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IMDbPro

Atajo al infierno

Título original: Short Cut to Hell
  • 1957
  • Passed
  • 1h 29min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,0/10
466
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Robert Ivers and Georgann Johnson in Atajo al infierno (1957)
¿CrimenCine negroDrama

Un asesino huye de la policía con la novia de uno de los agentes.Un asesino huye de la policía con la novia de uno de los agentes.Un asesino huye de la policía con la novia de uno de los agentes.

  • Dirección
    • James Cagney
  • Guión
    • Graham Greene
    • Ted Berkman
    • Raphael Blau
  • Reparto principal
    • William Bishop
    • Robert Ivers
    • Georgann Johnson
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,0/10
    466
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • James Cagney
    • Guión
      • Graham Greene
      • Ted Berkman
      • Raphael Blau
    • Reparto principal
      • William Bishop
      • Robert Ivers
      • Georgann Johnson
    • 20Reseñas de usuarios
    • 8Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes75

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    Reparto principal43

    Editar
    William Bishop
    William Bishop
    • Sgt. Stan Lowery
    Robert Ivers
    Robert Ivers
    • Kyle Niles
    Georgann Johnson
    Georgann Johnson
    • Glory Hamilton
    Yvette Vickers
    Yvette Vickers
    • Daisy
    Murvyn Vye
    Murvyn Vye
    • Nichols
    Jacques Aubuchon
    Jacques Aubuchon
    • Bahrwell
    Peter Baldwin
    Peter Baldwin
    • Carl Adams
    Richard Hale
    Richard Hale
    • AT
    Larry Arnold
    • Commuter
    • (sin acreditar)
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Road Driver
    • (sin acreditar)
    Joe Bassett
    • Patrolman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Jacqueline Beer
    Jacqueline Beer
    • Waitress
    • (sin acreditar)
    Paul Bradley
    Paul Bradley
    • Train Passenger
    • (sin acreditar)
    James Cagney
    James Cagney
    • Self - Pre-credits sequence
    • (sin acreditar)
    Douglas Evans
    Douglas Evans
    • Mr. Henry
    • (sin acreditar)
    Joseph Forte
    • Ticket Seller
    • (sin acreditar)
    Milton Frome
    Milton Frome
    • LAPD Captain
    • (sin acreditar)
    James Gonzalez
    James Gonzalez
    • Train Passenger
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • James Cagney
    • Guión
      • Graham Greene
      • Ted Berkman
      • Raphael Blau
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios20

    6,0466
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    Reseñas destacadas

    6filmalamosa

    decent B movie

    Story about an antisocial hired killer who goes after an employer who double crosses him. While tracking down the men who hired him he gets involved with the female lead a night club singer on her way to Los Angeles. In the end revenge is extracted.

    It is fast paced and keeps your interest especially the first hour. When the action moves to LA it starts to bog down a bit and get a little squirrelly. There is a long scene in an air raid shelter of some huge giant factory that is completely implausible...dozens of police scour the plant for hours but overlook an obvious staircase to the airraid shelter??

    Still it is worth a watch I give it a 6.

    The other reviews are by people much more knowledgeable about the actors and period than I...am reviewing it as a naive uninformed viewer.

    RECOMMEND
    dbdumonteil

    Half invention,half convention.

    Robert Ivers ,mainly in the first part ,gives an impressive performance:impassive ,deadpan,cold as ice ,he will make you shiver with his robotic swagger.When he kills the secretary after her boss,the directing(and performance) seems years ahead of its time.Ditto for the scene in the restaurant where his "client" is savoring mint chocolates or later in the train where he meets the chanteuse.

    The problem lies in this singer's character:the courageous young girl,who feels for the unfortunate killer who's got a raw deal,whose drunkard of a father treated him so bad he could be nothing but an outlaw etc etc etc.After an offbeat and intriguing first part,the movie turns predictable and the "moving" ending is business as usual.
    7bmacv

    In sole directorial effort, Cagney remakes This Gun for Hire

    Towards the end of Short Cut to Hell, with the two principal characters holed up in an abandoned underground storage bunker and the police cars massed outside, there's a long quotation from the doom-freighted score Miklos Rosza wrote for Double Indemnity. It's one of several arresting details the movie provides (another is a newspaper from the previous decade, with the headline 'Allies Cross Siegfried Line'), details that pique interest but go nowhere in attempting to satisfy curiosity.

    Short Cut to Hell is an all but forgotten movie but a noteworthy one nonetheless, if only as the only title James Cagney ever directed. Night of the Hunter it's not (the sole directorial effort of Charles Laughton), but another point of engagement is in its being a remake of the 1942 Alan Ladd/Veronica Lake vehicle This Gun for Hire, drawn from the Graham Greene 'entertainment' of that name.

    The Ladd/Lake allure didn't last into a new millennium (who knew?), but in 1957 both of them were still reasonably active, their less than glamorous (all right, alcoholic) endgames still a few years, or decades, off. Cagney chose to update them using actors without much in the way of either past or future.

