Air Patrol (1962) Poster

(1962)

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6/10
So far Maury Dexter's best
markwood2724 February 2017
Saw this 2/3/17 thanks to cable on demand. Over the years I've become something of a connoisseur of Maury Dexter movies, with "Air Patrol" the latest after having seen (or endured) "Wild on the Beach" (1965), "Surf Party" (1964), and "The Day Mars Invaded Earth" (1963). "Air Patrol" is without question the best on that list, keeping in mind that it is a distinction based strictly on the level of play in Dexter's single-A cinematic league.

In "Air Patrol" a thief steals a Fragonard, helicoptering off with it from a Wilshire Boulevard rooftop. Apparently choppers were still exotic and relatively rare for the 1962 audience, during the time between the end of the series "Whirlybirds" and the Alcatraz operation depicted in "Point Blank" (1967).

The thief threatens to destroy the purloined Rococo masterpiece unless a $100,000 "ransom" is paid. The art buyer's secretary is played by Merry Anders, who, in spite of the limited acting demands of her role, is both effective and beautiful in the tradition of Beverly Garland. Robert Dix narrates as he performs in a first-person styling of Jack Webb's Sgt. Joe Friday, only Dix' cop character not only carries a badge but also flies an LAPD helicopter to catch the thief. The cast includes Willard Parker and Dexter regular Russ Bender as detectives, with Parker's Lt. Vern Taylor sharing with us his knowledge of art history.

The final act resembles last acts in "The Third Man"(1949), "He Walked by Night"(1949) and "711 Ocean Drive" (1950). Only here an agile senior citizen leads the cops on a daylight chase through a partially filled Los Angeles River. Douglass Dumbrille gives us an unconventional-looking thief who reminded me of East bloc chieftans Walter Ulbricht or Gomulka in their final days. He seems to inhabit Del Webb's Leisure World, not Jack Webb's police world.

Unlike the virtual house arrest of the action in "Wild on the Beach", "Air Patrol" makes extensive use of location photography, giving us clear, just-made-yesterday looks at Los Angeles at the beginning of the 1960's, with views of the Miracle Mile along Wilshire Boulevard, the Sepulveda Dam, Los Angeles River, Hollywood (101) Freeway, and the Cahuenga Pass.

In spite of the movie's obvious limitations, which include a strange, ill-fitting score, it all kinda works. Weird, but it works. Never let admiration for Ford, Hawks, Welles and others make us forget their fellow auteurs Dexter, Arch Hall, Sr., Ray Dennis Steckler, William Witney, and the recently departed Ted V. Mikels.

They all made movies.
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5/10
Air Patrol
CinemaSerf21 May 2023
This has a bit of an air of the documentary to it as we follow the investigations of the LAPD as they try to track down the thieves of a valuable paining by 19th century French artist Fragonard. Now although we don't know who has done the deed, we know right from the start how this audacious crime was committed and so are, for a while, one step ahead of "Sgt. Castle" (Robert Dix) as he uses his new airborne sleuthing skills to work with "Lt. Taylor" (Willard Parker) to track down the picture before it's smuggled out of the country. The detective elements of the drama are quite dry, as is the acting and the writing - this is really just a sort of public information film that demonstrates to the audience (and to the criminal fraternity) that there is a new dynamic to policing and that makes tailing and surveillance much simpler. It passes an hour effortlessly enough, but it won't challenge your own grey cells in the least and I doubt you'll remember it for long afterwards, either.
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4/10
The Eyes in the Skies
bkoganbing7 September 2017
This film Air Patrol looks like a pilot for a television series involving the Air Patrol of the Los Angeles Police Department. Robert Dix plays a retired Air Force helicopter pilot now doing the same thing for the LAPD.

The plot concerns the theft and then ransom demand for a valuable painting. The thieves slugged Merry Anders and made off at night with the painting from a helicopter off the roof of the Los Angeles building it was in.

Willard Parker of the robbery detail and Dix of Air Patrol handle the theft and the demand for ransom. The surveillance of the Air Patrol is of course the key to solving the case and recovering a painting.

Routine action film, obviously no television series came from this. Nothing terribly special.
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A rare little boring gem
searchanddestroy-117 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
One more Maury Dexter movie. A short one, only 60 minutes, and shot on 2.35 frame - usually reserved for big productions. All films directed by Maury Dexter were the same.

Anyway this feature is boring, talkative but interested to be seen. It begins with a painting steal. In LA. And the police force is of course in search of the stolen stuff. As far as I remember, because the film is somewhere in my library and I have some difficulties to find it, there is an unexpected pursuit between a chopper and a car in LA streets. The force helicopter, of course. And this is near the ending of the story.

