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IMDbPro

Cazador de mujeres

Título original: The Girl Hunters
  • 1963
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 38min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.9/10
871
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Shirley Eaton and Mickey Spillane in Cazador de mujeres (1963)
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35 fotos
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Agrega una trama en tu idiomaLegendary detective Mike Hammer has spent seven years in an alcoholic funk after the supposed death of his secretary, Velda. He is brought back to the land of the living by his old friendly ... Leer todoLegendary detective Mike Hammer has spent seven years in an alcoholic funk after the supposed death of his secretary, Velda. He is brought back to the land of the living by his old friendly enemy, police lieutenant Pat Chambers.Legendary detective Mike Hammer has spent seven years in an alcoholic funk after the supposed death of his secretary, Velda. He is brought back to the land of the living by his old friendly enemy, police lieutenant Pat Chambers.

  • Dirección
    • Roy Rowland
  • Guionistas
    • Mickey Spillane
    • Roy Rowland
    • Robert Fellows
  • Elenco
    • Mickey Spillane
    • Shirley Eaton
    • Scott Peters
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.9/10
    871
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Roy Rowland
    • Guionistas
      • Mickey Spillane
      • Roy Rowland
      • Robert Fellows
    • Elenco
      • Mickey Spillane
      • Shirley Eaton
      • Scott Peters
    • 29Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 31Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer [EN]
    Trailer 2:28
    Trailer [EN]

    Fotos35

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    Editar
    Mickey Spillane
    Mickey Spillane
    • Mike Hammer
    Shirley Eaton
    Shirley Eaton
    • Laura Knapp
    Scott Peters
    • Pat Chambers
    Guy Kingsley Poynter
    • Dr. Larry Snyder
    James Dyrenforth
    James Dyrenforth
    • Bayliss Henry
    Charles Farrell
    Charles Farrell
    • Joe Grissi
    Kim Tracy
    • The Nurse
    Hy Gardner
    • Hy Gardner
    Benny Lee
    • Nat Drutman
    Murray Kash
    • Richie Cole
    Bill Nagy
    Bill Nagy
    • Georgie
    Clive Endersby
    Clive Endersby
    • Duck-Duck
    Ricardo Montez
    Ricardo Montez
    • Skinny Guy
    • (as Richard Montez)
    Larry Cross
    Larry Cross
    • Red Markham
    Tony Arpino
    • Cab Driver
    Hal Galili
    Hal Galili
    • Bouncer
    Nellie Hanham
    • Landlady
    • (as Nelly Hanham)
    Robert Gallico
    • Dr. Leo Daniels
    • (as Bob Gallico)
    • Dirección
      • Roy Rowland
    • Guionistas
      • Mickey Spillane
      • Roy Rowland
      • Robert Fellows
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios29

    5.9871
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8falconcitypaul

    Unique and Authentic

    "The Girl Hunters" opened in San Francisco the same week in 1963 as "Dr. No". Mickey Spillane's film got all the major publicity. However, the first outing of Sean Connery as James Bond altered action film history. Thereafter Pabst Blue Ribbon-drinking proles got muscled aside for dinner-jacketed U-speakers who knew that red wine didn't go with fish.

    I saw "The Girl Hunters" three times that summer. I admit that I love it dearly. I have whistled the propulsive soundtrack themes for 45 years, conjuring up the film's attitude as I set my shoulders determinedly and prowl the urban landscape with a warily appraising squint.

    I read the book twice that year. The second time I imagined Spillane's own curbstone-edged voice doing the first-person narration. It fit. My God, it fit. As an actor he didn't have the line-reading skills of a pro, but he had authenticity and a distinctive charm.

    Robert Aldrich's Spillane adaptation "Kiss Me Deadly" (1955) has stature as a late-noir post-modernist metafictional commentary on the detective genre. Prophetically, Aldrich filmed it before most of those adjectives had meaning. However, only "The Girl Hunters" accurately conveys the feel of Mickey Spillane's fiction.

    Aldrich and actor Ralph Meeker present a private eye opportunist seen from the outside--brutal, energetic, eyes on the main chance, cunning rather than bright. He's too large for his suit, a hustler busting out of his own clothes and the place he has in the world. A sly comment on slick, 1950's grassroots capitalist greed.

