Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951 film)

Tomorrow Is Another Day

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Felix E. Feist
Produced by Henry Blanke
Screenplay by Art Cohn
Felix E. Feist
Story by Guy Endore
Starring Ruth Roman
Steve Cochran
Lurene Tuttle
Music by Daniele Amfitheatrof
Cinematography Robert Burks
Edited by Alan Crosland Jr.
Production
company
Warner Bros.
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
  • August 8, 1951 (1951-08-08) (premiere-New York)
  • September 22, 1951 (1951-09-22) (wide-United States)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Tomorrow Is Another Day is a 1951 crime drama film noir directed by Felix E. Feist, starring Ruth Roman and Steve Cochran. An ex-convict who thinks he killed a man goes into hiding with a woman whose boyfriend is the supposed murder victim.[1] The title of the film comes from the last line of Gone with the Wind.

Plot

Convicted of murder at age 13, Bill Clark is freed after 18 years behind bars. He meets a taxi dancer, Catherine Higgins, but when her New York City police detective boyfriend George Conover catches them together, Bill is knocked out. When he awakens, Conover has been shot.

Bill knows the cops will come after him. He doesn't realize Catherine's the one who shot her boyfriend. She volunteers to go with him and they hitch-hike to California, falling in love along the way. They accompany the Dawson family to the lettuce fields of Salinas, where they find honest work and happiness, changing their identities.

A reporter's article about Clark is found by the Dawsons, who need money badly and turn in Bill for a reward. But back in New York, police reveal that before Conover died, he confessed that Catherine shot him in self-defense. She and Bill are cleared to resume their lives.

Cast

Reception

Critical response

Film critic Dennis Schwartz seemed disappointed with the film, writing "Gloomy minor film noir with a happy ending. The movie was made for John Garfield, but he died in 1951. A satisfactory Steve Cochran takes the part and gives it his best shot. Competently directed by Felix Feist (The Devil Thumbs a Ride/The Threat/Donovan's Brain), as always, and adequately written by Guy Endore (blacklisted after the movie for his political activism) and Art Cohn. Though watchable, the social conscious film remains forgettable--unable to leave a particularly sympathetic lasting impression of its outsider characters, whose distrust of the authorities leads them to be anti-social types and humorless downers for most of the pic."[2]

References

  1. Tomorrow Is Another Day at AllMovie.
  2. Schwartz, Dennis. Ozus' World Movie Reviews, film review, January 11, 2011. Accessed: July 17, 2013.
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