Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA woman inherits an Oklahoma oil well and hires an itinerant oil engineer to start drilling but she runs afoul of a greedy oil tycooness who wants her company at any cost, even if it means m... Alles lesenA woman inherits an Oklahoma oil well and hires an itinerant oil engineer to start drilling but she runs afoul of a greedy oil tycooness who wants her company at any cost, even if it means murder, sabotage and deceit.A woman inherits an Oklahoma oil well and hires an itinerant oil engineer to start drilling but she runs afoul of a greedy oil tycooness who wants her company at any cost, even if it means murder, sabotage and deceit.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Thomas Browne Henry
- Sheriff L.G. Morelli
- (as Tom Browne Henry)
Walter Burke
- Wally - Karnes' Thug
- (Nicht genannt)
Paul E. Burns
- Well Assistant
- (Nicht genannt)
Edgar Dearing
- Joe
- (Nicht genannt)
Art Dupuis
- Hansen
- (Nicht genannt)
Frank Fenton
- Pete
- (Nicht genannt)
Sol Gorss
- Matt - Karnes' Thug
- (Nicht genannt)
Jim Hayward
- Mike - Mecca Bartender
- (Nicht genannt)
Gil Perkins
- Harry
- (Nicht genannt)
Richard Reeves
- Detective Webber
- (Nicht genannt)
Ned Roberts
- Wally
- (Nicht genannt)
Charles Wagenheim
- Bus Driver
- (Nicht genannt)
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Marie Windsor and Richard Denning as "Buzz" pair up to bring in her oil well against the forces at be.Great quickie with actors who have all been in heavier fare.Cheesy dialogue,fist fights,gunplay,sexual tension and plot twists keep this trash-daddy moving at a clip pace in glorious black & white.At times the actors seemed amused as they delivered their lines.Dark and serious oil field trash film see Stark Fear with Beverly Garland.
Richard Denning (Buzz) rides into a small oil town and heads to the nearest bar looking for work. Bingo! That was easy. He's got a job. Seemingly, he is an engineering expert capable of turning a profit for an oil rig with a lame past as well as providing muscle against sabotage. It's a good CV! He eyes up Marie Windsor (Terry) on their first meeting and you sense that love is in the air. He is not subtle about it - ha ha! Well, there is a bad element in town, of course, in the form of ruthless businesswoman Fay Baker (Lilly) and she has her eyes on the oil rig for herself. Well, some bodies pile up and there are murders to solve.
It's an alright film to watch, made interesting by the role of Fay Baker. She is excellent and very memorable as the town's top girl. You don't mess with her. We needed more scenes with her. Marie Windsor starts the film off in a hard-edged manner but seems to soften towards the end, and you look forward to the showdown that you know will come at some point between Baker and Windsor. The audience is just waiting for that Joan Collins v Linda Evans Dynasty catfight. As the film is set in the world of oilfields, it will make you think of the Dallas/Dynasty days.
Set against this is the very dreadful character of the town's drunk lawyer Taylor Holmes (Corpus). Yeah, we get it - he's drunk all the time. Why are there so many scenes with him being drunk and unfunny? One scene really tests the patience when he is making a meal with his stupid pet monkey. No need for this scene at all - it is not endearing as it is obviously supposed to be. Well, I guess he is relevant to the story. By the way, this film has a twist that I guarantee you will not expect.
"I'll Oilwells love you" sang the great Dolly Parton on one of her 1960s albums.
It's an alright film to watch, made interesting by the role of Fay Baker. She is excellent and very memorable as the town's top girl. You don't mess with her. We needed more scenes with her. Marie Windsor starts the film off in a hard-edged manner but seems to soften towards the end, and you look forward to the showdown that you know will come at some point between Baker and Windsor. The audience is just waiting for that Joan Collins v Linda Evans Dynasty catfight. As the film is set in the world of oilfields, it will make you think of the Dallas/Dynasty days.
Set against this is the very dreadful character of the town's drunk lawyer Taylor Holmes (Corpus). Yeah, we get it - he's drunk all the time. Why are there so many scenes with him being drunk and unfunny? One scene really tests the patience when he is making a meal with his stupid pet monkey. No need for this scene at all - it is not endearing as it is obviously supposed to be. Well, I guess he is relevant to the story. By the way, this film has a twist that I guarantee you will not expect.
"I'll Oilwells love you" sang the great Dolly Parton on one of her 1960s albums.
Now this film does have its faults and plot holes - an able-bodied able-minded engineer in post-war America (Richard Denning as "Buzz") who is living life as a drifter in need of a job, an alcoholic lawyer, not practicing for years who doesn't have the money for a drink or a smoke but DOES have a home and plenty of food AND an exotic pet, and plenty of people turning up murdered and yet the police who are apparently not corrupt can't figure out who has done what but really do enjoy slapping suspects around.
The story revolves around a feuding brother (Reno) and sister (Lilly). Lilly inherited three oil wells, and brother Reno inherited just one, yet Lilly wants Reno's well too because Reno shot Lilly's fiancé in an argument over gambling. It was judged a justifiable shooting, but considering how poor the legal system works in this town, maybe Lilly has a point with her legal dissatisfaction. Buzz agrees to help Reno bring in his well...in a small town where the sister is known to cause trouble of both the economic and physical kind for anybody who gets in her way? In 1950 why didn't he just get a job with an oil company? Because then we'd have no story.
