[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendario de lanzamientosTop 250 películasPelículas más popularesBuscar películas por géneroTaquilla superiorHorarios y entradasNoticias sobre películasPelículas de la India destacadas
    Programas de televisión y streamingLas 250 mejores seriesSeries más popularesBuscar series por géneroNoticias de TV
    Qué verÚltimos trailersTítulos originales de IMDbSelecciones de IMDbDestacado de IMDbGuía de entretenimiento familiarPodcasts de IMDb
    OscarsPride MonthAmerican Black Film FestivalSummer Watch GuidePremios STARmeterInformación sobre premiosInformación sobre festivalesTodos los eventos
    Nacidos un día como hoyCelebridades más popularesNoticias sobre celebridades
    Centro de ayudaZona de colaboradoresEncuestas
Para profesionales de la industria
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de visualización
Iniciar sesión
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar app
  • Elenco y equipo
  • Opiniones de usuarios
  • Trivia
  • Preguntas Frecuentes
IMDbPro

Pasión desenfrenada

Título original: Backfire
  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 31min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
1.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Gordon MacRae and Virginia Mayo in Pasión desenfrenada (1950)
While recuperating from wartime back injuries at a hospital, veteran Bob Corey is visited on Christmas Eve by a beautiful stranger with an even stranger message.
Reproducir trailer3:59
1 video
17 fotos
Film NoirHoliday RomanceCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

Mientras se recupera en un hospital de las heridas sufridas en la espalda durante la guerra, el veterano Bob Corey recibe en Nochebuena la visita de una bella desconocida con un mensaje aún ... Leer todoMientras se recupera en un hospital de las heridas sufridas en la espalda durante la guerra, el veterano Bob Corey recibe en Nochebuena la visita de una bella desconocida con un mensaje aún más extraño.Mientras se recupera en un hospital de las heridas sufridas en la espalda durante la guerra, el veterano Bob Corey recibe en Nochebuena la visita de una bella desconocida con un mensaje aún más extraño.

  • Dirección
    • Vincent Sherman
  • Guionistas
    • Lawrence B. Marcus
    • Ivan Goff
    • Ben Roberts
  • Elenco
    • Viveca Lindfors
    • Dane Clark
    • Virginia Mayo
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.5/10
    1.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Guionistas
      • Lawrence B. Marcus
      • Ivan Goff
      • Ben Roberts
    • Elenco
      • Viveca Lindfors
      • Dane Clark
      • Virginia Mayo
    • 49Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 15Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Videos1

    Wanted for Murder
    Trailer 3:59
    Wanted for Murder

    Fotos17

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    + 11
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal51

    Editar
    Viveca Lindfors
    Viveca Lindfors
    • Lysa Radoff
    Dane Clark
    Dane Clark
    • Ben Arno
    Virginia Mayo
    Virginia Mayo
    • Nurse Julie Benson
    Edmond O'Brien
    Edmond O'Brien
    • Steve Connelly
    Gordon MacRae
    Gordon MacRae
    • Bob Corey
    Ed Begley
    Ed Begley
    • Police Capt. Garcia
    Frances Robinson
    • Mrs. Blayne
    Richard Rober
    Richard Rober
    • Solly Blayne
    Sheila MacRae
    Sheila MacRae
    • Bonnie Willis
    • (as Sheila Stephens)
    David Hoffman
    David Hoffman
    • Burns
    Ernest Anderson
    Ernest Anderson
    • James - Party Servant
    • (sin créditos)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Fight Fan
    • (sin créditos)
    Monte Blue
    Monte Blue
    • Detective Sgt. Pluther
    • (sin créditos)
    Paul Bradley
    Paul Bradley
    • Guest
    • (sin créditos)
    Russ Conway
    Russ Conway
    • Police Broadcaster
    • (sin créditos)
    John Daheim
    John Daheim
    • Bingo - Prizefighter
    • (sin créditos)
    John Dehner
    John Dehner
    • Blake - Plainclothes Cop
    • (sin créditos)
    Joe Gilbert
    • Fight Fan
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Guionistas
      • Lawrence B. Marcus
      • Ivan Goff
      • Ben Roberts
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios49

    6.51.9K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Opiniones destacadas

    7bmacv

    Returning vets drawn into cesspool of postwar Los Angeles

    The dislocation felt by returning servicemen was one of the chief topical themes of the film noir cycle. After being primed to take risks but no prisoners in the anarchic and violent theaters of World War, many found it hard to ratchet back down upon their return to an often jarringly altered society. Amnesia was the primary noir metaphor -- having to reconstruct an entire past life from scratch. Others faced having to cope with disabilities; still others, having spent the "best years of their lives" in hellholes abroad, weren't about to wait for the high life on the installment plan.

