This essay is Thrilling Days of Yesteryear’s contribution toThe Best Hitchcock Movies (That Hitchcock Never Made) Blogathon, currently underway from July 7-12 and jointly hosted by Tales of the Easily Distracted and ClassicBecky’s Brain Food. For a complete list of the participants and films covered, check it all out here.
Georgia attorney Sam Bowden (Gregory Peck) has just put in a full day’s work lawyering and is ready to go home to wife Peggy (Polly Bergen) and daughter Nancy (Lori Martin) when a lanky, sleepy-eyed stranger reaches into his vehicle and grabs his car keys. As it turns out, he’s no stranger—he’s an ex-con named Max Cady (Robert Mitchum), and in his conversation with Bowden, Cady makes it abundantly clear that he plans to stick around in Sam’s neck of the woods for a while because he has a score to settle with the man he addresses as “Councilor” with mock respect. Eight years ago in Baltimore, Cady attacked a young woman and Bowden, who heard the woman’s cries for help as he was headed back to his hotel room, came to her rescue…even going so far as to being the key witness at the trial that put Cady away for that eight-year length of time. Cady holds Bowden responsible for his little stay with the state, and he’s out for revenge.
But Cady’s boardin’ with the warden has taught him a few things, and he’s become familiar with what is known as “jailhouse law.” He never comes right out and threatens Sam, so Bowden technically has no reason to have Police Chief (and friend) Mark Dutton (Martin Balsam) introduce Max to the inside of one of Georgia ’s jails. Cady’s made sure that he has money in the bank, so they can’t get him for vagrancy…and when Dutton has his men lean on Max with a little old-fashioned rousting Cady hires a civil liberties attorney named Dave Grafton (Jack Kruschen) to look out for his interests. But Cady’s subtle intimidation starts to work on Sam (the Bowden family’s dog is poisoned, and they’re convinced Cady was responsible) and the lawyer is forced to seek outside assistance from a private detective, Charlie Sievers (Telly Savalas). Sievers even tries to get a woman whom Cady has savagely beaten, Diane Taylor (Barrie Chase), to testify against him and put him away but she demurs, fearing for both her safety and reputation.
Sievers finally advises his client (Sam) that legal niceties are all well and good, but some animals need to be put down with a bullet to the brainpan. When
In The Making of Cape Fear, a featurette on the 2001 DVD release of the classic 1962 movie, actor Gregory Peck recalled that adapting John D. MacDonald’s The Executioners to the silver screen was a project instituted by his production company, Melville-Talbot Productions (the “Melville” being a nod to Peck’s role as Captain Ahab in the 1956 film version of Moby Dick, no doubt). But Peck didn’t care for MacDonald’s title, and after seeing “Cape Fear River ” on a map he decided to dub the film Cape Fear . Peck actually hadn’t planned on starring in the film; the role of attorney Sam Bowden had been intended for Charlton Heston (other actors considered included Jack Palance, John Wayne, James Coburn, and Charles Bronson) but Peck stepped in at the last minute. As for antagonist Cady, the late Ernest Borgnine had been offered the part but he declined…and Rod Steiger wanted the part but backed off when he heard the smart money was on Big Bad Bob. I’m no casting director (nor do I play one on TV), but in retrospect it’s hard to believe that anyone besides Mitchum was considered…for me it’s his signature film role, even though many folks would probably argue in favor of Harry Powell in The Night of the Hunter. Powell is a little too cartoonish for my tastes…Max Cady is just plain bad news, with a countenance in which evil not only lurks, it gloats.
Peck definitely knew who he wanted to direct the film: he was working with J. Lee Thompson on The Guns of Navarone when he gave Thompson MacDonald’s book to read, and the director definitely wanted in. Thompson also wanted to cast Hayley Mills in the role of daughter Nancy (he had directed her in her formal film debut, Tiger Bay ) but she was under exclusive contract to Walt Disney. So Thompson had to settle for Lori Martin, at that time the star of TV’s National Velvet…but lamented years afterward that he wished he could have used Mills in the part.
In Thompson’s hands, Cape Fear became a Hitchcockian suspenser…chiefly because the director was quite fond of The Master of Suspense’s work (he would often tackle a problem on set by asking “What would Hitch do?”), and the homage to his idol can be seen in the striking camera and lighting angles, exhilarating moments of suspense, and the tweaking he had to do in the film’s subject matter to please the censors. He also had a charismatic villain in Mitchum’s Cady, and a protagonist (Bowden) who finds his own morality a bit muddied after coming into contact with same. Because Cape Fear was filmed at Universal-International, Thompson was able to utilize the services of art director Robert F. Boyle and film editor George Thomasini, both of whom had worked on previous Hitchcock movies. And the icing on the cake was provided when longtime Hitchcock collaborator Bernard Herrmann agreed to contribute the pulse-pounding musical score for the film…which bears a striking similarity to Psycho in many passages.
The location shooting for Cape Fear has always been of large interest to me because though there was much interior work done at Universal, outside shots were done in both Stockton, California (the marina and houseboat scenes)…and my old stomping grounds of Savannah, Georgia. I discovered this the very time I saw the movie sometime back in the 1980s on TBS…and it was my late step-gran (my mom’s stepmother) who remarked that the background in the beginning of the film looked quite similar to
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Peck’s Bowden stops momentarily outside the U.S. Customs House in downtown |
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Um…it’s not thatbeautiful. |


















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