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Dragnet

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 28min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
1.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Ben Alexander, Ann Robinson, and Jack Webb in Dragnet (1954)
Two homicide detectives investigate the brutal shotgun murder of a crime syndicate member.
Reproducir trailer1:22
1 video
12 fotos
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaTwo homicide detectives investigate the brutal shotgun murder of a crime syndicate member.Two homicide detectives investigate the brutal shotgun murder of a crime syndicate member.Two homicide detectives investigate the brutal shotgun murder of a crime syndicate member.

  • Dirección
    • Jack Webb
  • Guionistas
    • Richard L. Breen
    • Harry Essex
    • Jack Webb
  • Elenco
    • Jack Webb
    • Ben Alexander
    • Richard Boone
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.6/10
    1.2 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jack Webb
    • Guionistas
      • Richard L. Breen
      • Harry Essex
      • Jack Webb
    • Elenco
      • Jack Webb
      • Ben Alexander
      • Richard Boone
    • 27Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 12Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:22
    Trailer

    Fotos11

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    Elenco principal75

    Editar
    Jack Webb
    Jack Webb
    • Sergeant Joe Friday
    Ben Alexander
    Ben Alexander
    • Officer Frank Smith
    Richard Boone
    Richard Boone
    • Capt. James E. Hamilton
    Ann Robinson
    Ann Robinson
    • Officer Grace Downey
    Stacy Harris
    Stacy Harris
    • Max Troy
    Virginia Gregg
    Virginia Gregg
    • Ethel Starkie
    Vic Perrin
    Vic Perrin
    • Deputy D.A. Adolph Alexander
    • (as Victor Perrin)
    Georgia Ellis
    Georgia Ellis
    • Belle Davitt
    James Griffith
    James Griffith
    • Jesse Quinn
    Dick Cathcart
    • Roy Cleaver
    Malcolm Atterbury
    Malcolm Atterbury
    • Lee Reinhard
    Willard Sage
    Willard Sage
    • Chester Davitt
    Olan Soule
    Olan Soule
    • Ray Pinker
    • (as Olan Soulé)
    Dennis Weaver
    Dennis Weaver
    • Police Capt. R.A. Lohrman
    Monte Masters
    • Fabian Gerard
    Herb Vigran
    Herb Vigran
    • Mr. Archer
    Virginia Christine
    Virginia Christine
    • Mrs. Caldwell
    Guy Hamilton
    • Walker Scott
    • Dirección
      • Jack Webb
    • Guionistas
      • Richard L. Breen
      • Harry Essex
      • Jack Webb
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios27

    6.61.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7Panamint

    Chrome

    Check out the Chrome on the shiny 1950's automobiles. Look carefully and you will see the clear plastic air-conditioning tubes inside the rear window of the Cadillac. Wood furniture (not fiberboard), non-filter cigarettes by the ton, neon signs, 8-miles per gallon autos. This is authentic 1950's retro (and wastefulness) at its best.

    Expensive color film and fine film editing. First-class musical scoring is seamlessly blended into the movie.

    "Dragnet" is a meticulously planned movie project. Looks like every scene was thought out well in advance of the actual production. Webb must have been a very hard-working movie craftsman.

    Stylistically, Webb's brisk handling of actors and clipped, monotonous dialog is not appealing to my tastes, but directing style is in the eye of the beholder I suppose. His style is OK for television shows but less so in a full-length movie. However, this is a good crime movie and Webb at least gives it a kind of watchable uniqueness.

    Modern TV's "Law and Order" breaks no new ground. This "Dragnet" movie has the cops and detectives, then the District Attorney, then some sort of judicial hearing, etc. And of course "Law and Order" doesn't have those big chrome dinosaurs.
    6ccthemovieman-1

    Not Nearly As Entertaining As The TV Show

    I really enjoyed the Dragnet television shows back in the 1950s with Jack Webb and Ben Alexander and later Harry Morgan. They were very entertaining and fast-moving. I say that because this feature-length film was just too boring to add to my collection. I wouldn't watch it again.

    Oh, it started off with a bang as a man was murdered in a field, but then the rest of it is mostly detail work which gets pretty boring after 40 minutes! Some of the dialog is good: nice '40s-type film noir stuff.

    What I missed was the humor of the TV show, in which Webb and his partner, Officer Frank Smith, would interview a number of crackpots and those interviews would be funny. Most of the characters in this movie did not invoke laughs. It needed a bit more action, too, for a crime movie.
    yarborough

    Interesting, but not what it could have been.

