9 / 10
The Killers is Robert Siodmak’s 1946 American film noir expanding Ernest Hemingway’s 1927 short story. The film depicts two professional assassins arriving in a small New Jersey town to murder gas station attendant Pete Lund, who waits passively in his rented room for their arrival rather than fleeing when warned. Insurance investigator Jim Reardon subsequently traces Lund’s actual identity as former boxer Ole Swede Andersen and uncovers his involvement in a payroll robbery years earlier that produced the circumstances leading to his eventual murder. Burt Lancaster makes his film debut playing Ole Andersen. Edmond O’Brien plays Reardon. Ava Gardner plays Kitty Collins. Albert Dekker plays Big Jim Colfax. Sam Levene plays Lieutenant Lubinsky. William Conrad plays one of the killers. Charles McGraw plays the other killer. The screenplay was written by Anthony Veiller though John Huston contributed substantially without credit. The film was produced by Mark Hellinger Productions and Universal Pictures on a budget of approximately 875,000 dollars. The work received four Academy Award nominations.
The Killers represents the foundational expansion of brief literary source material into full-length noir adaptation. Hemingway’s original 1927 short story occupies approximately ten pages and depicts only the opening sequence where the two killers wait in the diner for Andersen to arrive. The remaining ninety minutes of the film operate as original elaboration that explains why Andersen accepted his death. Hemingway reportedly approved the adaptation as superior expansion of his source. Burt Lancaster’s film debut launched one of the principal American leading man careers of the postwar period. Lancaster brought athletic physical presence, intelligent dialogue delivery, and the underlying intensity that the films that came after including From Here to Eternity (1953) and Sweet Smell of Success (1957) extended. The Killers also represented one of Ava Gardner’s first major roles, establishing her femme fatale capabilities that subsequent entries in the genre would continue developing.
The Hemingway Expansion
Hemingway’s source story depicts only the opening sequence. Two killers arrive at a diner. They tell the customers and staff they are waiting for Ole Andersen. They threaten violence but ultimately leave without killing anyone in the diner. The story ends with Nick Adams visiting Andersen’s rented room to warn him. Andersen lies on his bed and tells Nick that running would do no good. The story ends without resolution.
The film expands this opening into elaborate noir investigation explaining why Andersen accepted his death. The expansion required substantial original creation rather than adaptation of existing source. Anthony Veiller and uncredited John Huston developed Andersen’s history as failed boxer, his involvement with Kitty Collins, his participation in the payroll robbery, and the subsequent betrayals that produced his eventual murder. The expansion has aged into demonstration that excellent adaptations can sometimes substantially exceed source material when the source provides foundation rather than complete narrative.
For Writers
Source material can provide foundation rather than complete narrative that adaptations must reproduce faithfully. The same applies to creative work. The brief source that establishes situation can support extensive original elaboration rather than constraining work to its specific content.
Lancaster’s Debut
Burt Lancaster’s film debut as Ole Andersen launched one of the principal American leading man careers of the postwar period. Lancaster was thirty-three during production. He had been working as circus acrobat and stage performer before Mark Hellinger cast him in the role. The combination of physical presence, intelligent performance, and underlying intensity produced material that established his standing immediately rather than requiring gradual career development.
Lancaster’s subsequent career extended across multiple decades including From Here to Eternity (1953), Sweet Smell of Success (1957), Elmer Gantry (1960), Atlantic City (1980), and many others. He combined athletic physical capability with serious dramatic range across productions that few American leading men have matched. The Killers set the pattern that subsequent work would extend. Lancaster died in 1994 having produced one of the more major American leading man careers of the twentieth century.
For Writers
Debut performances can establish star standing immediately rather than requiring gradual career development. Worth remembering for creative work. The first work that demonstrates full capability creates conditions that subsequent gradual development would not have produced.
The Flashback Investigation
The film structure follows insurance investigator Jim Reardon as he traces Andersen’s history through interviews with people who knew him at different periods. Each interview produces a flashback depicting the events the interview subject witnessed. The investigation gradually assembles Andersen’s complete history from the partial accounts of various witnesses. The structure creates dramatic suspense about how the disparate pieces will connect into coherent narrative.
The investigation structure has been imitated extensively in subsequent films including Citizen Kane (1941) which had used similar approach. The Killers extended the Citizen Kane structure to noir material. Subsequent productions across multiple decades have continued to use witness-based investigation as organizational principle. The picture allows films to deliver complex narrative through multiple perspectives while maintaining dramatic momentum through the investigator’s pursuit of complete understanding.
For Writers
Witness-based investigation structures can deliver complex narrative through multiple perspectives. Useful for fiction. The investigator who pursues complete understanding through witness interviews provides structural device that complex stories can use productively.
Craft Note
Robert Siodmak directed extensive American noir productions including Phantom Lady (1944), The Killers (1946), and The Spiral Staircase (1946). He had emigrated from Germany after the Nazi rise to power and brought European visual sensibility to American studio production. Siodmak returned to European production after the early 1950s and continued working through subsequent decades. His noir filmography represents considerable contribution to the foundational period of the American genre.
Verdict
The Killers represents the foundational expansion of brief literary source material into full-length noir adaptation. The Hemingway expansion demonstrates that excellent adaptations can substantially exceed source material when the source provides foundation rather than complete narrative. Burt Lancaster’s film debut launched one of the principal American leading man careers of the postwar period. The flashback investigation structure has been imitated extensively in later films across multiple decades. Recommended for anyone interested in film noir, in Lancaster’s filmography, or in works whose adaptation approaches have shaped subsequent film practice.
FAQ
Should I read the Hemingway story first?
Reading the 1927 source story provides context for understanding the adaptation expansion. The story is brief and can be read in approximately fifteen minutes. The film operates substantially as original work that uses the story as foundation.
How does the film compare to the 1964 remake?
Don Siegel directed a 1964 remake with Lee Marvin, John Cassavetes, and Angie Dickinson. The remake operates differently and was made for television before theatrical release. The 1946 original generally receives stronger critical recognition.
How does the film fit Lancaster’s filmography?
The Killers launched his career. From Here to Eternity (1953), Sweet Smell of Success (1957), and Elmer Gantry (1960) extend his major dramatic productions. Each work justifies engagement.
How does the runtime function?
The film runs approximately one hour forty-three minutes. The runtime accommodates both the opening source material and the extensive original investigation that follows.
What is the cultural impact of the film?
Foundational impact within American film noir and continuing approach to Lancaster’s debut performance. The work continues to receive critical attention for years after.
Is the film appropriate for younger viewers?
The film contains 1946-period violence and adult themes but no graphic content. Older teenagers can engage the material productively.