Three Steps North (1951) Poster

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6/10
Good Performances, Scenery, Hampered By Slow Pace
boblipton6 July 2021
Lloyd Bridges returns to Amalfi. He was stationed there during the war in the Quartermaster Corps; then he was in prison for stealing. Now he's out with a dishonorable discharge, and looking for the loot he buried. Things get in his way: not only his old girlfriend, Lea Padovani, but the money is missing, and the fellow who has been spending freely is dead, and Bridges is a suspect.

The two leads keep up the pace of dialogue and performance, and there are some lovely shots of Amalfi, but there's a leaden pace to the rest of it, raising my hackles in a get-on-with-it way as the police get involved, and apparently random strangers. Clearly this is an attempt to tangle the mystery, to offer more suspects, but director W. Lee Wilder and editor Ruth Totz seem content to let scenes ramble on without much happening.
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5/10
What's more important, stashed loot or your freedom?
mark.waltz31 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
American soldier Lloyd Bridges runs the black market on the side during World War II Italy and ends up in military prison when he's caught. Somehow making it back to Italy in spite of being broke and having no passport, Bridges finds himself followed everywhere he goes and ultimately wanted for murder. Bridges strives to find the money and keep the police off his trail, but there's no peace for the criminal no matter how minor.

Lea Padovani co-stars as the pretty Italian girl who latches onto him, and there's all sorts of other shady Italian characters, some familiar with Bridges since his days selling illegal goods. This is just an average thriller where the hero really isn't somebody you root for, even if it is the future sea hunter or the head of air traffic control who picked the wrong week to give up amphetamines. Bridges is pretty sexy, though, looking quite handsome in nothing but a pair of boxers.
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7/10
OFF-BEAT FILM-NOIR...ITALY LOCATIONS & CAST...LLOYD BRIDGES SHOW
LeonLouisRicci5 August 2021
A Dark-Atmosphere and Tone Pervades this Picture Shot in Italy by B-Movie Maker Wilder.

A Good Story of Ex-Con-Ex-Army Black Marketeer Bridges Returning After Serving 4 Years in the Brig.

He Buried the Loot Before Being Caught and He's Back for the Digs.

The Movie is Dominated by the Only American in the Movie as He is quite a Contrast.

Handsome, Tall, and Blonde Among Backward, Groveling Poor-Folk.

All Hemmed in by a Police-State and Criminals Constantly on the Move and Surveillance is the State of Play.

Bridges' Confidence Propels Him as He Searches for Clues to His Missing Money.

It's a Good Mystery Story from Wilder and He Keeps Things Going with Great Natural Locations and Dark Figures Lurking About.

Would be Better with Subtitles, a Lot of Foreign Language is Spoken.

The Film is Obviously an Homage/Rip-Off of "The Third Man" (1949).

Complete with "Guitar" Plucking Soundtrack.

It's a Hard-Boiled Noir with Sentimental Touches

A Bit Different because of the Locations and the Foreign Cast makes it a Euro-Look-See in the Post-War Era.

Good Atmospherics and the Foreign Cast and Locations make it...

Worth a Watch.
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A Bridges Showcase
dougdoepke31 July 2011
Where the movie really succeeds is as a character study. Bridges' ex-army man Frank Keeler comes across as unusually unsympathetic. We see him first as a penny-ante black- marketeer. Then, after serving a term in the brig, he cadges money from his buddies, but runs out on the debt. And if that's not bad enough, we discover he ran out on his Italian girlfriend and now, back in Italy, wants to use her again. Yeah, he's something of a rat, and only returns to Italy to dig up his buried army loot. Bridges is excellent, with an appropriate swagger and cocky self-assurance. And we don't so much root for him as wait to see what happens next.

Filmed on location in Italy, the authentic background helps overcome a rather muddled plot, especially the murky intrigue with American gangster Conway. What's really apparent, however, is the influence of Orson Welles' The Third Man (1950) from the previous year. Here, director-producer Wilder emulates much of Welles' complex visual style in a story that also resembles Welles' tale of post-war European intrigue, even down to the guitar accompaniment in place of the highly popular zither of The Third Man. Nothing necessarily wrong with this, except Welles is a really tough act to follow.

