Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn insurance lawyer unhappy with his rate of company advancement becomes a middleman in deals to recover stolen property from the Mob, thus earning a nice living. But his actions attract pol... Alles lesenAn insurance lawyer unhappy with his rate of company advancement becomes a middleman in deals to recover stolen property from the Mob, thus earning a nice living. But his actions attract police attention and set him up for a double-cross.An insurance lawyer unhappy with his rate of company advancement becomes a middleman in deals to recover stolen property from the Mob, thus earning a nice living. But his actions attract police attention and set him up for a double-cross.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Harry Dycker
- (as Dan Dayton)
- Floyd
- (as William Regnolds)
- Beebe
- (as Howland Chamberlin)
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Sullivan plays Steve Keiver, an insurance lawyer unhappy with his rate of company advancement. He hits on the idea of being a middleman in deals to recover stolen property from the Mob, thus earning a nice pay off for himself whilst the insurance company are saved money by not having to pay out. But sure enough his actions attract police attention and before he knows it he is up to his neck in double-crosses, frames and dames!
Tone is set from the off as our protagonist is on the run from the police, it's a dimly lighted moist street and he begins his narration. From there we get the film flashback of how he has come to be a wanted man.
We are in noirville so obviously we have a bona fide femme fatale (Dahl smouldering) who is greedy, immoral, manipulative and thinks nothing of crushing Keiver's dreams. If he's to go to his doom then she really will not give it a second thought - and yet he loves her and would have married her in a heartbeat. He's a classic noir dope, he just can't see the bad in the woman he so covets, which is all the more annoying since the lovely firm secretary Joan Brenson (Hagen excellent) covets him and he can't see the wood for the trees where the two ladies are concerned.
We have a bunch of run of the mill villains, with one who has a kink involving how long he can hold his breath under water for, though we do get a robbery scene that comes to reveal some devilish cheek soon afterwards. The cops you kind of get miffed about since the whole scam that Keiver has set up is implausibly allowed to flourish. Yet when things go bad for Keiver later in the play, we enter a dark world, where even if the finale isn't pure film noir, we get some moody turns of events that softens any feelings of there being a damp squib at film's end. 7/10
In a more general sense, the movie does contain a number of violent scenes. Yet all are staged rather impersonally, thereby eliminating one of the hallmarks of front-rank noir— that is, the "reality of violence" as one acute observer termed it. Anthony Mann's noirs (e.g. T-Men {1947}; Border Incident {1949}) are especially effective in making the audience not just see the violence, but more importantly, in making us feel its reality in a visceral way. Also important is the reality of evil (non-theological), whether it's corruption (e.g. Phenix City Story {1955}) or brutality (e.g. The Enforcer {1951}). The presence of evil is usually, I think, a matter of atmospherics and acting. Unfortunately, not only is there no sense of evil in the film, there's hardly even a sense of wrong-doing, especially from the rather genial chief gangster Franko who should be the main source. Now, Kress does a good workman- like job filming an imaginative script that keeps us interested and entertained. But ultimately he doesn't manage that extra dimension of making us feel a part of what's happening. As a result, the movie fails to rise above the level of respectable noir, yet that's certainly more than enough for a slow evening.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film flopped at the box office, resulting in a loss to MGM of $377,000 (about $4.6M in 2024) according to studio records. It did not even make back its negative cost, let alone expenses for duplication, distribution, and advertising.
- PatzerA policeman alerts patrol cars in the vicinity of "18th Street". In Manhattan all numbered streets are divided into East and West, so anyone giving an address would say "East 18th Street" or "West 18th Street," never the number alone.
The reporting policeman's notification came from a police call box. The location of that box as well as the cop's "beat" would have allowed headquarters to know the general location. However, the broadcast policeman's failure to provide that general location would have led to all squad cars along the ~2 mile stretch of (East and West) 18th Street to be on alert.
- Zitate
Detective Walter O'Bannion: [Keiver has duped Detective O'Bannion into getting the name of Ellen's new husband] Gordon Jessman. He and his wife are at the Granby.
Steve Keiver: Thanks.
Detective Walter O'Bannion: [naively earnest] Do we put a tail on him?
Steve Keiver: I don't know, I think he looks pretty cute the way he is.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Noir Alley: No Questions Asked (2018)
- SoundtracksI've Got You Under My Skin
(uncredited)
Written by Cole Porter
Sung along with jukebox by Jean Hagen and heard in score
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Discreción asegurada
- Drehorte
- 909 Santee Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(site of the pickup of the stolen furs)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 742.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 20 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1