Five Minutes To Live (1961)

Directed by Bill Karn, Five Minutes to Live is a gritty, low-budget neo-noir crime thriller that marks the feature film debut of Johnny Cash. Also known by its re-release title Door-to-Door Maniac, the film blends suspense, moral decay, and rockabilly menace in a compact 80-minute runtime.

Plot Summary
Johnny Cabot (Johnny Cash) is a guitar-playing psychopath hired to assist in a bank robbery scheme. While his partner Fred (Vic Tayback) demands $70,000 from bank vice president Ken Wilson, Cabot poses as a door-to-door music teacher and takes Wilson’s wife Nancy (Cay Forrester) hostage in their home.

Fred gives Ken five minutes to comply—or Nancy dies. But Ken, secretly planning to leave his wife for another woman, coldly tells Fred he’d be doing him a favor. As the clock ticks, tensions mount, and Cabot grows increasingly unstable, tormenting Nancy with twisted songs and threats. The climax erupts when their son Bobby returns home and the police close in.

Cast Highlights

  • Johnny Cash as Johnny Cabot
  • Vic Tayback as Fred Dorella
  • Cay Forrester as Nancy Wilson (also the screenwriter)
  • Donald Woods as Ken Wilson
  • Pamela Mason, Ron Howard (uncredited) as Bobby Wilson
  • Merle Travis as Max — also performs guitar in the title song

Behind-the-Scenes Trivia

  • The film was re-released in 1966 by AIP as Door-to-Door Maniac, with added footage, including a controversial scene not in the original cut
  • The ransom demand of $70,000 would be equivalent to over $675,000 today
  • Cash performed the title song, with a guitar solo by Merle Travis, who also appears in the film

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