Five Minutes to Live
Five Minutes to Live is a 1961 American neo-noir crime film directed by Bill Karn. It was retitled Door-to-Door Maniac for an American International Pictures rerelease in 1966. The film stars Johnny Cash, in his first theatrical film role, Donald Woods, Vic Tayback, and Cay Forrester, who wrote the screenplay and whose husband, Ludlow Flower, produced. Cash performed the film's title song, with a guitar solo by Merle Travis, who also appears in the film as Max.
Plot
Fred Dorella sits in a dark room, detailing his most recent bank robbery and talking about how he teamed with hardened criminal Johnny Cabot to execute his plan. Cabot plans to take Nancy Wilson, wife of the bank's vice president Ken Wilson, as a hostage. He intends to hold her until Fred calls confirming that they have the ransom money. Cabot watches the Wilson house as Ken leaves for work and their son Bobby heads off to school. Posing as a door-to-door guitar instructor, Cabot talks his way into the house and takes Nancy hostage.
More details
| author | Cay Forrester |
|---|---|
| director | Bill Karn |
| editor | Donald Nosseck |
| genre | crime thriller |
| keywords | bank robbery capture dark room held hostage kill las vegas plan run shoot talk terrorize vice president young boy |
| producer | James Ellsworth Ludlow Flower |
| productionCompany | Somera Productions-Flower Film Productions |
| publisher | Sutton Pictures |
| theme | independent neo-noir |