Why Must I Die
Why Must I Die
NR | 01 June 1960 (USA)
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A night club singer who is the daughter of a small-town crook is tried and convicted of murder.

Reviews
Micitype

Pretty Good

SanEat

A film with more than the usual spoiler issues. Talking about it in any detail feels akin to handing you a gift-wrapped present and saying, "I hope you like it -- It's a thriller about a diabolical secret experiment."

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Teddie Blake

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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Phillida

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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kapelusznik18

****SPOILERS*** Effective anti-death penalty movie released two years after the far more popular "I Want to Live" and a month after the headline grabbing, Caryl Chessman execution on May 2, 1960 in the San Quentin gas chamber. The film "Why Must I Die" showed how a innocent person can be executed by the state by mistake. It was popular nightclub singer Lois King's, Terry Moore, misfortune to get sucked into participating in a robbery of her place of employment the "Cockatoo" night club by hoodlum Eddie Rainey, Lionel Ames, and his safe-cracking gun moll Dottie Mason, Debra Paget.With Eddie blackmailing Lois in exposing her ex-convict dad Red King, Fred Sherman, unsolved crimes that the two participated in he got Lois to help him & Dottie knock off the "Cockatoo's" weekly take. It just happened that Loiss' boyfriend Kenny Randell,Phil Harvey,showed up unexpectedly and was blown away by Dottie. With the luckless Lois who was found at the scene of the crime by the just awakened night-watchman who was put to sleep with a spiked cup of coffee, by Lois, with the murder weapon, that Dottie dropped, in her possession! Arrested tried convicted and sentenced to death for Kenny's murder, in what seemed like 15 seconds, Louis can only be saved if both Eddie & Dottie confessed to their crime-fat chance-to keep her from being strapped into the state electric chair. It's Lois' court appointed lawyer Mr.Adler,Burt Freed, who somehow feels that she's innocent and tries to get her execution date postponed until he can dig up new evidence in her favor.***SPOILERS*** As things turn out it's Lois dad Red King who in trying to help his daughter screws things up big time by in trying to get his former partner in crime Eddie Rainey to confess his and Dottie's part in the robbery of the "Cockatoo" and murder of Kenny Randell. Red in trying to get him to confess to the police accidentally pushes Eddie off the fire escape of his 10th floor hotel room to his death! The only chance now for Lois to escape the hot seat now is Dottie who's now in women's prison together with Lois for a stick-up robbery where she ended up shooting a blind man whom she thought witnessed the robbery! ****MAJOR SPOILER***It's Dottie's enraged and fellow women inmates who get her, by working her over, to confess to her murder of Kenny Randell but as luck would have it Lois was already zapped, with 2,000 volts of electricity, before the warden or governor could stop the execution! We get to see here how justice can go wrong and an innocent person could end up dead for a crime that she or he didn't commit when the death penalty is involved. Unlike in a prison term it can't be reversed 1 or 10 or even 20 years later due to new found evidence. But in the case of the death penalty its permanent for the person who's sentenced and subjected to it!

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bkoganbing

This low budget independent film produced by Terry Moore is a plea against capital punishment. Producer Moore was able to get fellow contemporary star Debra Paget in this movie with her as they play a pair of knockabout girls who've definitely seen the seamier side of life. The only problem is that Moore winds up sitting on death row for a murder that Paget committed. Moore was a small time crook herself, but she grows tired of the life and wants to make a clean break from it. She goes to work for club owners Robert Shayne and Phil Harvey as a singer. But old friends like Lionel Ames whom she was an accomplice with in pulling several jobs follow her.Now Ames has Debra Paget in tow and she's one hard bitten dame that makes Moore look like Mary Poppins. The two pull a job on the club Moore was singing at and beautifully frame her for the robbery. The problem is that Paget kills Harvey and Moore fits that frame too.As for the rest of it, all I can say is that for such hard bitten dame Paget folds easily enough with a little pressure. If you've seen Susan Hayward in I Want To Live you can figure out where the story takes us.Hayward's performance in that is one of those once in a lifetime achievements by a player that are impossible to duplicate. That being said, plenty try and Terry Moore was one of them. I wouldn't be surprised if some of the financing for this low budget film was helped along a little by Howard Hughes. Terry was his main squeeze, but Hughes would have done this one from petty cash.Why Must I Die is sincere enough, but it's also trashy and exploitive.

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melvelvit-1

After a narrow escape during a botched heist, Lois King (Terry Moore) calls it a day and walks out on her small-time boyfriend, Eddie, and her ex-con dad to start a new life. She relocates to another city, finds work as a nightclub singer, and rises to become the headliner at a swank supper club owned by Kenny Randall. In love with Kenny and preparing for marriage, Lois gets an unwelcome visitor- Eddie and his new moll, Dottie Manson (Debra Paget)- who blackmail her into helping them rob Randall's safe. The scheme doesn't go off as planned, however; Dottie shoots Randall and takes off with the money while Eddie flees the scene after trying to run Dottie down. Lois is arrested, tried, convicted and sentenced to death for the crime despite the best efforts of her sympathetic lawyer (Bert Freed). Dottie is eventually arrested for another robbery and sent to the same prison as Lois, but refuses to confess to Randall's killing. Lois' only hope now is for Eddie to come forward but, confronted by Lois' dad, he accidentally falls to his death -and time is running out...In addition to earning Susan Hayward an Oscar, I WANT TO LIVE! (1958) was also a powerful plea for the abolishment of the death penalty. This low-rent rip-off did nothing for the career of its star, Howard Hughes' playmate Terry Moore, while capitalizing on the more sensational aspects of capital punishment. The poster screams "Only The Motion Picture Screen Would Dare Tell This Shocking Story!" and has Debra Paget yelling, "Honey, you're nothing but a good-time girl ...you're guilty as sin!" with Terry replying, "I'm damned if I'm innocent ...damned if I'm guilty ...the only thing that counts is to LIVE!" The movie's tag line reads, "The TRUE story of a girl on Death Row!" but, although very loosely based on the ordeal of Barbara Graham, a disclaimer in the closing credits reads "any resemblance to persons living or dead..."Mixing soap-opera with sensationalism, 1950's B-list pin-ups Terry Moore and Debra Paget get the chance to overact together in roles that require pulling out all stops. They can't quite pull it off, of course, but that only adds to the unintentional hilarity. Some of the more memorable moments include Moore, in prison, confiding in her doll and Paget blowing up a safe in capri pants and high heels. The teary-eyed Terry is forever getting bad breaks in life but Debra's risible role has her snarling every line and taking no prisoners; she kicks the cane away from an old blind man before shooting him in the back during a robbery because his ears may be witnesses. There's also a few in-jokes about Alfred Hitchcock: the music from VERTIGO is overused, one of the inmates killed her husband with a frozen leg of lamb, and Terry's Bible comes from the "Gates Motel". This was former Warner Bros. director Roy Del Ruth's final film and he gives this nonsense an air of respectability along with a well-done sequence or two. Terry Moore, who co-produced, gives herself four forgettable songs that stop the show for the wrong reasons and having her strapped into an electric chair with a hood pulled over her head comes not a moment too soon. The title tune (!) is saved for last and sung by Duane Eddy.Classic Film fans may enjoy ogling Moore & Paget or catching Del Ruth's swansong, but others may be tempted to pull the switch themselves.

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