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Du bist verloren, Fremder

Originaltitel: Tread Softly Stranger
  • 1958
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
642
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Diana Dors in Du bist verloren, Fremder (1958)
DramaKriminalität

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn irresistible temptress causes trouble between two brothers after the more handsome, charismatic one turns up, leading to robbery and death.An irresistible temptress causes trouble between two brothers after the more handsome, charismatic one turns up, leading to robbery and death.An irresistible temptress causes trouble between two brothers after the more handsome, charismatic one turns up, leading to robbery and death.

  • Regie
    • Gordon Parry
  • Drehbuch
    • Jack Popplewell
    • George Minter
    • Denis O'Dell
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Diana Dors
    • George Baker
    • Terence Morgan
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    642
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Gordon Parry
    • Drehbuch
      • Jack Popplewell
      • George Minter
      • Denis O'Dell
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Diana Dors
      • George Baker
      • Terence Morgan
    • 18Benutzerrezensionen
    • 8Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos7

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    Topbesetzung26

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    Diana Dors
    Diana Dors
    • Calico
    George Baker
    George Baker
    • Johnny Mansell
    Terence Morgan
    Terence Morgan
    • Dave Mansell
    Patrick Allen
    Patrick Allen
    • Paddy Ryan
    Jane Griffiths
    • Sylvia
    Joseph Tomelty
    Joseph Tomelty
    • Old Ryan
    Thomas Heathcote
    Thomas Heathcote
    • Sergeant Lamb
    Russell Napier
    Russell Napier
    • Potter
    Norman MacOwan
    Norman MacOwan
    • Danny
    • (as Norman Mac Owan)
    Maureen Delaney
    Maureen Delaney
    • Mrs. Finnegan
    • (as Maureen Delany)
    Betty Warren
    Betty Warren
    • Flo
    Chris Fay
    • Eric Downs
    Terry Baker
    • Young Rough
    Timothy Bateson
    Timothy Bateson
    • Fletcher
    John Salew
    John Salew
    • Pawnbroker
    Michael Golden
    • St.Johns Ambulance Man
    George Merritt
    George Merritt
    • Timekeeper
    Jack McNaughton
    • Workman
    • (as Jack MacNaughton)
    • Regie
      • Gordon Parry
    • Drehbuch
      • Jack Popplewell
      • George Minter
      • Denis O'Dell
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen18

    6,7642
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7blanche-2

    good thriller

    The stunningly beautiful Diana Dors gets involved with two brothers in "Tread Softly Stranger," a 1958 British 'B' movie. It's on a set of six films called "British Cinema," and it's by far the best of the lot.

    Dors is Calico, a real slut, albeit a gorgeous one, who is hanging out with a nerdy office worker, Dave Mansell (Terence Mansell), an accountant in a nearby factory. Then his brother Johnny (George Baker), a handsome con man running away from a bad debt, comes to town. Calico quickly switches allegiance, but keeps her options open. When Johnny finds out that Dave is 300 pounds short in the accounts because of embezzling to buy Calico gifts, he decides to hock the watch Dave gave Calico, add his own money to it, and gamble on a sure thing. With an impending audit coming up, there isn't much time to replace the money.

    Unfortunately, Calico has another idea. While Johnny is at the race track and winning, Calico convinces Dave that Johnny isn't coming back and insists that he just rob the factory of all its money - that way, the shortfall won't show up. She promises Dave that if he does it, she will go away with him. Turns into a real mess.

    This is a very suspenseful story, very dark and loaded with atmosphere. One gets the feeling of a small, crummy factory town. The acting is good; Dors is a knockout. Definitely work seeing.
    6bkoganbing

    Those Mansell Brothers -- Fools For Love

    George Baker and Terrence Morgan play the Mansell Brothers about as different as brothers can get. Baker has gone to London where his gambling has put him in debt with some bad people. He decides to go home to his north of England factory town and hole up there for a bit.

