Un estadounidense regresa a Tokio para intentar retomar los hilos de su vida anterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial, pero se encuentra atrapado entre los criminales y las autoridades.Un estadounidense regresa a Tokio para intentar retomar los hilos de su vida anterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial, pero se encuentra atrapado entre los criminales y las autoridades.Un estadounidense regresa a Tokio para intentar retomar los hilos de su vida anterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial, pero se encuentra atrapado entre los criminales y las autoridades.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Photo Sergeant
- (sin créditos)
- Provost Marshal Major
- (sin créditos)
- Capt. Winnow
- (sin créditos)
- Fingerprint Sergeant
- (sin créditos)
- Military Police Captain
- (sin créditos)
- Officer
- (sin créditos)
- Man
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Bogey gets an even better piece of news. His Ingrid Bergman who he married before the war and thought dead is alive. He goes to her and finds out she divorced him for reasons the plot really doesn't go into and is now married to a high civilian official with the American occupying authority, read MacArthur. That would be Alexander Knox in the Paul Henreid part and Ingrid, in this case Florence Marly has a daughter now.
Still Bogey who would now like to make money as a civilian flier as well is being used at cross purposes by the American Army Intelligence and by some Japanese led by Sessue Hayakawa who haven't adjusted to losing the war.
Tokyo Joe follows in plot lines laid out by Casablanca, but it sure treads softly in those giant footsteps. It was nice to see Sessue Hayakawa appear for the first time in an American film since silent days. He became a star in the early silent era in Cecil B. DeMille's The Cheat and left for Japan with the coming of sound where he stayed a popular film star right through World War II.
Hayakawa came here for Tokyo Joe. Other than establishing newsreel shots, this whole production was done on Columbia's back lot. Humphrey Bogart gives it the old Casablanca try, but he must have been wondering why he left Warner Brothers he was certainly doing a lot of the same stuff over at his home studio.
Alexander Knox is great, sardonic but principled, and Sessue Hayakawa is deliciously malign. Florence Marly is a poor substitute for Lisbeth Scott -- or couldn't Bogey get his own wife Lauren Bacall to work for scale? Bogey himself looks a little shopworn. Even the love child is fat-faced and unappealing.
Compromise pervades the film, from the cardboard sets to the hack director. Because it was cheap, exterior shots were minimal, and so the action scenes, which could have made for a more exciting story, give way to lots of talky interior stuff.
As the studio system weakened, star-owned production companies, like Bogart's, Burt Lancaster's and Alan Ladd's, were in vogue. Stars can't resist the chance to star in a movie where they don't have to take direction, so they often hire weak directors, usually with dismal results. This is one of them.
Very sentimental, with Bogart's performance dead on the mark and showing some sides of his persona which had not been explored before. Produced by Bogart's company, Santana Productions.
Tokyo Joe was made not long after Bogey had left Warner Brothers and it has more than a whiff of a "message picture" that strikes to find some meaning in postwar Tokyo. But like "House Of Bamboo" this film works not only as melodrama but as historical artifact of a period that is now forgotten. We don't think of the Japanese as a defeated power. Ever since the Honda Accord and the Toyota Camry started blowing away American competition we have thought of the Japanese as a superpower economically, not as a crippled defeated country. This film captures a mood that is rarely expressed in movies and it captures it with rather high production values. The rest of the cast isn't much but they play it straight and thus Tokyo Joe stands up even better after the initial viewing. The DVD transfer is very good and it remains a worthy addition to the Bogart canon.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis was the first movie allowed to film in post-war Japan. However, it appears that any footage of Joe Barrett (Bogart's character) that appears on location in Tokyo was filmed with a body double. It's more than possible that Bogart filmed only in the U.S. and never went to Japan.
- ErroresObvious double for Humphrey Bogart in the fight scenes and the street scenes filmed in Japan.
- Citas
Joseph 'Joe' Barrett: Hey, whatever became of the rattrap hotel that used to be next door?
Ito: The B-29's converted it into a parking lot.
Joseph 'Joe' Barrett: Well, it's lucky they stopped when they did, or all Tokyo'd be a parking lot. Next time it'll be the whole world and nothing left to park
Ito: Come upstairs, Joe. They don't understand a word of English - unless they listen.
- ConexionesEdited into Esto es todo (2009)
- Bandas sonorasThese Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)
(uncredited)
Music by Jack Strachey
Lyrics by Eric Maschwitz (as Holt Marvell) and Harry Link
Sung on a record several times
Sung by Florence Marly at the Tokyo Joe cabaret in flashback
Reprised by an unidentified female at the Tokyo Joe cabaret
Variations in the score throughout the film
Selecciones populares
- How long is Tokyo Joe?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 207
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 28 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1