52 Pick-Up backdrop - movieMx Review
52 Pick-Up movie poster - 52 Pick-Up review and rating on movieMx
1986110 minCrime, Drama, Thriller, Action

52 Pick-Up

Is 52 Pick-Up a Hit or Flop?

FLOP

Is 52 Pick-Up worth watching? With a rating of 5.993/10, this Crime, Drama, Thriller, Action film is a mixed-bag for fans of the genre. Read on for our detailed analysis and user reviews.

5.993137 votes
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52 Pick-Up Synopsis

Harry Mitchell is a successful Los Angeles manufacturer whose wife is running for city council. His life is turned upside down when three blackmailers confront him with a videotape of him with his young mistress and demand $100,000. Fearing that the story will hurt his wife's political campaign if he goes to the police, Harry pretends that he will pay the men, but does not follow through.

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Top Cast

Roy Scheider
Roy ScheiderHarry Mitchell
Ann-Margret
Ann-MargretBarbara Mitchell
Vanity
VanityDoreen
John Glover
John GloverAlan Raimy
Robert Trebor
Robert TreborLeo Franks
Lonny Chapman
Lonny ChapmanJim O'Boyle
Kelly Preston
Kelly PrestonCini
Doug McClure
Doug McClureMark Arveson
Clarence Williams III
Clarence Williams IIIBobby Shy
Alex Henteloff
Alex HenteloffDan Lowenthal

Official Trailer

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 52 Pick-Up worth watching?

52 Pick-Up has received mixed reviews with a 5.993/10 rating. It might be worth watching if you're a fan of Crime, Drama, Thriller movies.

Is 52 Pick-Up hit or flop?

52 Pick-Up has received average ratings (5.993/10), performing moderately with audiences.

What genre is 52 Pick-Up?

52 Pick-Up is a Crime, Drama, Thriller movie that Harry Mitchell is a successful Los Angeles manufacturer whose wife is running for city council. His life is turned upside down when three blackmailers...

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Critic Reviews

John ChardJul 13, 2014
★ 0

Our marriage has lasted 23 years. That’s longer than she’s been alive! 52 Pick-Up is directed by John Frankenheimer and written by Elmore Leonard (adapting from his own novel) and John Steppling. It stars Roy Scheider, Ann-Margret, John Glover, Vanity, Clarence Williams III, Robert Trebor and Kelly Preston. Music is by Gary Chang and cinematography by Jost Vacano and Stephen Ramsey. Successful business entrepreneur Harry Mitchell (Scheider) finds himself the victim of blackmail by three pornographers who have video evidence of his extramarital affair. With his wife about to embark on a new stage of her political career, the last thing Harry needs is a scandal, but when things take a turn for the worse Harry decides to use unorthodox methods to deal with the blackmailers. A nifty neo-noir this, certainly deserving of being better known in neo-noir circles. The presence of Leonard at the writing table ensures that the story doesn’t drift too far away from his own source material, though location is moved to L.A. as opposed to the Detroit of the novel. Thematic thrust centres around Mitchell being caught for his indiscretions and what the consequences of his actions means for all around him, quite often with devastating results. Mitchell has to move about a seedy world of pornography, of cheap peekaboo bars, strip joints and snuff movies, he has to get to the level of his blackmailers so as to enact his plans with conviction. The three weasels played by Glover, Williams and Trebor are in turn slimy, menacing and a twitchy neurotic, an off-beat trio suitably framed by Frankenheimer’s sleazy and cold world. It may not be prime Frankenheimer but the director knows his noir onions, both in performances garnered from his strong cast and via his visual ticks. Characters are more often than not smoking or drinking liquor, sweating or looking pained as the camera gets up close and personal, the director even finds place for a bit of slatted shadow play in one sequence and menacing angled shards for another. Some contrivances are more annoying than hindrances, it’s a bit bloodless for a picture not lacking in action scenes, and although the finale is signposted without due care and attention, it is still sufficiently rewarding. Decadence, sleaze, greed, paranoia and moral decay come crashing together to create a sadly neglected piece of 1980s neo-noir. A yuppie revenger where there are no heroes, just sinners and victims. 7.5/10