This film is very sexually provocative for 1950, considering the production code was still in full force. My assumption was that Terry and Reno were husband and wife - they are in and out of each other's hotel rooms without knocking and just give off that impression. But they are not married. The conclusions are unspoken but inevitable. Also, wealthy vindictive sister Lilly seems to be married to somebody who has lost her interest and respect. Well, he (James Griffith as Walter) has lost her interest and respect, but they are not married either although Walter is apparently living at Lilly's home. Again the conclusions are unspoken but inevitable. Also, Lilly seems to be laying every man in town who is involved in the oil business. This is apparently how she keeps them under her thumb - that and money. Don't these guys ever compare notes or do they care? Again, quite sexually frank for 1950.
Don't let the clichés in the opening moments of the film fool you - things are not as they appear. I'd recommend this one as a good but not great film noir.
The story revolves around a feuding brother (Reno) and sister (Lilly). Lilly inherited three oil wells, and brother Reno inherited just one, yet Lilly wants Reno's well too because Reno shot Lilly's fiancé in an argument over gambling. It was judged a justifiable shooting, but considering how poor the legal system works in this town, maybe Lilly has a point with her legal dissatisfaction. Buzz agrees to help Reno bring in his well...in a small town where the sister is known to cause trouble of both the economic and physical kind for anybody who gets in her way? In 1950 why didn't he just get a job with an oil company? Because then we'd have no story.
This film is very sexually provocative for 1950, considering the production code was still in full force. My assumption was that Terry and Reno were husband and wife - they are in and out of each other's hotel rooms without knocking and just give off that impression. But they are not married. The conclusions are unspoken but inevitable. Also, wealthy vindictive sister Lilly seems to be married to somebody who has lost her interest and respect. Well, he (James Griffith as Walter) has lost her interest and respect, but they are not married either although Walter is apparently living at Lilly's home. Again the conclusions are unspoken but inevitable. Also, Lilly seems to be laying every man in town who is involved in the oil business. This is apparently how she keeps them under her thumb - that and money. Don't these guys ever compare notes or do they care? Again, quite sexually frank for 1950.
Don't let the clichés in the opening moments of the film fool you - things are not as they appear. I'd recommend this one as a good but not great film noir.
How many B-films start with a stranger hopping off a bus in a lonely town, sidling into the local bar, sliding up to the femme fatale, and getting up to his neck in trouble? In this version, the hero (Richard Denning) google-eyes Marie Windsor's frame, breaks up a crooked dice game, and finds himself embroiled in an internecine oil-wildcatting war. It's a potboiler, but very watchable thanks to a decent plot, sharp dialog, and especially the offbeat characters and tried-and-true B-list performers who play them. Unfortunately, like most low-rent films of the time, the visual quality is only a couple of notches above TV, and most scenes are pretty static until the breakneck climax.
Miss Windsor gets a softer role than usual here; it's Fay Baker who scores the man-eating ice-queen role. Best of all are Jim Hayward as a world-weary bartender (talking like a Ben Hecht creation), and Tom B. Henry (of the formidable proboscis) as a hardboiled but fair sheriff. Oh, and a pet monkey plays deus ex machina.
Miss Windsor gets a softer role than usual here; it's Fay Baker who scores the man-eating ice-queen role. Best of all are Jim Hayward as a world-weary bartender (talking like a Ben Hecht creation), and Tom B. Henry (of the formidable proboscis) as a hardboiled but fair sheriff. Oh, and a pet monkey plays deus ex machina.
I don't know why, but I didn't enjoy this film. Kudos to those who did and found more in it than I did.
Double Deal from 1950 is a B movie that stars two actors I really like, Richard Denning and Marie Windsor. The story concerns a brother-sister fight; the sister, Lilly (Fay Baker) inherited three wells from dad, while Reno (Carleton Young) inherited one, and so far, it hasn't produced anything.
Reno killed Lilly's fiance in a fight; thus the adversarial relationship. Lilly is a powerful woman, and she wants Reno's well. She doesn't care how she gets it.
Reno is killed, and Terry (Windsor) inherits the well. She hires Buzz (Denning), who has experience with wells, to bring in this one. The two have an obvious attraction to one another.
Double Deal contains sexual innuendo, though you have to read between the lines. Reno and Terry seem to have been sleeping together. Lilly is either married to or shacked up with a man (James Griffith - kind of a poor man's Zachary Scott). However, it's evident Lilly is sleeping around to get matters concerning the oil business going her way.
The drunken attorney (Taylor Holmes) seems like he's a homeless bum, except he isn't - he has an exotic monkey for a pet, lives in a house, and still conducts business. The monkey, Pipi, at one point emerges a hero.
I love noirs, Denning is rugged and handsome, Windsor a talented actress, and Pipi adorable, but I just couldn't get into this film.
Double Deal from 1950 is a B movie that stars two actors I really like, Richard Denning and Marie Windsor. The story concerns a brother-sister fight; the sister, Lilly (Fay Baker) inherited three wells from dad, while Reno (Carleton Young) inherited one, and so far, it hasn't produced anything.
Reno killed Lilly's fiance in a fight; thus the adversarial relationship. Lilly is a powerful woman, and she wants Reno's well. She doesn't care how she gets it.
Reno is killed, and Terry (Windsor) inherits the well. She hires Buzz (Denning), who has experience with wells, to bring in this one. The two have an obvious attraction to one another.
Double Deal contains sexual innuendo, though you have to read between the lines. Reno and Terry seem to have been sleeping together. Lilly is either married to or shacked up with a man (James Griffith - kind of a poor man's Zachary Scott). However, it's evident Lilly is sleeping around to get matters concerning the oil business going her way.
The drunken attorney (Taylor Holmes) seems like he's a homeless bum, except he isn't - he has an exotic monkey for a pet, lives in a house, and still conducts business. The monkey, Pipi, at one point emerges a hero.
I love noirs, Denning is rugged and handsome, Windsor a talented actress, and Pipi adorable, but I just couldn't get into this film.
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 4 Min.(64 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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