    Where he's reunited with his rather dull brother Morgan who is a bookkeeper in a factory. His life is enlivened by the presence of Diana Dors who is one high maintenance indulgence for him. But pretty soon she also has Baker's wheels spinning too.

    Because she's so high maintenance Morgan is short in his accounts at the factory and an audit is coming. Baker's and Dors's solution is rob the place to cover the theft and incidentally pay off the nasty people Baker owes.

    For all his worldliness Baker himself is no professional criminal so when the Mansell Brothers go out to steal everything goes wrong.

    Diana Dors was the United Kingdom's answer to Marilyn Monroe. But Monroe even in her most voluptuous role in Niagara had nothing on Diana Dors in Tread Softly Stranger. One look at her you see why Baker and Morgan were goners.

    Tread Softly Stranger is worth seeing for one sexy bundle from Britain named Diana Dors.
    8MikeMagi

    Suspenseful British "B"

    When the British make a "B" movie, they tend to get it right -- and "Tread Softly Stranger" is a good example. George Baker as Johnny has left London and returned to his childhood home -- a scraggy northern town -- to escape the bookmakers who are screaming for his hide. His brother, Dave, a payroll clerk at a local steel mill, is a wimp, hopelessly smitten with next door neighbor Diana Dors. When the brothers set out to heist the mill's payroll, everything that can possibly go wrong does -- no surprise. But there's a nifty twist at the end that certainly is surprising. The atmosphere -- from grubby pubs to the factory's blistering operations -- provide a colorful backdrop. Worth watching.
    8adrianovasconcelos

    Strong B British noir with open, tempting Dors... and blind justice!

    I confess that I know nothing about Director Gordon Parry. As far as I can tell, the rather good FRONT PAGE STORY, starring Jack Hawkins, is the only other film he has directed that I have watched.

    Both films have strong, structured stories, but TREAD SOFTLY, STRANGER has the advantage of Diana Dors in the greatest form ever, even managing to deliver a credible performance. That said, plaudits must go to George Baker and Terence Morgan for playing two brothers understandably smitten with Dors - a temptress who wants money and gets them to steal for her, even if one (Baker) only does it to help his brother out of a tough situation and can clearly see Dors for the gold digger she is. Morgan is more impressionable and becomes a puppet in her horny hands, despite knowing that she does not love him but loves his brother instead.

    Baker leaves London because of a bad debt and seeks refuge in his backwater birthplace, Rawborough, a small railway stop town with a factory that keeps spewing fumes, like a smouldering hell consuming its residents, some of whom question Baker's return from "lovely London" to dingy Rawborough. The brighter of the two brothers, Baker sensibly destroys the money that his brother stole from the factory where he works... too little too late. From the moment the brothers broke the law, and in particular when an old factory security guard is accidentally shot dead, the gods of Greek tragedy (and the British production code which wanted no bad examples to encourage the already rising crime rate) predetermine punishment for them.

    Baker has the smarts to know that police need proof in order to charge them, but panicking Morgan cannot resist blind justice.

    Dors' final declaration that she will wait for Baker floats off with the breeze swirling around the rooftops of the bedroom she rents.

    Solid chiaroscuro cinematography from the excellent Douglas Slocombe, arresting script from Minter and O'Dell.

    Definitely worth watching. 8/10.
    7JamesHitchcock

    Kitchen Sink Noir

    Johnny Mansell is forced to flee London after running up large gambling debts and returns to his native town, the industrial town of Rawborough, where he moves into a flat with his brother Dave and Dave's girlfriend Calico. (It's a nickname!). The two brothers are, at least on the surface, very different. Johnny is a suave, fashionably dressed playboy, whose sources of income are rather mysterious, whereas the dowdy, bespectacled Dave is a wages clerk in a local steel mill. The outwardly respectable Dave, however, is hiding a guilty secret. He has embezzled £300 from his employers in order to buy expensive gifts for the glamorous but mercenary Calico and desperately needs to repay the money before the auditors make their annual visit to the firm. Johnny believes that he can win enough money in a betting coup, but Calico comes up with a plan for Dave to rob his workplace and to steal enough money to cover his fraud. Dave is desperate enough to go ahead with this plan, and the rest of the film deals with the disastrous consequences of his action.

