Sunday, May 31, 2026

Scandal Sheet (1952)

Like Deadline-U.S.A., Scandal Sheet is a newspaper story that was also released in 1952. Deadline-U.S.A. was released two months after Scandal Sheet and was the subject of my last blog article.

Scandal Sheet has an engrossing story that I enjoyed, even though I am not a big fan of Broderick Crawford. He, as managing editor Mark Chapman, and Donna Reed, as newspaper reporter Julie Allison, play roles that are probably familiar to film noir and classic film fans. The character with the transformational arc is Steve McCleary (played by John Derek). McCleary is a young reporter who idolizes his mentor just a bit too much and pays the price for it. The treatment of female characters is a bit of a drawback for modern-day viewers, but the grab for publicity at all costs (more details later) holds up surprisingly well.

Scandal Sheet is available for free online. Click here to see it at the Internet Archive.

The film starts with a distraught woman describing the aftermath of a murder. She thinks that she is talking to a police officer, but she is really talking to Steve McCleary, newspaper reporter for the New York Express. McCleary never bothered to correct her misperception, which infuriates her when she learns of her mistake. Newspaper photographer Biddle takes her picture after she starts screaming at McCleary in frustration (because the emotion, whatever the reason for it, will sell newspapers). When Lieutenant Davis arrives on the scene, the woman is so distraught that she is bent over, sobbing into her hands. Lieutenant Davis knows McCleary and Biddle’s tactics from past experience and threatens to arrest them both the next time.

This opening is dramatic and unsettling, and it tells you almost all you need to know about McCreary and Biddle and their work ethic—or lack thereof. On their way back to the newspaper offices, McCreary phones in his latest story to his boss and mentor, Mark Chapman. Chapman is keeping the newspaper’s stockholders waiting while he talks to McCleary. When he does show up at the board meeting, he shouts down protests from the stockholders about the New York Express turning into a tabloid. He uses increased circulation numbers and large dividend checks to the stockholders as the bases for his arguments.

Newspaper staff (including Chapman, Allison, McCleary, and Biddle) are heading that night to the newspaper-sponsored Lonely Hearts Ball. It is a publicity stunt intended solely to increase newspaper subscriptions. Any two people who meet the night of the ball and agree to marry in front of cameras win prizes, like expensive furnishings and household appliances. (This type of publicity should sound familiar to modern viewers. It is eerily similar to The Bachelorette/The Bachelor franchise.) The stunt is made even worse when it becomes clear that Mark Chapman is promising more than he is willing to deliver to the ball’s attendees.

Julie Allison makes it clear at the Lonely Hearts Ball that she is already sick of the lies and deception. She has already soured on the night’s events because of a chance meeting on the street outside the New York Express offices, when she, Chapman, and McCleary met Charlie Barnes, a reporter who once won the Pulitzer Prize and is now an alcoholic. He is doing some research for Allison, but he wants to work full-time again. Mark Chapman agrees to hire him but then later tells Allison and McCleary that he has no intention of doing so. Allison is dismayed and wants to tell Barnes so that he doesn’t get his hopes up, but Chapman and McCleary defend themselves by saying that Barnes needs hope, even false hope (in other words, their lies), to live on. Then they rush Allison into a cab.

(This article about Scandal Sheet contains spoilers.)

Charlotte Grant attends the ball and spots her estranged husband—Mark Chapman. She corners him, and he agrees to meet her at her rented room. He is hateful to her; he tells her that she was a mistake and that he is glad to be rid of her. He’ll grant her a divorce, finally, after twenty years of estrangement. (It helps to keep in mind that divorces weren’t granted so easily in the 1950s, and divorce carried more of a stigma at that time.) She threatens to tell her story all over town and to the other newspapers. He gets even angrier, shoves her, and accidentally kills her when she falls and hits her head. Mark Chapman cleans the room and takes everything that he can find that would incriminate him. He also takes a claim ticket from Pete’s Hock Shop. Then he leaves his wife’s body in her rented room.

McCleary and Biddle arrive at the scene of Grant’s death, and McCleary is not convinced that her death is an accident. Against the orders of Lieutenant Davis, he snoops around and finds the Lonely Hearts Ball pin on one of Grant’s dresses. He takes it and decides to write a lead story about Charlotte Grant’s death. At the morgue, he uses the promise of box seats at the World Series to bribe the coroner, Doc O’Hanlon, to conduct an autopsy. Doc O’Hanlon discovers that Grant’s death is more likely murder. When McCleary proposes the story idea to Mark Chapman, Chapman agrees. He cannot resist the lure of a sensational story, a way to keep increasing newspaper sales.