    "The Girl Hunters" and star Spillane give you Mike Hammer the way he sees himself--reasonable, but dedicated; taking care of business the way he needs to in an uneasy environment. A solid citizen, good to friends, but "someone terrible", a civic benefactor with a .45 under his coat and the will to use it.

    The only major difference I recall between book and screenplay comes when Hammer enters the tough waterfront bar where he's not welcome. The novel has a routine fight at the door. The movie shows Mike out-menace the ice pick- wielding bouncer while displaying his trademark homicidal grin, "the one with all the teeth."

    Interestingly, Lloyd Nolan, the white-haired Fed in the film, portrayed Brett Halliday's detective Mike Shayne in seven movies for 20th Century-Fox in the 1940's. You might check out the DVD package. Its features discuss Halliday's books, solid mass market hardboiled mysteries.

    Spillane took this type of urban adventurer and invigorated him with the Old Testament rigidity of Stonewall Jackson, Jack Dempsey's love of hands-on violence, and the populist wrath of a John Brown. His far more gutsy, hugely selling novels wove working class attitudes into fiercely climaxing revenge fantasies. The on-screen fight in "The Girl Hunters" between Hammer and the Dragon had no equal for pitiless savagery in 1963.

    In 1923 Carroll John Daly put the first hardboiled wise-cracking private detective into pulp magazine print. He represents a different stream from Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Daly's action tales have roots in rough-and-ready American culture. The big-talking river raftsmen in HUCKLEBERRY FINN and the folk yarns of Paul Bunyan and Pecos Bill display the same out-sized swagger as Daly's private eye Race Williams.

    Williams admitted that he could walk into a room filled with clues and not find a single one. His style of detecting was to fling open the door and start shooting, then sort things out as they flew. Spillane read and admired Daly, writing him a revealing fan letter after achieving success.

    Spillane gave the Race Williams bumptious folk hero contemporary visceral impact. He described his work as "the chewing gum of American literature". However, his books do more than exercise eye muscles.

    America's classic paranoid rant remains the same for rich and poor, Left and Right: Somewhere, somehow, someone is doing me dirt and I won't stand for it any longer! From 1947 to 1952 Mike Hammer shot men and women, kicked the guilty as well as the innocent, and broke teeth other than his own exorcising that rage. He came back after a decade in THE GIRL HUNTERS novel, which focuses our smoldering abstract anger on a world-girdling spy ring at the service of the international Communist conspiracy.

    Thank God it can be thrown into disarray by a lone American woman loose in the Soviet Union. (To learn what happens to Velda, the invisible Maguffin, read the book's direct sequel THE SNAKE.) Thank Him again that we have a howitzer-packing rogue private eye who can shrug off seven years of drunken debilitation (and repeated merciless beatings from a former best friend) to get ugly with foreign assassins nestled in our midst.

    Philosopher Ayn Rand named Spillane in her Objectivist newsletter as her favorite author. Why? His stories did not deal in moral grey areas. Bad was black, good was white. She liked that. Yet the truth of Spillane's fiction has more twists.

    Mike Hammer himself knows that he's a kill-crazy psycho. If you read nothing else of Mickey Spillane's, you might take time for the first chapter of ONE LONELY NIGHT. Hammer spends the rest of that book brooding over why a woman he has just saved from a gunman jumps to her death in an icy river after taking one searching look at the expression on his face.

    He comes to the soul-soothing epiphany that he's a killer designed by nature to kill killers. That's his destiny. He's a walking American revenge machine, a wish-fulfillment figure from the unquiet depths of our national psyche.

    "The Girl Hunters" presents this raw-hewn character straight, without any intermediary meddling. However you may like the approaches taken by Ralph Meeker or Armando Assante or Stacey Keach, the movie's credits have it right--Mickey Spillane is Mike Hammer. The Hammer on the page is a foot taller than Spillane on screen; otherwise they're identical.
    5jantoniou

    A bit strange, a bit strained...

    I was shocked to see a movie with a writer actually playing one of his characters, especially one as iconic--or, at least, notable--as Mike Hammer. I can only recall Stephen King playing in some of his scripts, but even then he did not tend to be a major, featured character. His stories have soared most with great actors, writing, and directing behind them ("The Green Mile," "Shawshank Redemption," "The Shining," "Misery," and many others).