But nothing special about this film. Only hard to get. In France, it was aired two years ago. We are lucky, ain't we !!!
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1/10
STOP NOW! SPOILER ALERT!
lazur-22 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This was ruined by the ending: The 'villain' is an elderly man, unarmed, & no indication of ever having been armed. He's exhausted from running. He's trapped against a gate, with a steep drop on the gate's other side. He could attempt suicide by crawling over the gate, but he doesn't. He's done. / The 'hero', a, young, athletic cop, armed with a revolver, has been chasing the old man, while firing his revolver for no good reason. Benefit of the doubt for the hero; maybe warning shots, but still stupid. The villain's trapped, arrest him. NOPE: Without a word, He shoots him dead! That is MURDER.
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5/10
Art for ransom!
mark.waltz2 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This is an entertaining and unique B crime drama about an ingenious scheme to steal a valuable painting in a private collection, no witnesses to the arrival of the criminals in the upscale private office building, revealed to have been done by helicopter. Secretary Merry Anders is knocked out before the crime takes place and is the only witness to who was responsible for it. The investigating police detectives (Willard Parker, Robert Dix and Russ Bender) work with the painting's owner (John Holland) to get the painting back, and in its entirety, not in strips!

Veteran screen villain Douglas Dumbrille has a key role as a semi-retired screen actor best known for his villain roles, and still quite the villain here. A really shocking scene on the roof of a high up skyscraper is a jaw dropper! There's also a very funny scene featuring Stacey Winters as a blowsy housewife who lives near a helicopter port, questioned by the police, and quite amusing in how she responds to their questions with her very disturbed husband heard in the background.

A quick little time passer at only 62 minutes, this is one of the better little independent caper films from the 60's, with direction by Maury Dexter who helmed many low budget 60's bottom of the bill programmers. Anders with her no-nonsense but pleasing personality is at first reluctant to cooperate with the cops (as she hates them in general!), but as the case becomes more dangerous (with a threatening voice calling her office), she feels she has no choice. The widescreen for such a low budget film (black and white, and short!) may not seem necessary, but it doesn't hurt the film either.
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5/10
Disappointing "B" Feature!
JohnHowardReid11 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 17 June 1962 by Associated Producers, Inc. Released through 20th Century-Fox Film Corp. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release: July 1962. U.K. release: 22 July 1962. Australian release: November 1962. Sydney opening as a support at the Regent. 6,306 feet. 70 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: A valuable painting is stolen in a daring coup which involves the thief's getaway at night in a helicopter. Lieutenant Tyler, who investigates, obtains the assistance of Sergeant Castle of the department's Air Patrol. The thief sends an inch-wide strip of the painting to its owner, and demands a large sum for its return. The owner pays the money, which is delivered, as demanded, by his secretary, Mona Whitney. The secret rendezvous turns out to be the deserted Hollywood Bowl.

COMMENT: This supporting feature has a few imaginative touches, but they are used to such saturation as to outstay their appeal. The aerial shots by Jack Woolf are very nice, but we see too many of them. The climax is good, but the shots are often held too long. The players are not very interesting, and the script is tedious and overlooks some points that might have been developed to advantage, e.g. the killer obviously had a female accomplice who phoned the fake telegram through, but of her (if it is her) we catch only a glimpse.
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7/10
Low budgeted, yes....but still pretty entertaining.
planktonrules21 February 2024
Despite a rather low budget and mostly actors you probably are not familiar with, this is a decent police drama.

The story begins with a robbery of a valuable painting and the getaway part is interesting...the thief leaves via a helicopter late in the night. After investigating, the police are able to determine that a helicopter must have been used. In the meantime, the thief has contacted the company that has insured the painting and the man who owned it...demanding ransom. Can the police get back this painting AND catch the man responsible?

The film is not a film noir caper, but a rather straight forward police film. The only real gimmick is the use of helicopters both to commit the crime and catch the thief. Well worth seeing, though not a must-see either.
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7/10
An Air, Land and Water Beauty.
jamericanbeauty31 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The sun glare from the aerial surveillance and simultaneous heated pursuit on the ground made for a visually stark and tense chase from street to dam! The premise is nothing groundbreaking, but it stands out in some ways. The Jigsaw-like disguised voice making ransom demands was unexpected and creepy. A satisfying creepy. The landscape from the performance stage and maze-style seating to the chase through the narrow watery dam and the inner workings of the dam looked like something out of an early Kubrick or Carol Reed. Architecturally gritty and gorgeous at the same damn time. The movie could have avoided the dull love story between the cop-hater cutie and the uh cop. The movie should have avoided the cliche bad guy gets fatally shot in the final minutes. He was cornered. Did the cop need to shoot him dead? He wasn't a serial killer, child predator or menace to society. Just arrest him.
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10/10
"The town where nobody paints..."
TheFearmakers8 January 2019
In AIR PATROL, one of many low-budget movies directed by Maury Dexter, the wheels of justice move slowly, and the blades even slower. Scenes with the police helicopter dotting the blue sky of what seems like the rural suburbs just beyond a skyscraper-laden landscape, takes some time, but are still suspenseful and entertaining...

Beginning with a soundtrack like any cop program of that era, though leaning on a jazzy upbeat over the usual forceful punch... other times providing bits of Halloween horror flick Tiburon sounds... as a faceless male thief steals a painting, and then takes off in a helicopter that meets him on that high-rise building's roof...