    British films noirs, unlike their American counterparts, often included elements of the "kitchen sink realism" which was very much in vogue in the Britain of the late fifties and early sixties, not only in the cinema but also in literature and the visual arts. "Tread Softly Stranger" with its factories and its shabby flats and nightclubs, permeated by an atmosphere of seediness and moral corruption, fits well into this tradition. George Baker's Johnny, a handsome, charming drifter living on the edge of the law but with a certain sense of honour and loyalty, is a classic noir figure.

    This was the second film which Diana Dors made after returning to Britain following her brief and unsuccessful attempt to conquer Hollywood; the first, "The Long Haul", was also a crime drama. Dors is often thought of as Britain's answer to America's blonde bombshells like Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield, but on the evidence of this film she could also be seen as the British equivalent of femmes fatales like Lizabeth Scott and Gloria Grahame. American films noirs often featured a beautiful and seductive but dangerous young woman as one of the main characters, and British directors working in the same style sometimes copied this feature. Although there were occasional brunette examples, such as the character played by Ava Gardner in "The Killers", the majority of these women were blonde, possibly because blondes had a greater visual impact in films shot in black-and-white. (This was said to have been the reason why Hitchcock used blondes in so many of his films, although he continued doing so even after he switched to colour).

    Diana's pneumatic figure and platinum blonde looks meant that she was often cast in comedies, generally with a sexual edge to them, but her real strength was in serious drama. (Although many people thought of her as little more than a sexy bimbo, she was actually a classically trained actress). "Yield to the Night" from two years earlier is often quoted as her greatest achievement in the cinema, but in my view she is equally good here. The two roles are in a sense complementary. Mary, her character in "Yield to the Night", is a murderess, yet is portrayed as a woman more sinned against than sinning. Calico, by contrast, is selfish and amoral, yet it is Dave and Johnny, both of whom have fallen for her charms, who have to pay the price for her selfishness and amorality.

    The one jarring note in Diana's performance is her accent. In her private life she spoke with a strong West Country accent- she was a native of Swindon- but in her films she generally used the upper-class Received Pronunciation she had learned at drama school, and that sounds wrong here, as Calico is supposed to be a working-class girl who has clawed her way up from the gutter. British film-makers of this period, however, could be curiously careless when it came to regional accents, even when they were aiming for realism in other respects. Rawborough is supposed to be in Yorkshire- Rotherham was used for location filming– but there are hardly any Yorkshire accents to be heard. ("Brief Encounter" is another example of a film ostensibly set in the North where everyone sounds as though they are from the Home Counties).

    The film did well at the box-office on its original release in 1958 but was generally ignored by the critics; there was a common assumption, on both sides of the Atlantic, that crime dramas, including some which are today regarded as cinema classics, were no more than potboilers. Interest in them, however, has grown over the decades. "Tread Softly Stranger" is not, perhaps, in the same class as the greatest British noirs such as Carol Reed's "The Third Man" or Robert Hamer's "The Long Memory", but with its gripping action, some good acting and its starkly expressionist photography of the industrial scenes it certainly remains worth watching. 7/10

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      As Johnny and Dave are escaping through the skylight after the robbery, a rope in the shape of a noose can be seen hanging from the ceiling. The rope is for opening and closing the skylight.
    • Patzer
      The robbery takes place at night and wouldn't have been discovered until the following morning, yet Johnny is reading a report of the robbery in the morning paper.
    • Zitate

      Johnny Mansell: Funny thing about women in men's jerseys - makes them look more like women than ever.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Talkies: Memories of Diana Dors (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Tread Softly Stranger
      Written by Richard Rowe (uncredited) and Jack Fishman (uncredited)

      Sung by Jim Dale

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 3. Juli 1959 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Tread Softly Stranger
    • Drehorte
      • Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England, Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Produktionsfirma
      • George Minter Productions
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 30 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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