Storm Warning (1951) Review: Ginger Rogers, Doris Day, and a Town Controlled by the KKK cover art

Storm Warning (1951) Review: Ginger Rogers, Doris Day, and a Town Controlled by the KKK

Storm Warning (1951) Review: Ginger Rogers, Doris Day, and a Town Controlled by the KKK

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Summary

Hosts Janna and Debbie discuss the 1951 film Storm Warning, directed by Stewart Heisler and starring Ginger Rogers, Doris Day, Ronald Reagan, and Steve Cochran.

They summarize the premise: Rogers plays a woman visiting her sister (Day) who witnesses a murder connected to the Ku Klux Klan, setting off an intense, fast-moving story. They note the film’s dramatic roles for Rogers and Day, Reagan’s district attorney performance, and the theme that silence and inaction can be as harmful as committing the crime.

Their conversation highlights shocking scenes, including Rogers being whipped and an attempted rape, the portrayal of a whole town complicit in the Klan, and the bleak ending in which the sister is shot by her husband and he is then killed. They connect the film to real-life Klan presence in the late 1980s and 1990s South and share their “martini shot” standout moments.

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FIND A FAVORITE SPOT IN THIS EPISODE:

00:00 Welcome and Setup

00:13 Movie Premise Teaser

01:39 Post Movie Reactions

02:06 When We Got Hooked

04:27 KKK Context and History

06:11 Ending and Tough Scenes

06:58 What Would You Do

10:42 Performances and Casting

12:56 Themes and Town Complicity

17:20 Segregation and Personal Stories

20:31 Martini Shot Moments

24:02 Final Thoughts and Goodbye

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