Illegal Entry
Cast & Crew
Frederick De Cordova
Howard Duff
Marta Toren
George Brent
Gar Moore
Tom Tully
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
After a forest ranger finds an unidentifiable Polish survivor of the Dachau concentration camp dead in the wilderness of San Bernadino County, the matter is referred to Daniel Collins, the Los Angeles district chief for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Collins places a photograph of the dead man in a local newspaper, which results in a call from the man's cousin, who states that he paid $2,000 to have the man brought into the country. The cousin is murdered, however, before he can tell Collins to whom he paid the money, saying only that the transaction took place at the Blue Danube Café. Collins then goes to Washington, D.C., where he asks that an undercover agent be assigned to the case, preferably Bert Powers, a friend of Wally O'Neill, the deceased husband of Anna Duvak, the German-American owner of the Blue Danube Café. Though initially reluctant, Bert, an Air Force veteran living in Amarillo, Texas, agrees to work for Collins and heads for Los Angeles. Pretending to be an out-of-work flyer, Bert quickly makes friends with Anna, and because she likes him, she tries to discourage him from seeing her, in hopes of keeping him out of the clutches of gangster Nick Gruber. Nevertheless, Bert is soon contacted by the gangster's associates, who hire the flyer to smuggle an illegal alien into the United States from Mexico. Later, Nick hires Bert on a permanent basis, much to the annoyance of his more careful associate, Zack Richards. For the first few weeks, though, Bert is assigned to nothing more than routine cargo runs. Finally, he is assigned a smuggling flight from Mexico, and is met at the Ontario, California airport by Collins and his men. The plane is empty, however, as the smugglers threw all the immigrants out of the plane while over the Pacific Ocean, because they suspected one of being a government agent. Afterward, Dutch Lempo, the fugitive head of the smuggling organization, calls a meeting at his home in Mexico, and orders Nick to find the spy within their organization. They then set a trap for the infiltrator by having a seemingly drunk Richards falsely tell the flyers that Dutch is meeting with Nick at a downtown Los Angeles warehouse. Before Bert falls for the trap, however, Anna asks him out, and the two are accosted at a nearby bar by Lee Sloan, another flyer and a jealous, unwanted suitor of Anna's. Lee then inadvertently saves Bert's life by beating him to the warehouse, in hopes of telling Dutch that Anna is cheating on him, and is killed by the gangsters. The next day, Bert goes to see Anna, and she admits that she knows that he is the government agent and invited him out in order to keep him from Richards' trap. After learning that she is working for the smugglers only to protect her illegal immigrant brother Stephen, Bert agrees to help her smuggle Stephen out of Los Angeles. Stephen, however, thinks that he has only caused his sister more trouble, and commits suicide by hanging himself. When Anna refuses to go to work the next day, Dutch insists on being flown into Los Angeles to see her. Bert is assigned to Dutch's flight, but is caught by Joe Bottsy, one of Dutch's thugs, when he telephones Collins from Mexico. Though initially knocked unconscious by Bert, Joe manages to call Nick in Los Angeles, who radios Richards, the co-pilot on Dutch's flight, about Bert's true allegiance. Bert manages to knock Richards unconscious, however, so Dutch is forced to let him fly the plane into Los Angeles. Knowing that he will be killed as soon as he lands the plane, Bert executes a crash landing, which knocks the gun out of Dutch's hand. Though injured in the crash, Bert survives with minor injuries, while Dutch and his gang are arrested and later convicted on numerous smuggling charges. For her cooperation, all charges are dropped against Anna and she is released into Bert's "custody."
Director
Frederick De Cordova
Cast
Howard Duff
Marta Toren
George Brent
Gar Moore
Tom Tully
Paul Stewart
Richard Rober
Joseph Vitale
James Nolan
Clifton Young
David Clarke
Robert Osterloh
Anthony Caruso
Donna Martell
Tom Clark
Watson B. Miller
Kenneth Tobey
Robert Bice
Peter Prouse
Antony Bacchus
Curt Conway
Eric Feldary
William Forrest
Lester Sharpe
Phil Tully
Reuben Wendorff
Al Murphy
Walden Boyle
Will Kaufman
Rosa Turich
Pierce Lyden
Lionel Dante
Edward Clark
Jack Ingram
Allan Ray
Sid Marion
Alex Montoya
Eddie Randolph
Vito Scotti
Pilar Del Rey
Frankie Van
Joe Ploski
Alex Akimoff
Betty Chay
Fraser Mcminn
Sam Finn
Slim Crow
Ray Flynn
Paul Bradley
Jack Chefe
Crew
John Austin
Ben Bengal
Leslie I. Carey
Col. William A. Carmichael
Art Cohn
Edward Curtiss
Jack Daniels
Fred Frank
Russell A. Gausman
Bernard Herzbrun
David S. Horsley
Herbert Kline
Joe Lapis
Joel Malone
Dan Moore
Richard H. Riedel
Jules Schermer
Milton Schwarzwald
Joan St. Oegger
Bud Westmore
Yvonne Wood
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Kenneth Tobey (1917-2003)
Born in Oakland, California on March 23, 1917, Tobey originally intended to be a lawyer before a stint with the University of California Little Theater changed his mind. From there, he went straight to New York and spent nearly two years studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse, where his classmates included Gregory Peck, Eli Wallach and Tony Randall. Throughout the '40s, Tobey acted on Broadway and in stock before relocating to Hollywood. Once there, Tobey soon found himself playing a tough soldier in films like I Was a Male War Bride and Twelve O' Clock High (both 1949); or a tough police officer in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye and Three Secrets (both 1950). Such roles were hardly surprising, given Tobey's craggy features, unsmiling countenance and rough voice.
Needless to say, no-nonsense, authority figures would be Tobey's calling for the remainder of his career; yet given the right role, he had the talent to make it memorable: the smart, likeable Captain Hendrey in The Thing From Another World (1951); the gallant Colonel Jack Evans in the "prehistoric dinosaur attacks an urban center" genre chiller The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953, a must-see film for fans of special effects wizard, Ray Harryhausen; and as Bat Masterson, holding his own against Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster in Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957).
Television would also offer Tobey much work: he had his own action series as chopper pilot Chuck Martin in Whirlybirds (1957-59); and had a recurring role as Assistant District Attorney Alvin in Perry Mason (1957-66). He would also be kept busy with guest appearances in countless westerns (Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Virginian) and cop shows (The Rockford Files, Barnaby Jones, Ironside) for the next two decades. Most amusingly, the tail end of Tobey's career saw some self-deprecating cameo spots in such contemporary shockers as The Howling (1981); Strange Invaders (1983) and his role reprisal of Captain Hendry in The Attack of the B-Movie Monsters (2002). Tobey is survived by a daughter, two stepchildren, and two grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Kenneth Tobey (1917-2003)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The film contains the following written foreword: "We gratefully acknowledge the generous cooperation and assistance of the Immigration and Naturalization Service in the making of this picture." The film opens with statements about the Immigration and Naturalization Service spoken by Tom Clark, the United States Attorney General, and Watson B. Miller, the Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. According to a Los Angeles Times news item, portions of the picture were filmed along the Mexican border. Hollywood Reporter news items include David Opatoshu and Houseley Stevenson in the cast, but their appearance in the released film has not been confirmed.