Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuBank robber Steve hides out in a small town, working as a cab driver. He meets Julie who is caring for her ill aunt. Steve courts her and they eventually marry because he needs a legitmate f... Alles lesenBank robber Steve hides out in a small town, working as a cab driver. He meets Julie who is caring for her ill aunt. Steve courts her and they eventually marry because he needs a legitmate front with which to launder the loot money.Bank robber Steve hides out in a small town, working as a cab driver. He meets Julie who is caring for her ill aunt. Steve courts her and they eventually marry because he needs a legitmate front with which to launder the loot money.
- Martha - Waitress
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- Photo Shop Assistant
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- Malt Shop Customer
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- Harry
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- Taxi Company Boss
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- Charlie
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- Vance - Reporter
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- Mr. Haines
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- Judge
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It's a pretty good, dark movie. Beaumont, for those of us who remember him as the father in LEAVE IT TO BEAVER, is excellent, and Miss Rafferty gives a fine performance. It will come to some as a surprise that this was produced by Sigmund Neufeld and directed by his brother, Sam Newfield (hiding under the name of 'Peter Stewart.' They had been associated so long with PRC, producing cheap movies for the bottom of triple features that it seems natural to believe that is all they were capable of. However, given a good script, good actors, and a halfway decent budget, they could turn out a good movie. Here's the proof.
All in all, the flick's a cheapo that over-stretches its spotty material. Too bad director Newfield's direction shows little imagination with a storyline that does offer some potential. In fact the staging of the implausible climax ends the flick on a particularly dreary note. Of course, the main attraction now is catching one of TV's favorite dads as soulless killer Steve, a difficult role Beaumont brings off in surprisingly effective fashion. In a better movie, his portrayal could have reached classic status. Trouble is his feminine foil, Julie (Rafferty), is poorly thought out and played in understandably bewildered fashion (where was the helping hand of the director). Julie goes from malt shop hooker (implied) to floor mat for Steve's many schemes, and crucially, without hint of depth the conflicted role requires. Had Julie some depth and had the script some irony, Julie could have turned the tables on her abuser in a way that shows he's underestimated her. Something surprising like that could have made the movie more memorable than the Beaumont showcase it finally is.
Beaumont plays a small time crook who has skipped with the loot from a bank robbery totaling $200,000.00. Now what to do with it.
Hwe hits upon a scheme that involves him wooing and wedding counter girl Frances Rafferty from a malt shop. She has a hypochondriac aunt whom she's chained to having to take care of her played by Cecil Weston. While courting her Beaumont acts just like Ward Cleaver courting June. But what he has in mind is to poison the old girl and then claim that $200,000.00 was part of money that the aunt hid in a mattress. This presuming the money isn't numbered consecutively and serial numbers recorded. As Rafferty has a shady past of her own she wants no one to know about she has to go along.
Of course what really forces her hand is when Ward Cleaver turns vicious and slaps her good. I imagine seeing Money Madness on TV after Beaumont's persona from Leave It To Beaver made him TV's favorite dad must have exponentially increased the shock value in a way the producers couldn't have dreamed of.
This 1948 independent noir film holds up well today and here's a chance to see a really different Hugh Beaumont.
"Money Madness" from 1948 stars Hugh Beaumont (Ward Cleaver of Leave it to Beaver) and Frances Rafferty.
In the first scene, we see Steve Clark (Beaumont) dropping a fortune into a safe deposit box. The next thing we know, he's driving a cab. When a passenger begins hassling his date (Rafferty), Clark throws him out of the cab and proceeds to charm the young woman, whose name is Julie.
Julie lives with her absolutely horrible aunt, who continually accuses her of not caring about her, leaving her alone all the time, etc. Julie would love to leave, but she can't bring herself to. After not very long (maybe five minutes) Steve proposes, and the two get married and go to Steve's place.
Steve then has a prearranged telephone call; when he hangs up, he tells her that his divorce never went through, so he is now a bigamist. It will take a little time to work it all out, so she needs to go back to her aunt's place. Boy have times changed!
Julie returns, with Steve coming by constantly. He poisons the old bat and then explains to Julie that she will inherit the house, and because he needs to hide where that money came from, he can put it in a chest in the attic, and everyone will think it was her aunt's.
Julie is naturally unhappy with this idea, especially since he's a murderer, but he reminds her that she can't testify against him since they're married (untrue - she cana't be forced to testify against him) and the bigamy deal was only so she would get back to her aunt's house; and she served the liquid with the poison.
Julie is stuck, and when Steve guns down an old partner who is after the money in front of her, she's plenty scared. The lawyer (Harlan Wade) handling her aunt's estate sees she is acting strangely, but she won't talk to him.
You won't be able to get over what a nasty piece of work Beaver's father is! He does a very good job, as does Rafferty as the fightened young woman.
The moral of this story is, get to know someone before you get married.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe failure of the original copyright holder to renew the film's copyright resulted in it falling into public domain, meaning that virtually anyone could duplicate and sell a VHS/DVD copy of the film. Therefore, many of the versions of this film available on the market are either severely (and usually badly) edited and/or of extremely poor quality, having been duped from second- or third-generation (or more) copies of the film.
- Zitate
Steve Clark: Listen, Julie. Get this straight. What I have I keep. That goes for the money, and it goes for you.
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- Herkunftsland
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- Auch bekannt als
- The Easy Way
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 13 Minuten
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- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1