Film Noir Classics Hosted by Foster Hirsch
Ida Lupino’s The Hitch-Hiker
Starring Edmund O'Brien
Monday, April 8th at 7:30
$11 Members | $16 Public
Brand new restoration of movie-star-turned-pioneering filmmaker Ida Lupino's chilling film noir classic about two men on a camping trip who are held captive by a homicidal drifter.
Beyond its obvious cultural significance as the only classic film noir directed by a woman (actress-turned-pioneering filmmaker Ida Lupino), The Hitch-Hiker is perhaps better remembered as simply one of the most nightmarish motion pictures of the 1950s. Inspired by the true-life murder spree of Billy Cook, The Hitch-Hiker is the tension-laden saga of two men on a camping trip (Edmond O'Brien and Frank Lovejoy) who are held captive by a homicidal drifter (William Talman). He forces them, at gunpoint, to embark on a grim joyride across the Mexican desert. Renegade filmmaking at its finest, The Hitch-Hiker was independently produced, which allowed Lupino and ex-husband/producer Collier Young to work from a treatment by blacklisted writer Daniel Mainwaring (Invasion of the Body Snatchers), and tackle an incident that was too brutal for the major studios to even consider. (USA, 1953, 71 Mins., NR, English & Spanish | Dir. Ida Lupino)