The one-man knockoff went easy enough, and only one lady, working late, got in the way: but only for the amount of time to get bonked unconscious in this breezy Late Noir with a beautiful, edgy, cranky, cop-hating ingenue, with old school chops of one of those brisk and edgy Femme Fatalle's, or the curt best friend of the leading lady on here, she's in the lead...

Waking up after the heist with a feeling liken to a hangover, or worse, and she's our primary starlet, looking better than ever: that being Merry Anders, as part of our ongoing "Merry Anders Cinema" and/or, on other flicks sans the exotically wide-eyed ingenue, Maury Dexter Cinema, for her already covered in b-movie write-ups of THE HYPNOTIC EYE and RAIDERS FROM BENEATH THE SEA, here playing Mona, under questioning in the same office building by a wise, patient yet assertive veteran cop Lt. Taylor played by Willard Parker and then our hero, a mellow, younger lawman whose primary task is a flier in the AIR PATROL. Bob Dix's Sgt. Castle slowly melts Anders down into not being so feisty and aggravated... But that's skipping ahead...

Merry has the best role here, or at least the most rounded, delivering a character-arc as she's questioned several times, going through a barrage of emotions in several offices and her home/budding art studio as well: She slowly melts from being a young generational rebel to a more sincere and understanding "gal" of the previous era... but without losing her independence...

Other soft-interrogations occur in the low budget fashion, mostly indoors after an establishing shot of either apartment buildings or houses...

Nothing fancy, and yet the storytelling's sparse and effective, aided by a Film Noir style narration by Dix, explaining not only the mysterious case of who could have possibly acquired a copter to pull off such a scheme, but also providing a sort of "TV Pilot" vibe throughout... And yet PATROL doesn't try winning over the audience with gunshots, car chases or testosterone...

Instead, it's a vehicle that goes beneath the catapulting aftermath in a manner to realistically show the meticulous, detailed precision of how cops work rather than the daydream of what it'd be like to live an adventurous life - fans of the standard Cop Movie, beware of this sleeper. "I'll tell you about the Force as a career," Dix smoothly tells Anders, "and you can tell me about the town where nobody paints." Belated pulpy new noir at its most obscure finest!
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8/10
Helicopter heist chased down by helicopter
clanciai30 May 2023
It's an interesting film technically, but the story and characters are very insignificant. An invaluable painting is stolen and collected from a skyscraper roof by a helicopter, and all the rest of the film is the trouble of the police to trace this helicopter and the painting. The motive is obvious, someone needed money, and used the painting for blackmail. We learn about the crook at a rather early stage, and there is no doubt about it when he pushes someone off that same roof of the theft. It's a very ordinary plot of hide and seek, but the end chase is very exciting for its very unusual procedure, and you can follow the entire manhunt from the air. The criminal has no chance of course, his end is inevitable, and the romance of the film does not succeed in making it more interesting. The film is actually only interesting from a technical point of view.
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Poor Douglas Dumbrille!
bigkingtut20001 November 2016
I just caught the end of this movie today. With a mind numbing chase between a car driving in the sewers of LA being chased by a police helicopter. In the movie, Grease, we had the same sewers used for a drag race...sans water. This time, poor Doug is driving a big old station wagon..with a ton of water..how is the car not flooded out because it was up to the door panel and over. Then Doug gets out of the car and climbs into the Sepulveda dam from the sewers leaving his car for some crazy teens to steal. The chopper lands on the dam...and the cop runs inside to immediately run into Doug with his booty from a kidnapping. So, Dumbrille, who is about 100 yrs old..actually 73, outruns the flatfoot cop who is in his twenty's. They make DD climb a ladder to try to escape after running lugging the briefcase with the dough. The cop chases him up the ladder and outside where DD is trapped..no where to go and no gun...the cop then plugs DD who then falls back into the sewer..in a death defying stunt. Another cop shows up and the shooter says lamenting..'he wouldn't stop'. He was a thousand years old for godsakes! Then he shoots him!!! Great fun, wish I had dvr'd it, worthy of the old MST3000!
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10/10
ONE OF MAURY DEXTERS BEST
tcchelsey8 July 2023
Maury Dexter, who went on to direct LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE and HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN, began his career with Lippert Productions and cranked out many exciting B films. AIR PATROL is one of them, a film all about aerial cops who fly around Los Angeles, attempting to nail the bad guys.

A famous painting, worth a fortune, is the center of attention here where some real nasties are out to get their hands on it. Lots of familiar faces in this one, but at the top is veteran Douglas Dumbrille, at his crafty best. There's a terrific scene where he meets a "colleague" and pushes him off a 10 story building --just for starters.

This is really a great film, campy and fun as you watch the cops vs. The robbers and some excellent aerial footage of helicopters, especially a car chase as they hover over Dumbrille's station wagon as he makes his getaway. A big thank you to FXM retro channel for re-running this little gem of late, and perfect viewing for late night weekends. Some great shots of 60s Hollywood, especially the famous Hollywood Bowl, eerily empty and very quiet.

Dexter would next go on to direct the cult classic THE DAY MARS INVADED EARTH. These two films make a fantastic back to back feature. You have to shop around as this may be on a private label dvd.
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