Directed by Samuel Fuller and released by 20th Century-Fox on May 27, 1953, Pickup on South Street is a taut, politically charged film noir crime thriller starring Richard Widmark, Jean Peters, and Thelma Ritter. With a runtime of 80 minutes, the film blends espionage, street-level crime, and postwar paranoia into a hard-edged narrative that helped define Fuller’s uncompromising style.
Plot Summary
Skip McCoy (Richard Widmark), a cynical pickpocket working the New York subway, lifts a wallet from Candy (Jean Peters), a streetwise woman unknowingly carrying microfilm intended for Communist agents. The theft draws Skip into a web of espionage, as federal agents and Communist operatives scramble to recover the stolen film. Candy, caught between loyalty and survival, becomes entangled with Skip, whose tough exterior begins to crack under pressure.
As the stakes rise, Skip turns to Moe Williams (Thelma Ritter), a weary informant who sells street intel to survive. Her tragic arc adds emotional depth to the film’s otherwise brutal tone. The story builds toward a violent confrontation, where Skip must choose between self-preservation and reluctant patriotism.
Cast
- Richard Widmark as Skip McCoy
- Jean Peters as Candy
- Thelma Ritter as Moe Williams
- Murvyn Vye as Captain Dan Tiger
- Richard Kiley as Joey
- Willis Bouchey, Milburn Stone, and Henry Slate in supporting roles
Production Notes and Trivia
- The screenplay was written by Samuel Fuller, based on a story by Dwight Taylor
- Cinematography by Joseph MacDonald emphasizes tight close-ups and shadowy urban textures, heightening the film’s claustrophobic tension
- Fuller’s direction was controversial for its raw portrayal of violence and its refusal to glorify patriotism, drawing criticism from FBI director J. Edgar Hoover
- Thelma Ritter received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Moe
- The film’s anti-Communist theme reflects early 1950s Cold War anxieties, but Fuller’s focus remains on character over ideology
- Widmark’s performance as Skip is emblematic of noir antiheroes—morally ambiguous, emotionally detached, yet capable of redemption
- The film was shot on location in New York and on studio sets, blending documentary realism with stylized noir aesthetics
- Pickup on South Street was later remade in 1967 as The Cape Town Affair, starring James Brolin and Jacqueline Bisset
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