The rest of the film mostly follows McCleary’s investigation into Charlotte Grant’s death, with each development a new front-page story to keep the public interested and buying newspapers. He and Julie Allison clash over his methods, but as the investigation tightens around Mark Chapman and others feel the ripple effects of his investigation, McCleary begins to see the consequences of his actions from a new perspective. This new perspective comes into sharper focus after the death of Charlie Barnes: Julie Allison accuses McCleary of being partly responsible for his death because he refused to believe him, to take him seriously, and to give him any respect.

McCleary wants to continue writing about what he now calls the Lonely Hearts killer. He convinces Allison to join him in the investigation, this time because he wants to solve Barnes’s murder, ease his conscience a bit, and win over Allison. First, he needs Mark Chapman’s okay, and he goes to Chapman’s home to do so. Again, Chapman agrees. I have to admit that I was a little surprised that Chapman didn’t kill McCleary when they were alone in Chapman’s home. It would have been the perfect opportunity, even if people would have put two and two together eventually. But maybe Chapman cared more for his protégé than he ever mentioned in the film.

McCleary and Allison finally discover the truth about Mark Chapman and his failed marriage to Georgia Grant. McCleary is utterly dismayed by the revelation that Chapman is the killer because he put his trust and his career in Chapman’s hands. Chapman won’t go quietly, however. When he is confronted by a witness in front of his employees and the police, he pretends to shoot at them. He aims down, however, and is promptly killed by Lieutenant Davis. It’s the first instance that I can recall of a “death by cop” in a film noir.

I mentioned the treatment of the female characters, and there were many instances of bad treatment that made me squirm. Here are some examples:

Steve McCleary’s pet nicknames for Julie Allison: princess, baby, tiger, kiddies (Allison and Charlie Barnes), kitten. He pooh-poohs Allison’s ideas about respecting other people’s feelings and their ideas, and there is one scene in the newspaper office where he spends most of it with his hand on her neck.

During the Grants’ argument in Charlotte Grant’s rented room, Mark Chapman calls Charlotte a “neurotic screwball” because, of course, she is solely responsible for his miserable treatment of her and their failed marriage. Mark Chapman treats a lot of the characters badly—unless they can give him something that he wants.

Biddle the newspaper photographer, calls his photo subjects, mostly the bodies of murdered women, scarecrows.

Scandal Sheet predates the Me Too movement by many years. I noticed the poor treatment of female characters, and particularly of Julie Allison by her coworkers, the first time that I watched the film, but it becomes almost impossible to ignore on repeat viewings. I enjoyed the main narrative of the film very much, but the way women were treated generally in the 1950s is something to be aware of when watching Scandal Sheet.

The Lonely Hearts Ball, the publicity stunt intended solely to increase newspaper subscriptions, was a surprise because it sounded so familiar. And it is not just The Bachelorette/The Bachelor franchise that it reminded me of. That one came to mind because of the mention of romance and marriage in the ball, but almost any game show and reality television show could have come from the same idea. The scenes involving the Lonely Hearts Ball in Scandal Sheet also made me squirm, but not only because the idea of making people do stunts for prizes was objectionable; it was the way it was treated by most of the main characters. Chapman especially was prone to calling the attendees, indeed all the newspaper’s readers, slobs behind their backs. He wasn’t a fun character to spend eighty-two minutes with.

But every film noir needs a villain, and this one (with its villain) is a good one. The story is a bit of a history lesson, with its examination of corrupt newspaper practices. Journalism may be in disarray in the twenty-first century, but the behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing seems to have been transferred (too) easily to new businesses (social media) and applied in new ways.

Click here for more information at Wikipedia about the long history of tabloid journalism. Note the brief discussion of “catch and kill” in relation to famous people who have been accused of mistreating women, often criminally.

Scandal Sheet is a social justice film about the newspaper industry, its business practices, and its publicity stunts. But I’m sure its filmmakers never intended the film to be a lesson about the way women were treated on the job and in general. Modern-day viewers will notice it, though.

