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The Mugger

  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 14 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,9/10
340
IHRE BEWERTUNG
The Mugger (1958)
DramaKriminalitätThriller

Ein polizeipsychiater versucht, einen straßenräuber zu finden, der von dem bedürfnis besessen ist, einsame frauen aufzuspüren und ihnen das gesicht aufzuschlitzen.Ein polizeipsychiater versucht, einen straßenräuber zu finden, der von dem bedürfnis besessen ist, einsame frauen aufzuspüren und ihnen das gesicht aufzuschlitzen.Ein polizeipsychiater versucht, einen straßenräuber zu finden, der von dem bedürfnis besessen ist, einsame frauen aufzuspüren und ihnen das gesicht aufzuschlitzen.

  • Regie
    • William Berke
  • Drehbuch
    • Evan Hunter
    • Henry Kane
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kent Smith
    • Nan Martin
    • James Franciscus
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,9/10
    340
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • William Berke
    • Drehbuch
      • Evan Hunter
      • Henry Kane
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kent Smith
      • Nan Martin
      • James Franciscus
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 3Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos88

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    Topbesetzung25

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    Kent Smith
    Kent Smith
    • Dr. Pete Graham
    Nan Martin
    Nan Martin
    • Claire Townsend
    James Franciscus
    James Franciscus
    • Eddie Baxter
    Stefan Schnabel
    Stefan Schnabel
    • Fats Donner
    Dick O'Neill
    Dick O'Neill
    • Sergeant Cassidy
    Leonard Stone
    Leonard Stone
    • Jim Kelly
    John Alexander
    John Alexander
    • Chief of Police
    Arthur Storch
    Arthur Storch
    • Jack Skippy Randolph
    Bert Thorn
    • Franklin Corey
    Albert Dannibal
    • Officer Connelly
    Connie Van Ess
    • Katherine Elio
    Dolores Sutton
    Dolores Sutton
    • Molly Baxter
    Sandra Church
    Sandra Church
    • Jeannie Page
    Renée Taylor
    Renée Taylor
    • Mac's Wife
    • (as Renee Taylor)
    Joan Morgan
    Linda King
    Beah Richards
    Beah Richards
    • Grecco Maid
    Boris Aplon
    • Jimmy Wilson
    • Regie
      • William Berke
    • Drehbuch
      • Evan Hunter
      • Henry Kane
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen12

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    6boblipton

    Berke's Last Film Has Its Moments

    There's a guy going around attacking women late at night, slashing their faces and their handbags. Police psychiatrist Kent Smith catches the case.

    It's based on an Evan Hunter novel, his second 87th Precinct novel writen under his Ed McBain pen name. It's a slow procedural, but Kent Smith's calm presence and the expanding circle of characters and the suddenness of the clue revealing whodunnit make it less than a perfect mystery. Still, the shooting in actual New York City locations makes it worthwhile, as does the cast, including Dick O'Neill, James Franciscus, and Renee Taylor.

    William Berke's last directorial effort is obviously a cheap affair, and half the characters sound like they've taken elocution lessons from Sheldon Leonard, but there are visual sparks in the movie, particularly the sequence that starts in a Turkish bath and ends with Smith and suspect Arthur Storch running from a crap game. Berke's career wasn't going anywhere in particular when he died at the age of 55 the year of this release. He'd started out in B westerns, and had never gotten an A budget in a quarter of a century, but he liked to give the audience some value for money.
    6sol-kay

    Taken out of context

    ****SPOILERS**** A number of women have been attacked in the city over the last two months where they were mugged of their handbags and had their left cheek slashed by the mugger. Dr. Pete Graham, Kent Smith, a police psychiatrist, after interviewing a number of the mugging victims thinks that the reasons for the muggings is not money but for some kind of sexual gratification on the part of the mugger. Even when we see the mugger in action he looks more like a secret service agent, with his sunglasses and tailored cloths, then your average mugger.

    Were introduced early in the movie to Eddie, James Franciscus, a cabbie who's a friend of Dr. Graham and his family his wife Molly, Dolores Sutton, and her younger sister Jeannie, Sandra Church who's having an on and off again affair with Eddie's next door neighbor Grecco, George Maharis. We see right away that there's some connection with the mugger and Eddie's family members, especially Jeannie but just what kind of connection is it?

    The mugging of women continue and later in the movie there's a break in the case when it's found out that a certain criminal Skippy Randolph, Arthur Storch, was released from jail in Chicago on July 29. Skippy committed the same crimes that are happening here in town and the crimes just began on July 29. After being arrested and checked out it's found out that Skippy was not involved in the muggings so who can the mugger be?

    "The Mugger" is one of those films with a double-plot to it which you don't notice until the very end of the movie. Dr. Graham and the police track down the mugger later in the film but before they do Jeannie becomes a victim but unlike the other mugging victims she ends up being murdered. The film is extremely complicated for a run of the mill crime movie with a surprise ending that exposes the killer of Jeannie but not before the mugger responsible for the earlier crimes was apprehended.

    It turns out that Jeannie's killer took advantage of the muggings for cover to kill her and then have him, the mugger, blamed for her death. Unknown to him he was seen with Jeannie the night that she was killed by an undercover policewoman Claire Thownsond, Nan Martin, who was at the dance club shadowing her.

    What really floored me was how the killer just went to pieces when he was confronted by Dr. Graham and Policewoman Thownsond with his whereabouts the night of Jeannie's death. I was also surprised how irresponsible both of them, Grahm & Thownsond, were by risking their lives with the killer in a position to where he could have easily have killed them! When all they had to do was have him arrested later at his home where they and the police knew where he lived.

