Steel Town (1952) Poster

(1952)

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7/10
Learning the business
bkoganbing16 April 2018
Steel Town is a nice B film from Universal studios that has John Lund going to work at a steel mill to learn the business from the ground up. He's the son of the boss, but dad has never forgotten his roots. He has Lund boarding with an old friend from his beginning days William Harrigan and his wife Eileen Crowe. Also staying at the house is Ann Sheridan their daughter who slings hash at the local eatery popularized by the factory workers and James Best a young steel factory worker whose dad was killed at the mill in an accident. He's a reminder of what can go wrong if one is not always alert.

Lund has a rival for Sheridan in Howard Duff also a veteran worker at the plant. In a way their rivalry is a whole lot like the rivalry of soldiers for the affections of the girl be left behind in a slew of war pictures. Don't kid yourself, these workers see themselves in as rigorous and occupation as any the military has to offer.

In fact that notion is graphically demonstrated by the cinematography showing the making of steel, how these guys are working near furnaces operating at hundreds of degrees fahrenheit.

Watching Steel Town put me in mind of a story how the fabled Yankee owner Colonel Jacob Ruppert learned the brewery business also from the ground up. Purportedly Ruppert's dad sent his son to work in the factory so as to learn the business from the ground up. His first job was washing the kegs where the beer was to be stored.

All the players get right into their roles, so much so that you cease to think of them as actors and view them in the blue collar roles they are playing. This film above all is a nice tribute to the working people who really made this country great.
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5/10
We're Just Steel Men And Steel Women In A Steel Town
boblipton11 January 2022
John Lund may be in position to inherit the steel mill, but his uncle wants him to learn what goes on from the ground up. So he moves into the home of uncle's one-time fellow puddler William Harrigan. Harrigan's daughter is Ann Sheridan with a strawberry-blonde rinse and, apparently, a given name of 'Red'. Lund is+ working under Miss Sheridan's boyfriend, Howard Duff.

I suppose Lund is supposed to be the hero, his vast wealth irrelevant, his arrogance delightful insouciance, his learning how to shovel into a furnace without burning out his eyes more significant than cramming for a test, then forgetting everything but the diploma. I find Duff's dislike very natural as Lund tries to appropriate his girl, and Miss Sheridan's reverse snobbery until she realizes that it's just as easy to fall in love with a rich man as a poor one. Of course Lund will make good. Of course he'll marry Miss Sheridan. What they'll talk about evenings is a problem that can be resolved in the divorce courts.

As usual, I enjoyed Miss Sheridan, who always is busy doing whatever she is doing at the moment, and dislike Lund, one of the lesser examples of Post-War Leading Man: handsome, stalwart, and utterly interchangeable. With Eileen Crow, Chick Chandler, and a surprisingly natural Nancy Culp as a hash house waitress.
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And a Cup of Java
drednm15 June 2016
STEEL TOWN is a neat little film about the boss' nephew who comes to town to work in a steel mill and learn the business. He also moves in on a local redhead, setting up a rivalry with a co-worker for her hand. The film has almost a documentary feel as it demonstrates steel production methods (filmed as Kaiser Steel's California plant) and makes good use of its color filming.

John Lund stars as Steve Kostane (the spelling on the company sign), the nephew who moves in with "Red" (Ann Sheridan) and her family, much to the consternation of Jim (Howard Duff). The two men battle for Red's favors but have to work together in the dangerous steel mill. We know from the getgo who will win, but it doesn't matter.

Co-stars include William Harrigan as the father with a bad heart, Eileen Crowe as the mother, James Best and Chick Chandler as co-workers, and best of all Nancy Kulp as the saucy, gum-chewing waitress Dolores who yells out each in a Brooklyn accent and always finishes with "and a cup of java." The Kaiser Steel mill in Fontana, California, is used as a filming site and as mentioned, a couple of Kaiser automobiles are prominent. Steve drives a white Kaiser DeLuxe sedan, and Jim drives the smaller model, the Henry J. The Kaiser auto company had brief success as a start-up company after World War II but discontinued producing passenger cars in 1955. Their Jeep continues in production.

Along with the cars, the film also promotes Fontana (near San Bernardino) and mentions Lake Arrowhead as a weekend destination as well as a retirement spot.
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4/10
The leading lady might be red hot, but the film is as cold as hardened steel.
mark.waltz22 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This look into the life of working in a steel mill has some interesting moments butt quickly loses its substance as the story pretty much goes nowhere. Ann Sheridan is fine and dandy as they restaurant owner whose family has worked in the steel mill for years, but the Romantic triangle she's involved in with Howard Duff and John Lund is actually quite dull. It all starts when Lund shows up at Sheridan's greasy spoon and gets into a fight with Duff over his seat, his steak and his sweetheart. If it wasn't for and Sheridan and a young Nancy Kulp as the heavilly accented waitress from Brooklyn, the opening of this film would have been a dud but it is one of the few highlights of the film.

There's real no substance to the romantic triangle between Sheridan and the two men because in spite of Duff's claim that Sheridan is his gal, it's apparent immediately. Sheridan is immediately taken to the handsome blond Lund. it turns out that Lund has inherited the steel mill and is there to get to know how it works, taken on a tour by Jeff who realizing that he is his boss decides to play nice. From there, it's all about Lund making his way with Sheridan, moving into the boarding house run by her parents, William Harrigan who works at the mail and Eileen Crowe.

Other than the opening scene with Culp calling out an order for steak and all the trimmings (Chopped with her amusing way of adding on coffee), this is memorable for the sequences inside the steel mill that shows how it works. It is dangerous and puts Papa Harrigan in jeopardy even though he claims that he has no intentions of ever retiring or even dying. It's a rather ordinary drama nicely filmed in color but minus any real soon in the romantic department.
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10/10
Great steelmaking document
hlschmidt20 May 2010
Outstanding documentation of the open hearth steel making process! The tour of the mill that Steve Kostane (John Lund) is given is an excellent summary, from raw materials (including coke-making!) into the blast furnace to produce the iron, to steel in the open hearth, to teeming the red-hot ingots and readying them for the rolling mill. There are not many integrated steel mills like this left in the US, and none AFAIK use the open hearth process anymore (today steel is made in the BOF, basic oxygen furnace, or is melted from scrap). BTW, in addition to automaking, Kaiser Steel also had a large shipbuilding division which turned out Liberty ships in WWII.

OK, so while the movie IS a bit cornball, it's a great document in glorious living Technicolor©! It's a shame that it doesn't seem to be commercially available on DVD.
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Fun to watch in retrospect
fivefids31 October 2001
If this film is nothing else, it is an excellent statement/commentary on a working class town in the 1950s. Great use of color for 1952, which was allegedly done to properly feature Ann Sheridan's red hair. Many scenes were filmed at the Kaiser steel plant in Fontana, CA. What the average viewer in the 21st century probably will not know is that the cars used in this movie were manufactured by the Kaiser-Frazer Motor corporation. Of all the aspects of this film, seeing these old cars, a very colorful 1951 Kaiser driven by Lund and a 1951 Henry J (also made by Kaiser) driven by Duff, was a real treat. Not much of a story but excellent social commentary on a period many look back on with rose colored glasses.
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