    Backfire forgoes amnesia for the latter two categories. Gordon MacRae recuperates from spinal-cord injuries in a veterans' hospital until he can get out and buy a ranch with army buddy Edmond O'Brien, who abruptly vanishes. Upon release, MacRae sets out to track him down through the labyrinthine underbelly of postwar Los Angeles. It looks like O'Brien got mixed up with heavy gamblers, and is in fact wanted for apparently murdering a syndicate kingpin. MacRae is aided in his quest by his nurse (Virginia Mayo, good as a good gal for once) but thrown off the trail by a mysterious foreigner (Viveca Lindfors, as a discount-chain Ingrid Bergman). But, as always in the noir scheme, things are rarely what they at first seem....

    No masterpiece, Backfire nevertheless keeps up the pace and the suspense, drawing (like Somewhere in the Night) on themes and formats that were central concerns of the cycle.
    8secondtake

    Complex, exciting, and visually rich, but straining slightly under its own weight

    Backfire (1950)

    A complicated, interesting and sometimes forced story about two ex-G.I.s with dreams of a ranch. But the realities of post-War America set in, with shades of old gangsterism (this is a Warner Bros. film, remember) and with siren calls from lonely women and a murder unexplained. The story is made more complicated (and interesting) by layering a number of flashbacks into the flow, and you have to really pay attention to keep the chronology straight. But this is a plus, in the end, because it's a richly dense movie you could easily watch a second time. Just the range of scenes is ambitious, from gorgeous pouring rain at night to a boxing arena to a sunny army rehab swimming pool to, of course, a detective's office. The photography (under Carl Guthrie) layers up many scenes, some are visually sensational (he also shot the great "Caged" a few months later).

    Viveca Lindfors makes some stunning appearances here as Lysa, and you can see why Hollywood thought she might make a new Swedish import like Ingrid Bergman. And she can act, too, with an emotional intensity and range that makes you wonder why her career didn't, in fact, take off. Almost to set her off as the mysterious brooding beauty, the lead woman is the cute, cheerful, all American Virginia Mayo, who plays nurse and friend Julie perfectly. In a way you see in just these two how well cast, and typecast, two women can be, and how the director, Vincent Sherman, works so well with their differences, though we all wish for more of Lindfors.

    Likewise for the two leading men. The main star is a pretty boy, and a decent actor, Gordon MacRae as Bob, but MacRae lacks presence and magnetism, and maybe true ability. At first we accept this because Bob is just lying in a hospital bed, with Julie cheerfully attending. But then up he gets, pain all gone, and the real movie starts. His best friend is the underrated noir staple Edmond O'Brien, who isn't pretty at all, but trying, I think, to be something of a Bogart, a regular guy named Steve, with guts and depth and reserve.

    With Lindfors, he's still the best performer here, and they have a few scenes together that are the best acted, if not the best written, parts of the movie. If we take the Bergman/Bogart comparison out of "Casablanca" to an extreme here with Lindfors/O'Brien in "Backfire," we can see their scene by the piano as a kind of wartime flashback, shoehorned into the movie for no good reason except to say they must be fated to meet and fall in love. But this isn't easy when someone else already loves the girl, and that someone has a gun, and a warped mind.

    Why exactly this doesn't all come together is one of the mysteries of the movies, where there are so many pieces to a puzzle that contribute successively, and concurrently, and getting them perfect is really really hard. Ultimately it's the director we look to for the big decisions (as well as the day to day control), and Sherman had shown once before his mastery of a complex story in "Mr. Skeffington." In a way, this one is just so fractured, following the film noir penchant for flashbacks and femme fatales and confusing plots, it would take a miracle, or a Michael Curtiz, to pull it off (I'm thinking "Mildred Pierce" more than "Casablanca" here).

    Still, it's a great film to get lost in, and to pull out the subtleties where they really work well.
    youroldpaljim

    An interesting film noir.

    Bob Corey, a war veteran recovering in a V.A. hospital for a spinal injury, becomes alarmed when his war buddy Steve Connolly vanishes. One night while under sedation his visited by mysterious woman who informs him that Steve has been seriously injured and is in trouble with the law. Bobs nurse convinces him its all a dream. But when Bob is released from the hospital, he is questioned by police who want to know if he knows where he thinks Steve can be found. The police inform Bob that Steve is suspected of killing a gambler. Bob then sets out to find Steve and find the real killer. Along the way bodies pile up and Bobs search for leads him into the clutches of mysterious mobster named Walsh.

    BACKFIRE! is a well directed, photographed and acted noir mystery which holds one interest throughout. The ending comes as quite a surprise when the identity of Walsh is revealed. The cast is excellent, including many of the minor players. It was nice to see Virginia Mayo playing a good girl for a change in a film like this. The writers of this film must have had an obsession with spinal chord injuries, since both male leads suffer such injuries during the film.
    7The_Dying_Flutchman

    Los Angeles Plays the Straight Man Yet Again

    Perhaps not the best of film Noir, but more than serviceable with a fine cast and a haunting performance by Viveca Lindfors. What a babe when young and quite exotic in this role. "Backfire" may well have been written with the matinée crowd in mind as it has many weaknesses, but the director, Vincent Sherman, was efficient in the sequences of action and brutality. Gordon McCrae was a little flat, but I think the studio was trying to give this singer the benefit of the doubt. That has always been the way of things in the movies: give the popular singers of the day a chance to become known in some other milieu. It might have worked better if Edmund O'Brian had played the lead, but such was not the case. Anyway, a slightly better than average trip down the darkened alleyways of Noir's mean streets.
    6blanche-2

    Warners noir, not very effective

    Vincent Sherman was a solid director, but unfortunately, he missed the boat with "Backfire" because a backfire it was and went unreleased for two years. By the time it was released, Edmond O'Brien had enjoyed some big success - but in this, he doesn't have much of a role.

