd" and wondered if his character would end up later in life with the pocket protector in his shirts, and a sliderule always close at hand!

It's a movie I have always enjoyed watching, the few times I was able to find it on TV over the years, probably because it was made the year I was born. It tells a more revealing tale of life in Postwar "Levittown/GI Bill" America, putting the Cleavers and the other schmaltzy "perfect families" of 1950's TV America firmly in their place. In fact, I enjoyed it enough that I have it recorded ~ on a VHS tape. Unfortunately, I don't have a VCR hooked up any longer, and for whatever reason I have not seen it scheduled on TCM. If they did show it, I missed it.

However, because I started wondering about it again for some reason in the last few days, I Googled it, discovered it listed on TCM as far as an incredibly short review, cast list and other technical data is concerned, but nothing about it being scheduled for viewing.

Then I went back to the list of Googled results, and discovered much to my pleasure that the entire movie, uncut and as is, is posted on Youtube! This was just done in July, so apparently someone else who had the opportunity and technology posted it for everyone to enjoy! I just found it there yesterday, and am on my second go~round!

Hope this will become a more visible part of the genre of movies showing real life in America, because it really does touch on many of the conflicting issues and rapid changes in attitudes and some of the then~unidentified problems with post~war PTSD. I know ~ I grew up a child of the backlash of several of these issues. Of course the movie can't show all the details of the results of the actions the characters take ~ there just isn't time. I guess that is left up to us to imagine, seeing that everything seemed to have one of those "happy ever after" endings for those remaining in Sunrise Hills.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Thank you, Shari. I appreciate very much your interesting observations on the movie, and the era. I didn't know it was on YouTube. A great opportunity for new fans to see it. I don't know if everybody lived happily ever after in Sunrise Hills. I still wonder where Joanne Woodward went. That'd be an interesting sequel. Thanks again.

Anne said...

This is what makes me wonder if Jeffrey Hunter and Patricia Owens's
characters had even consumated thier marriage

The kid's got a broken radio, Jeff pulls out a screw driver and sets to work.

Tony Randall gets smarmy with Jeff's wife and he's a frozen bystander...if Tony was mashing a radio, I think Jeff's character would have sprun into action.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Mr. Hunter clearly has his priorities. And his pocket tools.

Unknown said...

The subdivision in the movie is really Marquez Knolls in Pacific Palisades. There is a home on Jacon Way listed at over1,600,000

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Welcome, Mark. That's an amazing price. I guess all Tony Randall had to do was wait 60 years and then sell his house to be a millionaire.

Sharid57 said...

Hello again! I was doing some more research on some things regarding some of the details behind the making of this movie, and came again on this review. I reread it, along with all the comments, searching for bits of the information I was seeking. I noticed a couple of things I wanted to mention this time.

Twice, at least, I noticed that "Hunter and Rush" were identified as the new young married couple, when it's "Hunter and Owens" who played those parts. (One up by the photo of parishioners exiting the church at the beginning of the review, and I think the other one is in the paragraph describing their examination of their new home.)

I wondered if perhaps it might have been an unconscious slip due to the fact that Hunter and Rush were indeed a married couple in real life from December, 1950 until sometime in 1955, when they separated and divorced. They had a son, Christopher in 1952.

Another minor issue involves the issuance of a 'can' of Coke to the young son of Hingle's and Rush's characters. Coke only came in bottles back then, as were shown being removed from the fridge, and cans were away off in the future at this point. As I said, it's a minor issue, but I know reviewers are generally sticklers for accuracy, so I thought perhaps you might like to know.

I too wondered immediately about the wisdom of offering a small child an 8 ounce bottle of concentrated sugar water and caffeine in the middle of the night when he said he was only "thirsty" and likely would have received a glass of water from his own mother, if anything at all, had she been there. "Scraping him off the ceiling" following a Coke so late was exactly what I thought when I saw this happen, and how very pleased his mother would have been at the prospect!

