CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.7/10
138
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Steve Bennett es un piloto temerario que estrella aviones para películas. Se casa con Laura Marley, una estrella arrogante que cambia por amor. Ella le pide dejar su peligroso trabajo, pero ... Leer todoSteve Bennett es un piloto temerario que estrella aviones para películas. Se casa con Laura Marley, una estrella arrogante que cambia por amor. Ella le pide dejar su peligroso trabajo, pero al no encontrar otro, su matrimonio fracasa.Steve Bennett es un piloto temerario que estrella aviones para películas. Se casa con Laura Marley, una estrella arrogante que cambia por amor. Ella le pide dejar su peligroso trabajo, pero al no encontrar otro, su matrimonio fracasa.
Howard Da Silva
- Red Garvey
- (as Howard da Silva)
Alec Craig
- Mr. Briggs
- (escenas eliminadas)
Polly Bailey
- Mrs. Cady
- (sin créditos)
Cliff Bergere
- Stuntman
- (sin créditos)
Eddie Borden
- Film Crewman at Pier
- (sin créditos)
Frank Bruno
- Bruno
- (sin créditos)
Lorna Dunn
- Marge Randall
- (sin créditos)
Dick Elliott
- Dan Foley
- (sin créditos)
James Fawcett
- Stuntman
- (sin créditos)
Gus Glassmire
- 1st Doctor
- (sin créditos)
Averell Harris
- Earl McGill
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Kent Taylor is a fine stunt man in Hollywood. Then he marries movie star Linda Hayes. She's terrified by his deadly stunts, and forces him to quit.
There's a lot to recommend this movie, from the stunts to the general ambiance of the stunt players' bar, to a cast that includes Asta and Fred Niblo (playing Fred Niblo the director). To Howard Da Silva and Ralph Morgan. Unfortunately, Miss Hayes is not very good, and there's one of those endings in which they hand wave away all the problems that have been building up for 71 of its 72 minutes. This leads me to think that screen writer Edward North had a far more tragic ending in his original screenplay. Still, for the first 71 minutes, it's pretty good.
There's a lot to recommend this movie, from the stunts to the general ambiance of the stunt players' bar, to a cast that includes Asta and Fred Niblo (playing Fred Niblo the director). To Howard Da Silva and Ralph Morgan. Unfortunately, Miss Hayes is not very good, and there's one of those endings in which they hand wave away all the problems that have been building up for 71 of its 72 minutes. This leads me to think that screen writer Edward North had a far more tragic ending in his original screenplay. Still, for the first 71 minutes, it's pretty good.
... because little RKO just didn't have the star power and budget to put much energy, excitement, or depth to this story. And yes, Katharine Hepburn as the big star would have made this film much better, but RKO had already deemed her box office poison, mainly because of their own awful scripts, and sent her packing to MGM, where the next ten years would prove her to be otherwise. But I digress.
This is the tale of a Hollywood stuntman, (Kent Tayler as Steve Bennett) who first feuds with then falls in love with and marries a big star (Linda Hayes as Laura Marley). Then, AFTER the ceremony, AFTER she sees Steve do his first big stunt post nuptials, THEN Laura pouts until he gives up the profession he loves and becomes a bit actor - and a mediocre one at that - in Laura's films. His first reaction is - "Well, I couldn't keep doing this the rest of my life." That is true. But he needed to come to that realization on his own schedule. And surely Laura must have noticed that all of her dates with Steve involved adventurous sports?
Eventually, Steve is brought down by a combination of missing his old profession, feeling he is under the thumb of his influential wife, and an accident on the set for which he blames himself because he was not the experienced guy doing the stunt. I'll let you see yourself how this paint by numbers plot pans out.
This film has a few things that recommend it. First, RKO has found its own Asta in Skip as Laura's dog that actually brings the feuding couple together in the first place. Second, there is the bar - "The Graveyard" - where all of the Hollywood stuntmen gather for a drink that closes anytime a stunt man dies. How does such a bar stay in business with such a narrow clientele and such a gloomy name? Finally, there is a laugh out loud minute at the beginning of the film where Steve and Laura go to their "trailers" on the movie set, before they first meet. Inside each "trailer" the place looks like a dressing room complete with cheery drapes on sunny windows. But outside - they look like the big portable trash containers you rent if you are moving and need to throw away a pile of junk! It was just a great comical art direction moment in film.
This is the tale of a Hollywood stuntman, (Kent Tayler as Steve Bennett) who first feuds with then falls in love with and marries a big star (Linda Hayes as Laura Marley). Then, AFTER the ceremony, AFTER she sees Steve do his first big stunt post nuptials, THEN Laura pouts until he gives up the profession he loves and becomes a bit actor - and a mediocre one at that - in Laura's films. His first reaction is - "Well, I couldn't keep doing this the rest of my life." That is true. But he needed to come to that realization on his own schedule. And surely Laura must have noticed that all of her dates with Steve involved adventurous sports?