January 16, 1952, release date    Directed by Phil Karlson    Screenplay by Ted Sherdeman, Eugene Ling, James Poe    Based on the novel The Dark Page by Samuel Fuller    Music by Morris Stoloff, George Duning    Edited by Jerome Thoms    Cinematography by Burnett Guffey

Broderick Crawford as Mark Chapman/George Grant    Donna Reed as Julie Allison    John Derek as Steve McCleary    Rosemary DeCamp as Charlotte Grant    Henry O'Neill as Charlie Barnes    Harry (Harry) Morgan as Biddle, newspaper photographer    James Millican as Lieutenant Davis    Griff Barnett as Judge Elroy Hacker    Jonathan Hale as Frank Madison    Jay Adler as Bailey    Don Beddoe as Pete, the owner of the hock chop    Charles Cane as Heeney, the bar owner    Katherine Warren as Mrs. Allison    Ida Moore as Nellie    Cliff Clark as Doc O’Hanlon    Ralph Reed as Joey, copy boy    Pierre Watkin as Baxter, newspaper reporter

Distributed by Columbia Pictures    Produced by Motion Picture Investors

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Deadline-U.S.A. (1952)

In his audio commentary on the DVD for Deadline-U.S.A., Eddie Muller claims that the film is not a noir. Then about fourteen minutes into the film commentary, he states that he scheduled the film to open his 2008 Noir City Film Festival in San Francisco. I have said (written) many times that I’m not a big fan of categories for film, and maybe Muller feels as ambiguous about film categories as I do. But no matter what category you want to put it in (drama, crime thriller, film noir, fictional commentary on the state of the newspaper industry), Deadline-U.S.A. is a great film. And in spite of being produced in 1952 and in black and white, it’s a film with a modern theme: the decline of the free press in the United States.

The film starts with a Senate commission hearing, which is attended by the press and is filmed by television cameras. A reporter from the Day, George Burrows, is in the courtroom taking notes while Tomas Rienzi testifies about spending money to influence an election, a charge he denies. When Burrows gets back to the newspaper offices to talk to the managing editor, Ed Hutcheson, Hutcheson learns that the newspaper is about to be sold to Lawrence White, owner of a rival and competitor called the Standard.

The Standard is the opposite of the Day: it is a tabloid full of sensationalism and yellow journalism. Ed Hutcheson laments how readers want horoscopes, dream interpretation, comics, and so on. He wants to fight the sale of the Day, but the heirs, the widow and two daughters of the original owner, are determined to sell. It is now Hutcheson’s job to tell the employees that the newspaper will be sold and that they will lose their jobs.

Hutcheson goes “home” to his ex-wife Nora. It’s home to him because he still loves Nora, but they are divorced and living separately. She wishes he hadn’t come to visit, but he stays. He is too drunk to argue when she arranges their separate sleeping accommodations. The next morning, Ed gets a phone call about George Burrows, the newspaper reporter, who is found in an industrial park after a beating by Rienzi’s men. Ed runs off, and Nora is reminded why they divorced in the first place. When they do finally meet for dinner, Nora has just enough time of Ed’s time to announce that she plans to remarry before Ed gets another phone call and rushes off about another important story.

This latest story involves a murder mystery, and the reporter who wants to follow the lead is the only female reporter at the Day: Mrs. Willebrandt. An unidentified woman was found in the river wearing only a mink coat, and Willebrandt found out that the woman’s mother, Mrs. Schmidt, arrived at the morgue to identify her daughter. Willebrandt is convinced that the mother knows a lot more than she is telling. The daughter, Bessie, used the name Sally Gardner, and Willebrandt believes the mother and the daughter’s alias are two details that will be part of a great story.

(This article about Deadline-U.S.A. contains some spoilers.)

Several story threads are thus introduced in the film: Tomas Rienzi, organized crime, and general corruption; the impending sale of the Day and the attendant legal wranglings that Ed Hutcheson hopes will thwart the inevitable; the possibility that Ed and Nora Hutcheson can renew their romance and marriage; and the mystery of the unidentified woman found in the river. Some are more closely connected than others, but all are wrapped up by the film’s end, including the legal case concerning the sale of the Day to Lawrence White of the Standard.

The probate court decides that the sale to the Standard should go through, but Ed Hutcheson stands up in court to defend the Day. He invokes the readers, the employees, the unfinished business concerning Thomas Rienzi, and the paper’s desire to expose Rienzi’s corruption. He also defends a free press, competition, the marketplace of ideas, all of which sound like arguments that could be made today about the media. Earlier in the film, Hutcheson tries to convince Garrison’s heirs not to sell, and he made similar arguments then, too. Unfortunately, he cannot stop the sale.

