Directed by Edward Dmytryk; produced by Stanley Kramer
Edward Miller (Arthur Franz) is embittered, angry and resentful toward women. His feelings have reached the point of violence and he starts shooting women he sees from a distance. On his trail are the hassled police lieutenant, Kafka (Adolphe Menjou), and his droll assistant, Ferris (Gerald Mohr). How they will catch Miller - if they will catch him - before he claims more victims, may be answered by the murderer himself, who begs them from afar to stop him.
An interesting and suspenseful movie, The Sniper seems to be ahead of its time. I expected, when I first read the synopsis, to find that it had been made in the early 1960s, not a decade earlier. The writing stands out rather more than the acting. The screenplay (nominated for an Oscar) is by Harry Brown, who had already written or co-written A Walk in the Sun (based on his novel), Arch of Triumph, Sands of Iwo Jima and A Place in the Sun. He would later co-write the original Ocean’s 11.
Brown’s script allows us to know the killer, a loner who was obviously traumatized as a child, undoubtedly by his uncaring, possibly physically abusive mother, and then rejected by society in various ways. Miller is made sympathetic to an extent; he knows he is committing murder, and wants to be stopped, and yet cannot. Nonetheless, his rage, never far beneath a rather childish surface, is clearly depicted, and he is not let off the hook for his crimes.
Interestingly, criminal profiling is highlighted in the film. Psychiatrist James Kent (Richard Kiley) is concerned as much with finding out why the murders are being committed as he is with stopping them, with a view to preventing such killings in the future, and helping or ‘curing’ those who might become criminals. It is a view considered too idealistic for other citizens, though his influence is felt by Kafka.
Though the acting takes a back seat to the writing, it is, even so, good, if not very good. Franz is adequate though a little obvious in his rĂ´le, while the performers playing the cops don’t bring anything new to their parts. Marie Windsor, a hardworking actress of B-movies and film noir (eg. The Narrow Margin, The Killing), plays against type as a pleasant and friendly lounge pianist.
Frank Faylen also steps out of his usual niche, and plays an authority figure, a high-ranking police official. Wally Cox, very soon to become tv’s Mister Peepers, and later, a popular panelist on The Hollywood Squares, has a non-comedic bit part, while Charles Lane, whose film work spanned three quarters of a century, plays a drunk.
Among other aspects of The Sniper that stand out are its setting - clearly San Francisco, one of the most recognizable cities in the world but which is never named or indicated - and the ending, which is unusual for the genre. The Sniper is exciting and involving, and extraordinary for its era.












