Anyway, It's an appropriate ending that achieves some poignancy without betraying Frank's selfish character; thanks also to Aldo Fabrizi's sly performance as the wily caretaker. All in all, it's an obscure movie, likely because of the absence of big name stars. Nonetheless, Bridges shows here how much talent there is outside those big name stars.
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6/10
Potentially interesting plot ruined by poor direction
adrianovasconcelos23 November 2023
Director Lee Wilder - a complete unknown to me - had a potentially very gripping plot to work with, but failed on various fronts: cinematography, albeit keeping to the film noir tenets of darkness, is unremittingly dark throughout, consistently filmed at night or in the darkest parts of Amalfi, Italy.

Ex-GI Frank Keeler (Bridges) returns to Italy after doing 4 years in the clinker in Detroit, USA, to pay for his involvement in black market activity. Sensing that he was about to get caught, he had the good sense to bury the proceeds in a box by a cemetery.

However, all types of complications happen from that point on, and Lee Wilder simply cannot get believable performances from his cast, including noted Italian actors like Aldo Fabrizi, Lea Padovani (she sounds completely unnatural in English, but quite convincing in Italian) and Gianni Rizzo, among others.

Lloyd Bridges emerges as the least bad of the lot but still not good enough to convince me ever to rewatch THREE STEPS NORTH. 6/10.
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7/10
The adventures of a jerk!
planktonrules30 August 2021
During the 1950s-60s, many Italian films sought out American actors to star in their films. The idea was that an American star might increase the film's marketability abroad. Many of the stars were actually very minor stars...folks who would one day be bigger stars, such as Richard Basehart in Fellini's "Il Badone" as well as this film, " "Three Steps North" with Lloyd Bridges.

When the story begins, you learn that during WWII, Frank (Bridges) was a very bad boy. He was a soldier who would steal from the military and sell these stolen goods on the black market. But, he got caught and was sentenced to four years in prison...and the film begins after he's released. His plan is to return to Italy because he left a small fortune buried there....and he wants to retrieve it. But, not surprisingly all sorts of problems occur...the first of which is that there is a military cemetery very close to where he buried the money...and it won't be easy to retrieve. But, before he can try, folks start dying and the local police take an interest in Frank.

This is a decent film. While it lags a bit in the middle, the story is entertaining and Bridges is excellent as a glib jerk! No, this man is no hero...and this makes the film quite unusual...but well worth seeing.
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7/10
Burried with the dead.
ulicknormanowen24 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Underrated thriller which,in spite of a sometimes muddled script , sustains the interest till the final sequences ; Lloyd Bridges is par excellence the anti-hero : black market during the war in Italy , dishonorably discharged , he hid the fruit of his traffic in a secret place : but as he burried it in the dark , he perhaps did not choose the right place.

All the other actors are Italian ,which shows respect for the audience ; "three steps north" takes place a few years after WW2 ,the shadow of which hangs over the whole movie : the GI cemetery , the caretaker who lost son and wife, the old lady in the hotel who visits her son 's grave and thinks that he's akin to her family , weren't it for his braveness (unwittingly ironical).

A lot of colorful characters surrounds the ex-soldier : a woman who pretends to help him by providing him an alibi , a suspicious superintendent , an obese private .....he meets in the church ..... As for the chapel ,it's the final unexpected twist and it's brilliant ,as luminous as the light which comes at the caretaker's windows.
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9/10
Italian crime/mystery, w/ Lloyd Bridges as ex-GI in post-war Italy
django-115 July 2003
Produced and directed by W. Lee Wilder, this Italian production stars Lloyd Bridges as a GI who returns to Italy after the war to find some money he stashed a few years earlier (I don't want to give away too much of the plot, so I'll be intentionally vague)--needless to say, he has a number of problems in getting to it and a number of other people manage to get in the way of his getting it. Lea Padovani is the lovely but fiery lady he knew during the war who he tries to find to assist him, and the colorful Aldo Fabrizi is a man who lives right next to where the money was stashed and who befriends Bridges, but who Bridges must keep in the dark about his REAL reasons for being in the area. As always, Lloyd Bridges manages to make the character richly detailed and full, giving him some unpleasant qualities even though he is the "hero" of the piece, and making us feel for him as he faces danger and encounters one problem after another. The ending is nicely ironic while being positive and bringing the character to a new level of self-awareness. Wilder uses a number of nice, unexpected touches throughout and the location filming and mostly-Italian cast (except for two small supporting characters who play Americans)give the film a unique flavor. This originally received a US release through United Artists and was taped off TV during the early days of cable, when stations had a lot of time to fill and still played off-the-wall black-and-white B movies that could be gotten cheaply. Those days are long gone, but you should still keep your eyes out for this distinctive mystery with a fine Lloyd Bridges performance.
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