CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
426
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA psychologist pioneers a research study at a prison. He seeks the help of six savvy inmates including a safe-cracker, a mobster, a pair of armed robbers and psychopath. Could he trust them?... Leer todoA psychologist pioneers a research study at a prison. He seeks the help of six savvy inmates including a safe-cracker, a mobster, a pair of armed robbers and psychopath. Could he trust them? What's in it for them?A psychologist pioneers a research study at a prison. He seeks the help of six savvy inmates including a safe-cracker, a mobster, a pair of armed robbers and psychopath. Could he trust them? What's in it for them?
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 5 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total
Harry Morgan
- Dawson
- (as Henry Morgan)
Charles Bronson
- Jocko
- (as Charles Buchinsky)
Wesley Addy
- Bit Role
- (sin créditos)
Jack Carr
- Harry Higgins
- (sin créditos)
Dick Cogan
- Convict #2
- (sin créditos)
Dick Curtis
- Guard
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
It is rather unusual to show a prison movie this way, from the psychological point of view. The classical jail scheme is about violence, brutality, escape plan, not from this angle. That said, it is unusual but, sorry, I was pretty bored. I prefered RIOT IN CELL BLOCK 11 or BRUTE FORCE, or THE LAST MILE. I tried to avoid this Hugo Fregonese film all long those years, and I finally tried it. And that confirmed I was damn right to run away from it. Again, I don't say it's a bad film, not at all, but for moviegoers in search of prison films, I warn, it is very special. Psycholgical study of inmates; it is definitely a drama and not a crime flick, as some dictionaries say. Not the Hugo Fregonese's film that I will remember in first. Or only to avoid it again in the future.
A no big name cast, but a lot of solid character players make My Six Convicts a really original and worthwhile film about our penal system. What makes a convict tick, that's what psychologist John Beal is in the state prison system to find out and you be the judge if he did.
Beal is sent to San Quentin and since that's where this film was shot, I'll use that as the prison name to find out to see if we can better rehabilitate convicts. Actually part of the answer is supplied in Goodfellas where Henry Hill says that people who work are stupid. Just take what you want at least until you get caught.
This film is about the thousands of guys who aren't connected who do wind up in the joint for one reason or another, that group you saw demanding their meals while the wiseguys were dining elegantly. As in every prison picture any place of incarceration has its own set of rules and code which one had better learn quickly.
Beal needs a staff and he comes up with six of them, Gilbert Roland, Millard Mitchell, Alf Kjellin, Marshall Thompson, Jay Adler, and Harry Morgan. All join up with Beal for their own reasons, but all of them worry about confidentiality, a real important thing in Beal's research. But it's also something that the cons worry about when it comes to being a stool pigeon. And that's a guy with no popularity and limited life expectancy.
The six convicts are quite a study in convict Americana. Although all of these guys are near and dear as great character players my favorites would have to be Millard Mitchell, Gilbert Roland, and Jay Adler. Mitchell is your old convict who knows the system inside out and how and when to play people to get what he wants, he was an ace safecracker by trade before going in. Roland is a gangster who is doing his time and waiting to be deported where on his stashed loot he's going to live the good life.
Adler was a truly sad case, a guy who got greedy and caught and who is a great example of recidivism. After he gets his parole he doesn't know what to do on the outside so he deliberately violates parole to get back. A truly institutionalized human being and between the time of the making of this film and now, no one has found a way to deal with that.
My Six Convicts from Columbia's B picture unit is a great film of some wonderful case studies of the criminal mind.
s
Beal is sent to San Quentin and since that's where this film was shot, I'll use that as the prison name to find out to see if we can better rehabilitate convicts. Actually part of the answer is supplied in Goodfellas where Henry Hill says that people who work are stupid. Just take what you want at least until you get caught.
This film is about the thousands of guys who aren't connected who do wind up in the joint for one reason or another, that group you saw demanding their meals while the wiseguys were dining elegantly. As in every prison picture any place of incarceration has its own set of rules and code which one had better learn quickly.
Beal needs a staff and he comes up with six of them, Gilbert Roland, Millard Mitchell, Alf Kjellin, Marshall Thompson, Jay Adler, and Harry Morgan. All join up with Beal for their own reasons, but all of them worry about confidentiality, a real important thing in Beal's research. But it's also something that the cons worry about when it comes to being a stool pigeon. And that's a guy with no popularity and limited life expectancy.
The six convicts are quite a study in convict Americana. Although all of these guys are near and dear as great character players my favorites would have to be Millard Mitchell, Gilbert Roland, and Jay Adler. Mitchell is your old convict who knows the system inside out and how and when to play people to get what he wants, he was an ace safecracker by trade before going in. Roland is a gangster who is doing his time and waiting to be deported where on his stashed loot he's going to live the good life.
Adler was a truly sad case, a guy who got greedy and caught and who is a great example of recidivism. After he gets his parole he doesn't know what to do on the outside so he deliberately violates parole to get back. A truly institutionalized human being and between the time of the making of this film and now, no one has found a way to deal with that.