But Hutcheson isn’t going to let the Day fade away quietly. He prints an editorial about Tomas Rienzi, Rienzi’s corruption, and its effects on the life of the city. He doesn’t use his own name in the byline; he uses John Garrison’s. John Garrison was the owner of the Day and died eleven years earlier. When he finally discovers hard evidence of Rienzi’s crimes, he publishes the story, and it’s just in time for the newspaper’s final edition. The evidence comes from Mrs. Schmidt, mother of the murdered girl. She has her daughter’s diary, and she is not afraid about publication of some of the details it contains. She trusts the newspaper, not the police, because she has read the Day for thirty-one years; it was how she learned English after immigrating to the country.

As I mentioned, the DVD comes with audio commentary by film historian Eddie Muller. Just like his other commentaries, Muller’s commentary for Deadline-U.S.A. is a lot of fun to listen to and is packed with information about many aspects of the film. The film has a special significance for Muller because he grew up around newspapers thanks to his father, who wrote about boxing, and because he himself worked in journalism, all of which makes his commentary that much more entertaining. Here are just a few of the facts Muller discusses in his commentary:

The offices of the New York Daily News were used for the location shootings for the newspaper: the press room, printing rooms, trucking, and so on.

The director Richard Brooks starts the story with a congressional hearing, which was common in film and on television in the 1950s.

The newspaper business allowed Richard Brooks to survive the Great Depression. He worked for the New York World after it had been folded into the New York Telegram. The real-life story about Joseph Pulitzer and the New York World story is used in the film. The story about the newspaper’s heirs was based almost exactly on the story of Pulitzer’s heirs. Margaret Garrison is a stand-in for Joseph Pulitzer.

Richard Brooks wrote the part of Ed Hutcheson for Humphrey Bogart, and he had to fight Darryl Zanuck to cast Bogart. Bogart is perfect for the role because he could portray cynicism and idealism at the same time on-screen. Bogart as Ed Hutcheson voices a lot of Joseph Pulitzer’s editorial philosophy.

Richard Brooks cares less about organized crime than he does about the decline of newspaper journalism. Richard Brooks’s ideas about merging newspapers as a threat to democracy are prescient.

Because of the different story threads, the narrative seems to jump from one plot detail to another, and Deadline-U.S.A. is another film where viewers really have to pay attention to all the clues and remember names and details. Seeing the film more than once is a big help, but that shouldn’t be a hardship because the film is so good. Humphrey Bogart is great in the role of Ed Hutcheson. The supporting cast is filled with several film noir regulars like Paul Stewart, Martin Gabel, and Tom Powers. Ethel Barrymore plays the role of the widowed heir Margaret Garrison. She, Bogart, and the supporting cast all give strong performances (probably no surprise to fans of film noir and classic films).

Deadline-U.S.A. is one of those films that viewers have to watch carefully because every detail counts, and repeat viewings are well worth the time. The role of Ed Hutcheson is a bit different for Humphrey Bogart, but that just makes the film all the more interesting. It’s amazing that so many of his lines could be repeated today and remain true about the free press in the United States—almost three-quarters of a century later.

March 14, 1952, release date    Directed by Richard Brooks    Screenplay by Richard Brooks    Music by Cyril J. Mockridge    Edited by William B. Murphy    Cinematography by Milton R. Krasner

Humphrey Bogart as Ed Hutcheson    Ethel Barrymore as Margaret Garrison    Kim Hunter as Nora Hutcheson    Ed Begley as Frank Allen    Warren Stevens as George Burrows    Paul Stewart as Harry Thompson    Martin Gabel as Tomas Rienzi    Joseph De Santis as Herman Schmidt    Joyce MacKenzie as Katherine (aka Kitty) Garrison Geary    Audrey Christie as Mrs. Willebrandt    Fay Baker as Alice Garrison Courtney    Jim Backus as Jim Cleary    Carleton Young as Crane, Garrison’s daughters’ lawyer    Selmer Jackson as Williams    Fay Roope as Judge McKay    Parley Baer as the headwaiter    John Doucette as Hal    Florence Shirley as Ms. Barndollar    Raymond Greenleaf as Lawrence White    Tom Powers as Andrew Wharton    Thomas Browne Henry as Fenway    Phillip Terry as Lewis Schaefer, Nora’s fiancé    Joseph Sawyer as Whitey Franks    Lawrence Dobkin as Larry Hansen, Rienzi’s lawyer    Clancy Cooper as Police Captain Finlay    Willis Bouchey as Henry    Joseph Crehan as White’s city editor    Kasia Orzazewski as Mrs. Schmidt    Norman Leavitt as a newsroom reporter

Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox  • Produced by Twentieth Century Fox