    In the Ladd role of the icy, isolated killer-for-hire, Robert Ivers is little more than a trenchcoat and a topper, skin and bones, who brings to mind an unlikely amalgam of Elisha Cook Jr. and James Dean. Finding himself set up through marked bills, after carrying out the two brutal murders contracted by pompous 'fatso' (Jacques Aubuchon, whose indulgences are pretty young things and peppermint patties), he eludes police, taking as hostage Georgann Johnson, a lounge singer engaged to police detective William Bishop.

    Johnson proves a game gal, but in the wrong way. She has a way with a wisecrack, but it's not in the flirtatious Veronica Lake way (nor that of Lauren Bacall or Gloria Grahame); the spin she gives is more in the Eve Arden-ish, vinegar-virgin mode, less seductive than matey, even matronly. So the chemistry between captor and captive (our old friend The Stockholm Syndrome) rarely reaches reactive force. (Nor, for that matter, do the reactions between Johnson and Bishop.)

    Notwithstanding its unknown cast, Short Cut to Hell doesn't have the look or feel of a B-movie, and Cagney keeps a good pace and an acceptable amount of tension (a few quite brutal scenes help to quicken the pulse as well). It's not quite clear why Cagney chose this material to direct, and he makes (or had to accept) some less than ideal choices, but he'd worked in movies long enough to insure that the movie he directed was brisk and absorbing, a better little movie than its obscurity might suggest.
    jarrodmcdonald-1

    Short Cut to Cagneyville

    This is the only film James Cagney directed, and for a first-time effort, this remake of THIS GUN FOR HIRE is not too shabby. Cagney supposedly made the film as a favor to producer A.C. Lyles, and he did not really intend to pursue a career as a director. While it may not be up to the original, the film still has a good deal of Cagney-esque energy, and enough suspense to sustain viewer interest.

    Actress Georgann Johnson is cast in the Veronica Lake role, and she applies a serious amount of realism. At one point, she has to walk down the aisle of a train, and she does it very subtly as if her equilibrium is off-balance, which if you think about it, it should be. How come other actors do not walk realistically on trains, planes and other fast-moving transportation in movies? Maybe they should consult Miss Johnson for pointers.
    4secondtake

    Such a weaker, imitative version of "This Gun for Hire" there is no real point in it

    Short Cut to Hell (1957)

    A strained effort all around, including James Cagney giving a personal introduction standing next to an imposing movie camera, assuring us his two new leading actors were terrific, before we get a chance to see for ourselves. We can wonder about his motivations, but on the surface two things seem clear. One, he's trying to move from being an actor to being a director (he sort of says he's getting too old to act, interestingly). And two, he's going about it in a cheap and sort of safe way, as if Hollywood knew it wasn't going to go very far.

    The result is pretty awful in enough ways to say you might just skip it. I'm a junkie for noir films, and "This Gun for Hire" is a true, early, formative classic from 1942. That one, with Alan Ladd in the lead, and Veronica Lake and Laird Cregar as support, is terrific in all the little ways that add up to something uniquely memorable, even in the hands of little known director Frank Tuttle. Now, fifteen years later, Cagney in his first and last directorial effort, remakes Tuttle's version. He sometimes matches it scene for scene (a few curious substitutions, like an air raid shelter instead of an empty railroad car) and actor for actor (the man taking Cregar's role seems to be vainly imitating him). And he leaves out a few of the key quirks that made the original more, well, original and disturbing (like Ladd's relationship to cats).

    One stark difference is the different kind of female character Cagney casts, avoiding the sultry version of Veronica Lake for a very Doris Day kind of lead. And it's probably telling that these terrific new actors Cagney is using had very little in the way of careers after this. Cagney did act in a few more films, living until 1986.

    If you have little patience, I think you might not make it through the first painful scene of a woman overacting her weariness in the motel hallway, but that's not fair. It does have faster and more interesting moments. In general, the filming and lighting has brightened up, losing at least the noir visual quality, maybe keeping its tonal range in line for television rebroadcast (an important concern by the late 1950s).

    If you want to know the possibilities of the story at its best, start with Graham Greene's 1936 book (A Gun for Sale) and then to the seminal 1942 movie. Short Cut to Hell is an asterisk at beset, a curiosity.

    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      James Cagney's only directorial effort.
    • Citas

      [Kyle just told Glory that he's a professional killer]

      Glory Hamilton: Is there anything you like about yourself?

      Kyle: Yeah. I never miss.

    • Conexiones
      Referenced in Aquí está Lucy: Lucy and Carol Burnett (1971)
    • Banda sonora
      I'm in the Mood for Love
      (uncredited)

      Music by Jimmy McHugh

      Lyrics by Dorothy Fields

      Performed by Danny Lewis

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    Preguntas frecuentes13

    • How long is Short Cut to Hell?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • septiembre de 1957 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Short Cut to Hell
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 29min(89 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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