My Six Convicts from Columbia's B picture unit is a great film of some wonderful case studies of the criminal mind.
s
This early Stanley Kramer production is well-cast, with fine performances by Millard Mitchell, a typical bit of interesting overplaying by Gilbert Roland and some good work by the rest of the supporting cast, including Byron Foulger and Henry Morgan. But although the early scenes are nicely done in an appropriate semi-documentary style -- director Fregonese started out doing public-service shorts about firefighters and the police -- the majority of the movie is taken up with moments of melodrama. I also have the uneasy feeling of no real connection -- that the 'six convicts' of the title are meant to be types, rather than individuals.
Cameraman Guy Roe, who started out with well-regarded B noirs like ARMORED CAR ROBBERY and later went into TV work, does some handsome work with good choices of angles. Look for the sequence in which the convicts get upset about the pitcher being withheld from the game.
Cameraman Guy Roe, who started out with well-regarded B noirs like ARMORED CAR ROBBERY and later went into TV work, does some handsome work with good choices of angles. Look for the sequence in which the convicts get upset about the pitcher being withheld from the game.
"My Six Convicts" is an interesting comedy drama about one of the first psychologists to work in a prison. John Beal plays Doc who is given a six-month trial effort to see if he can accurately test the convicts for their IQs, and study their backgrounds. This was part of an idea he had to see if it would make sense to staff prisons with such professionals in the future. Doc's biggest challenge is to earn the trust of the inmates.
After some chicanery by a couple of inmates, and Doc's pointing out the advantages of lighter duty in working with him, half a dozen men come around. They agree to work on his staff, and they become the first to take his tests. Millard Mitchell plays James Connie who surreptitiously steers the Doc and the inmates through a successful effort. Mitchell gives a great performance and received a Golden Globe award as best supporting actor in 1952. Other prominent actors among the inmates are Gilbert Roland as Punch Pinero, Harry Morgan as Dawson, Marshall Thompson as Blivens Scott and Jay Adler as Steve Kopac.
The film is a fictional adaptation of a real story. An attempted prison break, killing and suicide aren't in the book. The source is a 1951 autobiographic book by Donald Powell Wilson, "My Six Convicts: A Psychologist's Three Years in Fort Leavenworth." While Fort Leavenworth is a federal penitentiary in Kansas, the setting and story for this film was at San Quentin, a northern California state prison.
The comedic light touch lifts this film and helps in the individual portrayals of the six convicts' lives in more depth. It's a film worth seeing if one can find it on DVD.
After some chicanery by a couple of inmates, and Doc's pointing out the advantages of lighter duty in working with him, half a dozen men come around. They agree to work on his staff, and they become the first to take his tests. Millard Mitchell plays James Connie who surreptitiously steers the Doc and the inmates through a successful effort. Mitchell gives a great performance and received a Golden Globe award as best supporting actor in 1952. Other prominent actors among the inmates are Gilbert Roland as Punch Pinero, Harry Morgan as Dawson, Marshall Thompson as Blivens Scott and Jay Adler as Steve Kopac.
The film is a fictional adaptation of a real story. An attempted prison break, killing and suicide aren't in the book. The source is a 1951 autobiographic book by Donald Powell Wilson, "My Six Convicts: A Psychologist's Three Years in Fort Leavenworth." While Fort Leavenworth is a federal penitentiary in Kansas, the setting and story for this film was at San Quentin, a northern California state prison.
The comedic light touch lifts this film and helps in the individual portrayals of the six convicts' lives in more depth. It's a film worth seeing if one can find it on DVD.
Well I must say this prison film was a nice surprise. Both the realism of the filming that took place at San Quentin State Prison and the strong acting by all lead seven (7) actors kept me paying attention to the very end. Was it a realistic portrayal of life in prison? No, but the story line was superbly executed and the the psychologist (John Beal) referred to as simply "Doc" who narrates a lot of the story was well presented.
It did remind me of the later 1963 Oscar nominated prison film The Great Escape starring Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson and James Garner. Although the actors who starred in this lesser known film such as Millard Mitchell and Gilbert Roland never attained the star status of McQueen, Bronson and/or Garner their acting was top notch and most enjoyable.
This is a most under rated film and more than deserving of my 8 out of 10 IMDB rating.
It did remind me of the later 1963 Oscar nominated prison film The Great Escape starring Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson and James Garner. Although the actors who starred in this lesser known film such as Millard Mitchell and Gilbert Roland never attained the star status of McQueen, Bronson and/or Garner their acting was top notch and most enjoyable.
This is a most under rated film and more than deserving of my 8 out of 10 IMDB rating.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMillard Mitchell was the first actor to win a Golden Globe Best Supporting Actor award without receiving a corresponding Academy Award nomination. The other 6 in chronological order are: Earl Holliman in El farsante (1956), Stephen Boyd in Ben-Hur (1959), Oskar Werner in Alto espionaje (1965), Richard Attenborough in El cañonero del Yangtzé (1966) then El fabuloso Doctor Doolittle (1967) (these two wins in successive years), Richard Benjamin in La pareja chiflada (1975) and Aaron Taylor-Johnson in Animales nocturnos (2016).
- ErroresThe convicts manage to carry off an elaborate scheme to bring Randall's wife from Canada and smuggle her into the prison simply so Randall can enjoy ten minutes of marital bliss. But there is no explanation offered as to just exactly how they got her out again, nor why Randall didn't go with her, if they did, after it's all over.
- ConexionesReferenced in La muralla de cristal (1953)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- My Six Convicts
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 44 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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