    Actually, the beginning of the movie is the best part. O'Brien is Steve Connelly, just back from the war and hoping to buy a ranch with his wartime body, Al Corey (Gordon MacRae). Al was badly injured and has been in the hospital a while. Steve takes off and says he will contact him. But eight weeks go by, and no communication.

    One night, while Al is asleep in the hospital and they have given him something to help him sleep, a woman rushes into his room and wakes him up. She tells him that Steve has been injured, he's in terrible pain, and he wants to die. She doesn't know what to do.

    Groggily, Al tells her that he is due to be released soon, and Steve should hold on. He points to a pad where she can write down the address. In the morning the paper is blank, and Al's nurse (Virginia Mayo), among others, is skeptical about his story.

    Once released, Al sets off to find Steve. He walks into sticks of dynamite getting ready to explode. He learns that Steve became involved with gamblers, and is wanted for murder of a big shot who wanted what he believed was owed him.

    The problem is that once they started in on the flashbacks, the film became confusing. Most of the time going back and forth like that in a film is easy to follow, but for some reason, this wasn't.

    The film also stars Dane Clark as another war buddy and Viveca Lindfors who is involved with someone named Lou Walsh, a mystery figure responsible for a great deal of mayhem.

    "Backfire" seems too long at 91 minutes because the pace was off. MacRae did an okay job but he needed a little more guidance; this would never be his milieu. Viveca Lindfors is stunning -- it's a shame her film career didn't carry her further, but she wasn't one to play Hollywood games. She was an award-winning stage actress and for some time did a one-woman show that toured around the country. Even into old age she did television and small roles in films.

    A disappointment all around.

    Más como esto

    Un amanecer trágico
    6.8
    Un amanecer trágico
    Cerrado el paso
    6.6
    Cerrado el paso
    La infiel
    6.8
    La infiel
    En visperas de la muerte
    6.5
    En visperas de la muerte
    Hora de violencia
    6.8
    Hora de violencia
    Desperate
    6.7
    Desperate
    Extraña agonía
    6.7
    Extraña agonía
    Sombras del pasado
    6.9
    Sombras del pasado
    La dama en el lago
    6.5
    La dama en el lago
    Crimen en las calles
    6.6
    Crimen en las calles
    La bestia del crimen
    6.5
    La bestia del crimen
    Nacida para el mal
    6.6
    Nacida para el mal

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Completed in October 1948, and bears a 1948 copyright statement on the opening credits, but not released until 1950.
    • Errores
      Every time one of the principals takes a cab, it's always the same 1936 De Soto that had been part of the WB studio inventory since the mid-1930s. It still was being used in films, though by the time this one was made, post-WWII 1946, 1947, and 1948 De Sotos had become the norm on most city streets. A real 1936 cab would have been worn out and scrapped because no cars were made for such use during the war. Likewise, the police chief of Los Angeles is still running around in another long-time pre-WWII WB veteran vehicle, a 1940 Buick 4-door sedan.
    • Citas

      Bob Corey: [after Quong closes his eyes] Can't you help us, doc? Can't you do something?

      Quong's Doctor: [after opening Quong's eyelid] I'm afraid the next time he talks it'll be to his ancestors.

    • Conexiones
      Referenced in Yo amo a Lucy: The Fashion Show (1955)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
      (1739) (uncredited)

      Written by Charles Wesley and Felix Mendelssohn (uncredited)

      Sung during the Christmas scene at the beginning

    Selecciones populares

    Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
    Iniciar sesión

    Preguntas Frecuentes14

    • How long is Backfire?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de junio de 1950 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Backfire
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Fremont Hotel - 401 South Olive Street, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(hotel where Corey and Connolly stayed - demolished 1955)
    • Productora
      • Warner Bros.
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 31 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

    Contribuir a esta página

    Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
    Gordon MacRae and Virginia Mayo in Pasión desenfrenada (1950)
    Principales brechas de datos
    What is the Spanish language plot outline for Pasión desenfrenada (1950)?
    Responda
    • Ver más datos faltantes
    • Obtén más información acerca de cómo contribuir
    Editar página

    Más para explorar

    Visto recientemente

    Habilita las cookies del navegador para usar esta función. Más información.
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Inicia sesión para obtener más accesoInicia sesión para obtener más acceso
    Sigue a IMDb en las redes sociales
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    • Ayuda
    • Índice del sitio
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Licencia de datos de IMDb
    • Sala de prensa
    • Publicidad
    • Trabaja con nosotros
    • Condiciones de uso
    • Política de privacidad
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, una compañía de Amazon

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.