The other part I happened to have also wondered about at the end, were all the missing puzzle pieces, such as how the Town Council were pursuaded to throw out their documented prejudices and allow a member and his family of the Asian culture to purchase a home in their all-white enclave and become church attending, mortgage interest and tax paying participants in the Caucasian-only world? And where was Jone Woodward's character going in a taxi at the end of the movie? She was a widow, without a husband to support her now. How could she possibly survive in the world where every woman had to be married, with no education, no job skills, and no husband? What about the Flaggs? Did Jerry succumb to his alcoholism or did he keep his new job working in Herm's appliance store?

So many unanswered questions left behind when the movie ended? What a soap opera this would have become if allowed to flourish and the characters were fleshed out more fully!

Sharid57 said...

I think another source of resentment and false superiority that Cameron Mitchell's character feels against Jeffrey Hunter's character is that while Cameron was sweating it out in the Pacific theater during the War, earning medals and respect while wearing the uniform, Hunter's character was "sweating it out" by working his intelligence in the desert of the Southwest United States, working on "the calculations" for constructing the first atomic weapons to be used to end the conflict.

Mitchell's semi-hidden displays in his garage of his medals, uniforms and other souvenirs of battle in the jungles are the only things that give him a sense of self-importance and self worth. Being confronted with a college educated neighbor who escaped the life threatening conflict he was forced to endure was just more than he could handle.

And Hunter's character, David, felt somehow less of a man for having escaped the conflicts that all his neighbors had to endure and survive, even though he certainly provided a considerable service on his own. Something about not having a thrilling story to tell later when asked by his children "What did you do in the War, Daddy?" was a troubling prospect for those who managed through luck, education, or physical infirmity to escape the battles fought by their contemporaries.

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Welcome, Sharid, and thank you so much for adding your insightful comments to the discussion. I agree, the "theater of war envy" which played such a big part of veterans' relationships was definitely a factor here. And thanks for pointing out my slip-ups. I got tangled in the names, and, you're right, it was indeed a bottle and not a can of Coke. Now I'm wondering if it was 8 ounces or 12 ounces? These are things that keep a blogger up at night.

Unknown said...

In the early 1990's I caught this movie on AMC back when they showed great movies,
and that same week
I bumped into Pat Hingle standing in line at the bank in North Hollywood.

I walked up to him,
said hello,
and told him how much I enjoyed his performance in No Down Payment.
He smiled and said "Why thank-you son, that was a long time ago".
I shook his hand, and off I went :)

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Thanks for sharing that neat story. Pat Hingle's work was great in this movie. I used to love AMC.

da90027 said...

Actually SHarid57 Coke started canning their product in 1956. By 1957 it was available in stores in cans. Big time soda can collector here.

stevenarclight said...

We bought a home there in 1953!
It's still there.
Many pleasant thoughts.
I remember the homes, and the cars and the air was still fresh.

Glenn Evans said...

I grew up in a cookie cutter suburb of southern California. No doubt the tensions of the people depicted in No Down Payment existed as they always have everywhere. Whether they concentrated within the 4 or 5 house radius of a backyard cookout may be a bit of a stretch. The director deserves some creative license in creating a compelling drama and he took it. But the notion that conformity and housing can inherently create problems has always seemed a little wrong to me. The intellectual protestations of that lifestyle and it's ensuing ills have over time proven completely wrong. People simply took advantage of a response to what was a stunning housing shortage after world war II and did their best to build a life around it. For the most part the lifestyle was safe and successful. As a child of the 50's I look back on it very positively.

Karen said...

I'm obviously very late to the "No Down Payment" party -- I only learned about it a week or so ago, while watching the "Last Movie Stars" documentary on Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman. I was so glad to see that you'd covered it, and I greatly enjoyed revisiting it with you. It was quite an astonishingly frank movie, I thought, and I was in from the opening scene as Jeffrey Hunter and his wife drove passed all the billboards.

-- Karen

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

You're never too late, Karen. Pull up a chair. I agree it's an astonishingly frank movie, so neatly visually compelling, and interesting relationships.

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