Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1957


Rock All Night

Buy Rock All Night now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Rock All Night' is a 1957 crime drama film produced and directed by Roger Corman. Distributed by American International Pictures, it is based on a 25-minute television episode of 'The Jane Wyman Show' from 1955 called "The Little Guy." It stars Dick Miller, Russell Johnson and Abby Dalton. It co-stars Mel Welles, Ed Nelson and Clegg Hoyt. The film was released as a double feature with 'Dragstrip Girl'.

Plot



Two escaping killers hide out in a club called the Cloud Nine and hold the bartender and clients hostage. Amongst the patrons are a nervous singer (Abby Dalton), a boxer, his wife, and manager, an extortionist, a loud thug and his girlfriend, as well as a small man who can determine people's real (as opposed to posed) personalities and has no fear (Dick Miller).

Cast



* Abby Dalton as Julie

* Dick Miller as "Shorty"

* Russell Johnson as "Jigger"

* Mel Welles as Sir Bop

* Ed Nelson as Pete

* Clegg Hoyt as Marty

* Jeanne Cooper as Mabel

* Barboura Morris as Syl

* Chris Alcaide as Angie

* Richard Karlan as Jerry

* Bruno VeSota as Charlie

'The Little Guy'



The film was based on a TV play 'The Little Guy' which aired on 'Jane Wyman Presents The Fireside Theatre' in September 1955. It was directed by Don Weis.

Production

Dane Clark signed on to star in July 1955, after having just appeared in a stage production where his leading lady died in his arms.Clark Resumes Work as 'Little Guy'; Catalina Also Has Traffic Problem

Ames, Walter. Los Angeles Times 13 July 1955: 26.


Accolades

The production earned Don Weis the Screen Directors Guild Award for Best Director of a TV Play in 1955.Young Child Star Emotes in Suspense; Wyman, Clark Click

Ames, Walter. Los Angeles Times 23 Oct 1956: A6.
Three-Way Partnership Formed on Coast To Make TV Film Series on Gen. Fremont

Special to The New York Times. New York Times 23 Dec 1955: 35.
DELBERT MANN WINS AWARD ON MARTY FILM

Chicago Daily Tribune 30 Jan 1956: b10.


Production



In October 1956 Roger Corman bought the rights to "Little Guy" from Jane Wyman for his production company Sunset Productions. Dane Clark was originally sought to play the lead.FILM EVENTS: Prize TV Play Will Be Filmed

Los Angeles Times 6 Oct 1956: B2.
FILM EXPERIMENTS SAID TO BE WANING: Systems Being Re-evaluated in Light of Expense to Theatre Owners, Convention Told Hayes Novel to Be Filmed Of Local Origin

By THOMAS M. PRYOR Special to The New York Times. New York Times 9 Oct 1956: 31.




Corman gave the script to Charles B. Griffith to expand into a feature. Mel Welles later claimed Corman wanted Griffith to turn the story "into a rock script to emulate the success of 'Rock Around the Clock' and all those pictures were having."

According to one account, Griffith says he wrote the script over the weekend:

I cut it up with a pair of scissors, this original screenplay, and added new characters like Sir Bop, which was to be played by Lord Buckley, but Mel Welles ended up playing it because Buckley was out of town. Mel wrote his own hiptionary for sale in the theatre to go with it. Dick Miller was in the Dane Clark part. He was the little guy of the title. The music was by Buck Ram, The Platters and those people all doing their hit songs. Of course, no songs were written in 24 hours... I would just put down musical number here. The girl has her dialogue with the guys and then turns around to sing a song. It was up to them what she sang, up to Roger.[http://sensesofcinema.com/2005/35/charles_b_griffith/ Aaron W. Graham, 'Little Shop of Genres: An interview with Charles B. Griffith', 'Senses of Cinema', 15 April, 2005] accessed 25 June 2012


According to another account, what happened was two days before filming there was a change in the schedule of The Platters and they were only going to be available for one day so Griffith rewrote the script in 48 hours.Mark McGee, 'Faster and Furiouser: The Revised and Fattened Fable of American International Pictures', McFarland, 1996 p79

The film was at one stage known as 'Rock'n'Roll Girl'.'Tin Star' Filming Set in Black and White

Los Angeles Times 11 Nov 1956: F12.


Songwriter and manager Buck Ram offered a slew of his musical talent such as The Platters, accompanied by the Eddie Beal sextet with Eric Dolphy on baritone saxophone, The Blockbusters, and Nora Hayes to AIP in return for having the sole rights to a soundtrack album for the film. Corman filmed Ram's acts lip-synching their tunes on a separate set that comprise the beginning of the film. 'Rock All Night' was made in five daysp.74 Denisoff, R. Serge & Romanowski, William D. 'Risky Business: Rock in Film' 1991 Transaction Books and originally appeared as a double feature with 'Dragstrip Girl'.

Comedian Lord Buckley had planned to be in the film, but when he was unavailable, one of Corman's stock company and a writer for Buckley, Mel Welles imitated Buckley in the role of "Sir Bop". Corman was worried no one would understand what Wells was saying so Wells wrote a dictionary of hip talk for the film.

Dick Miller, a former Navy boxing champion, played the role Dane Clark did in the television show, with Russell Johnson playing the role that Lee Marvin originated.

Despite the short shooting schedule and minimal locations (only two sets), Corman always regarded the movie as a personal favourite.Ed. J. Philip di Franco, 'The Movie World of Roger Corman', Chelsea House Publishers, 1979 p 8

Quentin Tarantino



In 1993 Showtime announced they would remake a number of AIP films of the 1950s. Quentin Tarantino was to do a remake of 'Rock All Night'.Return of the rebel flicks Fifties films being remade, but with more sex and danger

The Globe and Mail 14 May 1993: C.8.
However the film was never made.

Robert Rodriguez got the idea to make 'Grindhouse' after seeing a poster on Quentin Tarantino's wall advertising 'Rock All Night' and 'Dragstrip Girl'.Tarantino: I'm proud of my flop Undaunted by the US box-office failure of his latest film, Quentin Tarantino can't wait to unveil a new, souped-up version at Cannes. He talks to John Hiscock

Hiscock, John. The Daily Telegraph 27 Apr 2007: 029.


Notes



See also



* List of American films of 1957

References



* Corman, Roger and Jerome, Jim 'How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime' 1998 Da Capo Press

* Naha, Ed 'The Films of Roger Corman: Brilliance on a Budget' 1984 Olympic Marketing


Buy Rock All Night now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1957



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1090191845.