Eventually, Steve is brought down by a combination of missing his old profession, feeling he is under the thumb of his influential wife, and an accident on the set for which he blames himself because he was not the experienced guy doing the stunt. I'll let you see yourself how this paint by numbers plot pans out.
This film has a few things that recommend it. First, RKO has found its own Asta in Skip as Laura's dog that actually brings the feuding couple together in the first place. Second, there is the bar - "The Graveyard" - where all of the Hollywood stuntmen gather for a drink that closes anytime a stunt man dies. How does such a bar stay in business with such a narrow clientele and such a gloomy name? Finally, there is a laugh out loud minute at the beginning of the film where Steve and Laura go to their "trailers" on the movie set, before they first meet. Inside each "trailer" the place looks like a dressing room complete with cheery drapes on sunny windows. But outside - they look like the big portable trash containers you rent if you are moving and need to throw away a pile of junk! It was just a great comical art direction moment in film.
Hollywood stuntman Steve Bennett (Kent Taylor) had a tough day on set and diva actress Laura Marley (Linda Hayes) doesn't help with her loud music. It is not an easy first meeting especially after she thinks that he stole her dog. Somehow, he tames the shrew and they get married. After she witnesses a dangerous stunt, he promises a distraught Laura to quit his job.
It's a good start for the romance. I did not expect dog theft as a meet-cute. The actors are good together. On set romances happen all the time. I don't recall too many of this combination in recent movies other than The Fall Guy. They should do more of them.
It's a good start for the romance. I did not expect dog theft as a meet-cute. The actors are good together. On set romances happen all the time. I don't recall too many of this combination in recent movies other than The Fall Guy. They should do more of them.
Over in Trivia there is this little note: Actress Helen Twelvetrees sued, claiming that the film was based on her life story. She won her case.
It would have taken a really bad lawyer to lose the case. RKO was on record of making the claim. On page six of the pressbook sent to the theatre exhibitors, there was a long publicity story , for use in local newspapers when the film was showing in their towns. It told of the many stunt men who were involved (in actual roles and stunts) on "I'm Still Alive." Mentioned were Allen Pomeroy. George Magrill, Cliff Bergere, Art Dupuis, Cy Slocom and several others. And, about half-way through the long ready-to-be printed (and it was) story was this paragraph from RKO's publicity department: "Strangely enough, every one of them is married, and most of them own their own homes. It is a fetish with these men who lead such hazardous lives to run no bills, to pay cash for everything they buy. They had fun on the picture which, they say, is based on a true story of one of their number, the romance a few years ago between the former star, Helen Twelvetrees, and stuntman Jack Woody."
She might have overlooked it. if they hadn't called her a former star.
It would have taken a really bad lawyer to lose the case. RKO was on record of making the claim. On page six of the pressbook sent to the theatre exhibitors, there was a long publicity story , for use in local newspapers when the film was showing in their towns. It told of the many stunt men who were involved (in actual roles and stunts) on "I'm Still Alive." Mentioned were Allen Pomeroy. George Magrill, Cliff Bergere, Art Dupuis, Cy Slocom and several others. And, about half-way through the long ready-to-be printed (and it was) story was this paragraph from RKO's publicity department: "Strangely enough, every one of them is married, and most of them own their own homes. It is a fetish with these men who lead such hazardous lives to run no bills, to pay cash for everything they buy. They had fun on the picture which, they say, is based on a true story of one of their number, the romance a few years ago between the former star, Helen Twelvetrees, and stuntman Jack Woody."
She might have overlooked it. if they hadn't called her a former star.
Steve is a stunt pilot for the movie studio. But when he gets hitched, laura, the new wife asks him to stop flying. She's worried that something horrible will happen to him. But ... when steve can't find another job, he thinks about going back to it. Similar story to "the bride walks out". What happens when the wife makes (a lot) more than the husband? Such a crush to his ego back then. An issue probably just as volatile back than as it is now. Will their marriage survive? Taylor and hayes were both minor players for RKO. And that dog running around the whole time sure looks like asta from "thin man". And yes, that's dick elliott in the bar as dan; he was also the mayor in andy griffith. Director irving reis died young at 47. Story by edmund north. It's not bad, for an RKO B shortie film.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaActress Helen Twelvetrees sued, claiming that the film was based on her and her actor and stuntman husband Jack Woody's life story. She won her case in January 1943 but was awarded only $1,100 (about $21,000 in 2025).
- ErroresWhen Steve goes to pour coffee after making pancakes, the bandage on his forehead disappears and then reappears in the next shot.
- Créditos curiososOpening credits are shown in picture frames.
- ConexionesReferenced in Arena: The Orson Welles Story: Part 1 (1982)
- Bandas sonoras(Oh My Darling) Clementine
(1884)
Music by Percy Montrose
Lyrics by H.S. Thompson (1863)
(from "Down By the River Lived a Maiden")
Played on a radio and sung by Kent Taylor and Linda Hayes
Hummed and sung a cappella by Kent Taylor often
Played on piano by Linda Hayes and sung by party guests
Played as background music often
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- I'm Still Alive
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 12 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
What is the English language plot outline for Héroes de profesión (1940)?
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