    I agree with the other comments that it is somewhat disappointing that we already know the identity of the killer at the beginning, but it is obvious that the killing was shown so that we know Friday and Smith aren't harassing an innocent man throughout the movie. And harass they do. Because we know the killer, we can laugh they way Friday and Smith do when they frisk him four times a day and tailgate his car. The main problem with the movie is that the story just isn't as interesting as most of the stories of the television episodes were, and, as someone wrote, Friday is a different, tougher man, not as likeable as before. Another unfortunate thing is that in making the movie in color to attract audiences who had only seen "Dragnet" in black-and-white, the movie loses the stark film noir feel that many of the television episodes had. In addition, the movie was made when the television series started to bring more silly comedy into it, and, as a result, the movie contains far too much of it. The early episodes had a lot of dark humor, but not silly humor like this movie does, such as the scene with the big-busted singer, and the scene in which the bystanders watch Friday and Smith frisk Max Troy. Even Friday's one-liners aren't as darkly funny or clever as they are in the early television episodes. That said, the movie is still very interesting and rather entertaining if you give it a chance. Webb directs with a nice pace and the big production gives it a grand atmosphere that the television show can't capture. Had a "Dragnet" movie been done in black-and-white, with a more accessible story, and during the 1951-52 season when the only comedy was dark comedy, the movie would have been a bonafide classic.
    8pmtelefon

    Jack Webb will always be the man

    Jack Webb was a one of a kind filmmaker. Whether it was in the movies or on television he was, in his own way, a genius. His was work is easy to spot. He had a style all his own. "Dragnet" is not Webb at his best but it's still good. I watch it for the straight detective story that it is but there are quite a few funny moments to. The "Naked Gun" movies have ruined this movie a little for me. The dated "hi-tech" stuff is pretty funny now. Those moments don't take any enjoyment away from the movie. They actually add to the fun. "Dragnet" is always a welcome visit.
    burgbob975

    It gets scarier with each new viewing

    Were the 'fifties really this awful? The mind boggles.

    Moviegoers in 1954 got excited when they heard that one of their favorite TV shows, Dragnet, had been made into a feature film. (I remember because I was one of them.) One now stares in wonder at this icon of the strange and far-off 'fifties, an era that was Eisenhower-sunny on the surface and dark and menacing just beneath it.

    Dragnet the movie (eventually there was a second, on TV), now largely forgotten, was nothing more than an extended television episode made in color, while home sets were still black and white. Judging from the picture's low-rent set-ups, it must have been one of Warner Brothers' most cheaply made films for that year. A couple of scenes take place in empty fields, and---with the single exception when filming was done at the African wing of the Los Angeles County Museum---the indoor sets were not much more imposing. Many of the actors were frequently unemployed second-string players whose work did not make a deep impression.

    In the intervening time since it was made the film has largely gone unseen and although it made it to video, it is little viewed in this form. (I found a dusty copy at a Half-Price book store, selling for a desperate-to-get-this-turkey-off-the-shelf $3.99!) Predictably, it has dated badly. That 'fifties audiences accepted the actors' rigidly stylized, robotic impersonations of police officers as representing the way they actually spoke in real life says something about Americans' willingness to uncritically accept virtually anything they saw in movies, and especially on TV. (Remember actors posing as doctors extolling the pleasures of smoking during cigarette commercials?) Dragnet's cops' signature manner of speaking---a flat, semi-technical, bureaucratic argot, spoken in low, monotonal voices---Webb's cops rarely if ever snarled---was one of the most memorable things about the show. Now this is seen for what it always was: unintentional self-satire. (On the other hand, to Webb's great credit, virtually all modern-day cop shows stemmed from Dragnet, untold imitations of which have been launched on television over the past five decades)

    For more evidence of the film's antiquated point of view, watch the scene at the jazz club where Friday and Smith, seeking information about a criminal they're pursuing, converse with a musician who's one of their informants. There's a humorous moment when Smith gets a `real hip' handshake from the trumpet player that is nothing more than a quick swipe and a handful of air, then stares at his hand as if to figure out what had just transpired. This is followed by a three-way conversation during which the script clumsily has the musician work his way through an A to Z litany of now-moldy, 'fifties hipster clichés (`How's that chick?' `Really flipped, huh?' `Oh man, that's a drag,' `He was really nowhere,' `I've been diggin' it in the papers,' `He was jumpin' pretty steady with that Troy mob,' `Dig ya.') by way of what the screenwriter apparently must have regarded as establishing a well-rounded character.