    The ending of the movie was a bit off the wall with the killer being chased by the police as he was chasing a ferry and jumps to his death as he missed his ride and gets chopped to ribbons by the ship's propellers. All right the killer wasn't all there and was desperate trying to escape from the police but why risk, and lose, his life trying to get to the ferry! Even if the killer made it he would have been arrested by the police on the other side of the river who were waiting for him?
    5bmacv

    Poor Ed McBain adaptation, wrenched away from his 87th Precinct

    Police psychiatrist Kent Smith is an easy-going, amiable guy, ready to take time from his pursuit of a sunglassed mugger to act as unofficial therapist to easy-going, amiable hack driver James Franciscus (whose wife's sister, living with them, has become withdrawn and hostile). But the mugger has struck 11 times in eight weeks, grabbing women's purses and leaving a superficial knife scar along their jawlines. With the help of his fiancée, policewoman Nan Martin, Kent follows up a number of leads, all of them dead ends. Then the mugger strikes once more, but this time leaves his victim dead - Franciscus' sister-in-law, whom an autopsy reveals to have been three months pregnant....

    Part of the pleasure of Ed McBain's seemingly endless series of police procedurals set in the 87th Precinct is that he takes the bizarre and the pathological and makes them mundane - part of the warp and weft of living in a city. The second of his novels to be filmed, The Mugger leeches much of the familiarity away; it ill-advisedly dispenses with the quirky cops of the 87th to center on Smith, a character so four-square that McBain would never have written him.

    And though his books may seem garrulous and absent-minded, underneath the disgressions clockwork plots tick away. But in The Mugger, the red herrings really stink. Few adaptations of McBain's series, for the movies or for television, have been quite successful in fidelity to the author's nameless city and the cops who police it, but The Mugger must count among the weakest of them - an inferior follow-up to the same year's Cop Hater.
    8planktonrules

    Quite enjoyable and worth seeing despite a low budget.

    "The Mugger" is a low-budget sleeper of a cop film from the late 1950s--the tail end of the American film-noir era. While the film doesn't have any major stars, the story is VERY modern for 1958 and might surprise you. Plus, it's a dandy little story about police profilers and a nasty case that's got everyone stumped.

    Kent Smith was a very reliable actor who mostly was a supporting actor and star in Bs. In this film, he plays the lead, a police psychiatrist that's been called in to deal with a strange series of attacks. They involve women who were mugged and then slashed on the left side of the face--not a deep slash, but serious nevertheless. His job is to help determine what sort of guy would do this--the profile of what they should be looking for in the case. The story is compact, very interesting, takes a few nice detours to throw the audience off the scent and gets even more interesting when there is a murder. I'd say more but I don't want to give away the plot.

    There were many good reasons I enjoyed the film--most of which boil down to dandy writing. The dialog was very snappy, there were some funny little touches (such as the blonde victim who REALLY liked Smith) and the film's not beating around the bush too much in discussing crime. You'll hear words like 'rape' and 'sexual attack' in the film and there is also a bit about a pregnant woman--stuff that the more permissive 50s films STILL rarely ever discussed but which made the movie much more realistic. I also enjoyed some of the supporting players--such as the way the policewoman handled herself in the park. Well worth seeing and a nice opportunity for Smith to show he was a very good actor with a likable style. The only negative at all I noticed was the confrontation scene at the end--who would confront a killer while the killer is driving the car?! Talk about a recipe for disaster! Oh, and the best line in the film: "Is he a friend of yours? He's in little pieces now".
    Dethcharm

    "Shall We Go Quietly?!"...

    THE MUGGER is about a prolific purse snatcher who always leaves his female victims with a signature wound.

    The police are baffled.

    Enter police psychiatrist, Dr. Pete Graham (Kent Smith), who attempts to discern the motivations behind the crimes, while the title maniac strikes again and again, causing the same injury.

    What message is this person sending through this terrible trademark?

    Death ensues.

    This is an enjoyable crime thriller. In spite of it's being fairly predictable, the final confrontation / revelation is exciting and worth the wait. Kent is very good in his role, but it's Nan Martin who is the most interesting, as Graham's fiancee, Policewoman Claire Townsend.

    Co-stars the ever-dependable James Franciscus...

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    • Wissenswertes
      Film debut of George Maharis.
    • Patzer
      When Peter Graham uses the phone in the Grecco house, the shadow of the boom mike appears on the wall above him.
    • Zitate

      [first lines]

      [At a police station, two men can be seen in an office. Sitting at a desk is Dr. Pete Graham, and with him is a policeman. This is Sergeant Cassidy]

      Sergeant Cassidy: We need good cops, even though you are a psychiatrist now.

      Dr. Pete Graham: [looks at a piece of paper on his desk] And this mugging business seems to be right down my alley.

      Sergeant Cassidy: Do you think so, huh? Well, let's see how this new science works.

      Dr. Pete Graham: First, we'll see how the hold science works. Now, you know what I need. Six cars in the area, two men in each car. I'll take Kelly with me.

      Sergeant Cassidy: [nods] You got it.

      [the Sergeant turns and begins to leave the office]

      Dr. Pete Graham: I'll feed you everything I know as soon as I can

      [the Sergeant smiles and nods again before the turns to leave]

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • November 1958 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • El mutilador de rostros
    • Drehorte
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Barbizon Productions Inc.
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    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 14 Min.(74 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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