***Out In The 1950s C-Film Noir Night- Radar Patrol
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
DVD Review
Radar Patrol (not Radar Patrol vs. Sky King), 1951
In the beginning was …radar. At least
by the number of times the word was used and its glories acclaimed in the film
under review, uh, Radar Patrol, that
appears to be the case. Call me jaded by the vast increase in technology and
wizardry in my lifetime but I could not get a head of steam worked up about the
subject of radar and all of its practical uses from fishing to police
detection. The latter of course the theme driving this effort. I mentioned in
recently reviewing some B-film noir efforts that there were subtle gradations
in that B category. This film is a notch below that. Here is why.
This standard police procedural
starts with the good guys touting the virtues of radar and how the of use of it
could help fight crime. Fight crime in the red scare, Cold War early 1950s so
the criminal activity has a sinister national security edge to it. That edge
concerns the uses of the then fairly recently discovered uses for atomic
material. Naturally anybody who had quantities of that available would find a
ready market, legal or illegal. Here the illegal comes into play. A gang of
ne’er-do-wells hijacks a van carrying atomic material. (By the way no effort
was made to encase the material or have the handlers protected by suits they
just transported the stuff in an old time van like it was boxes of books or
something.) The hijacked material was hidden away in a barn until it can be
exported on a yacht owned by the ringleader of the operation.
Of course once the officers of the
radar patrol get on the case that gang’s days are numbered. First they foil a
clean getaway and netted one of the robbers by the use of, well, radar to track
the miscreants. Then they foiled a small test transport by the gang using, oh
well, yes, radar. Then they blew the case wide open using a helicopter equipped
with, let’s see, radar and they thus had saved the sacred material from the bad
guys, done a good day’s work, and enhanced national security. And for their
efforts the government has upped their budget in order to buy more, yes again,
radar. See C what I mean.
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