    Not only was the film disappointing in how little attempt was made to `open it up' for the big screen, but in some ways its narrowly focused two-for-a-nickel script was decidedly less interesting than what was shown on the television show. For example, it missed interesting possibilities for character development, especially as this pertained to Webb's Joe Friday and Ben Alexander's Frank Smith. (Some time after the film's debut, Webb finally recognized that television viewers yearned to know more about Joe Friday in his off-duty hours and so gave them glimpses of this law enforcement automaton's meager social life, including intriguing little dabs of romance.)

    The film version also completely wastes the participation of Ben Alexander, the warmest and most appealing of all Joe Friday's sidekicks, leaving him with nothing to do except dutifully tag along with his superior officer and occasionally asking suspects or witnesses the odd question or two. The inspired daffy non sequiturs that his character, Frank Smith, regularly voiced in conversations with Joe Friday on the television show, which viewers loved and looked forward to, were almost entirely absent from the film. The one exception, which occurs during a brief back-and-forth with Webb about their individual food preferences, is so brief and isolated that it comes off as a self-conscious sop to audiences whom the screenwriter knew would be looking for it and falls flat.

    Webb also was the film's director, and he went about most of these duties with a notable lack of imagination. The result is a picture that is dreary and monotonous from start to finish. He elicited almost uniformly wooden-and even occasionally embarrassing-performances from the cast (leaving one to wonder how much of his own money was invested in the film or what his deal was with Warner's, and whether he might even have deliberately restricted himself to printing the first take, no matter much a second or even a third might have been desirable). The scene where as Joe Friday he interrogates the crippled woman whose small-time crook of a husband has just been killed is mawkish, and the actors playing police officers are directed to be so deadly serious that scenes like this were subsequently lampooned to great effect in the Dan Aykroyd satire made in 1987. At one point a very competent actor, Richard Boone, is reduced to miming a series of grotesque scowls while instructing his subordinates. It's a wonder Webb didn't direct him to gnaw on a table leg.

    Dragnet was a film that was mired deeply in its time and seems to evidence a disturbing subtext that relates to the American mindset as it was during the bland, conformist, and frightened Eisenhower/McCarthyite ‘fifties. The Cold War was at its height in 1954 and fears by Americans of falling victim to communist manipulations and even outright mind-control were rampant. It may be no coincidence that Dragnet and Don Siegel's Invasion of the Body Snatchers appeared within two years of each other. The cops in Dragnet are not merely grim, intense, obsessed defenders of the law, they often border on being zombie-like. One of Dragnet's most explicit messages---brought home to audiences several times---was how, if only we didn't have so many laws and that darn Constitution, we could put a heck of a lot more criminals behind bars where they belong. I've replayed this film at least half a dozen times and each time I watched it, the scarier it seemed. It's interesting to contemplate what super-patriot Joe Friday, if given the power and left to his own devices, would have done to lawbreakers. Luckily for the bad guys in the film---and possibly for all the rest of us---he wasn't given access to nuclear weapons.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The first theatrical film based on a television show.
    • Errores
      The murder scene is an open lot bounded by Loma Vista, 3rd, Wentworth and Rachel. These are actual streets in the LA area but do not intersect or form a block. Obviously the geography is intentionally inaccurate, which is also the case with that referred to hundreds of films and television programs. In such instances, if an actual address is used the occupant would have grounds of legal action if the location were to attract unwanted visitors.
    • Citas

      Max Troy: This gonna take long?

      Sgt. Joe Friday: You've got the time.

      Max Troy: Mine's worth money, yours isn't!

      Sgt. Joe Friday: Send in a bill.

      Max Troy: I asked you a question!

      Sgt. Joe Friday: You're here to answer 'em, not ask 'em!

      Max Troy: Now, listen to me, Cop. I pay your salary.

      Sgt. Joe Friday: All right, sit down. I'm gonna earn it.

      Max Troy: You already have, the kind of money you make. What do they pay you to carry that badge around, 40 cents an hour?

      Sgt. Joe Friday: You sit down! That badge pays 464 dollars a month. That's what the job's worth. I knew that when I hired on. $67.40 comes out with withholding. I give $27.84 for pension and 12 bucks for widows and orphans. That leaves me with $356.76. That badge is worth a dollar 82 an hour so Mister, better settle back into that chair because I'm about to blow about 20 bucks of it right now.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Theme From Dragnet (Danger Ahead)
      (uncredited)

      Music by Miklós Rózsa and Walter Schumann

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    Preguntas Frecuentes15

    • How long is Dragnet?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 4 de septiembre de 1954 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Original Dragnet
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Parker Center - 150 North Los Angeles Street, Downtown, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Mark VII Ltd.
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 500,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 28 minutos

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