    Mickey Spillane is woefully short of King's humility, though. The movie has an intriguing plot, but is convoluted beneath the weight of bad acting and mostly wretched delivery. The dialogue is actually pretty believable, all things considered, but you can feel the crowd assembled on the screen is mostly amateurs. The amateurish feel coupled with the somewhat on-target dialog sort of coupled to create a more "fun" movie than what is probably intended and it stays thin on the noir-ish elements, which often seem clichéd in most movies anyway.

    Spillane is generally horrible as a supposed slick lady's man--which Stacy Keach carried off much more believably with his charisma and acting chops, if not looks, on television. Spillane's pretty dry and one-note as Hammer, but at least he doesn't tend to ham it up. In fact, I'm not sure he is capable of ham.

    Shirley Eaton is excellent as the eye candy and Hammer's love interest, but Spillane just butchers some of his lines with her; for example, when she asks Hammer if he loves her, Spillane lowly rasps in the back of his throat, "I think I do, baby." It's really a pretty lame attempt at being emotional. And, kissing together? Just horrible face-mashing and a real waste of such an exquisite beauty as Eaton's. Spillane just has no idea how to be expressive and believable; his face is just a pancake throughout the movie. It gives a certain "naturalism" to the movie, but probably not in a good way for someone that needs to be as dynamic as Mike Hammer.

    Though it would have been very easy to have it, there is almost no dramatic tension in this movie, just a series of pasted-together scenes that Spillane meanders through. On a highly superficial level it works--the basic pieces ultimately fit--but there's no elegance to the design, probably due to lack of presentation on the part of most of the actors.

    The story is good enough to be re-made as a true noir-ish exploit, but the acting and stylistic elements need a real working through.
    7RanchoTuVu

    another low budget Mike Hammer movie

    Mike Hammer (Mickey Spillane) is found drunk and passed out by a police cruiser in an alley; he's taken to excessive drinking since the abduction of his girlfriend and secretary Velma, and is no good to himself or anyone else. Given a second chance and a new license to carry his cannon like .45 by new-found friend and FBI agent Rickerby (Lloyd Nolan) he sets out to find Velma and in the process meets the beautiful Laura Knapp (Shirley Eaton) who he first sees in her bikini as she's getting a suntan on an inflated raft in her pool. She makes a good femme fatale and has a neat seduction scene with him in her dark living room one night. Rickerby puts Hammer on the trail of "The Dragon" (Larry Taylor) a Soviet killer who might be connected to Velma's disappearance as well. The plot is difficult to follow, names are tossed out, and the viewer's job is to try and connect the dots. The pace is all right, directed by veteran Roy Rowland, and Spillane, though he isn't Olivier, grows on you as the film heads into a surprisingly violent ending.
    6AlanSquier

    A dream-come-true for the writer?

    Yeah, pals, I'll bet this is a dream of many writers, to portray his or her favorite character on the screen. I imagine Agatha Christy would have loved to portray Miss Marple, and Dashell Hammett possibly would have picked The Continental Op to portray.

    That off my chest, I feel kindly toward this film and was glad for the opportunity to see Spillane as Hammer. I can't say he was terribly good, but one can at least say that his portrayal was interesting, and I don't mean that as a put-down.

    It was also good as always to see Lloyd Nolan still around and adding to the film. This sure isn't the best Mike Hammer film, but I found it worth a look and imagine you will too.
    Ripshin

    Actually, I like this flick

    Granted, the other posters have valid comments.......Spillane cannot really act. However, for some bizarre reason, his stilted, monotone delivery works for me.

    My major complaint, regarding acting, would have to concern Scott Peters, as Hammer's former partner. He screeches his way through every scene he's in, and he makes it completely unbelievable that his character could ever have been friends with Hammer.

    The soundtrack is indeed grating. The crashing score overpowers many of the scenes, derailing the film noirish approach to the material.

    Eaton is indeed great, although the usually wonderful Nolan comes across as a bit cartoonish.

    That all being said, I still recommend this film, if only for the experience of seeing Spillane play his own creation.

    One side note: WHAT happened to Velda????

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Mickey Spillane plays his own fictional character, something extremely rare in movies as authors usually aren't actors. In this case, Spillane was a true tough guy character type, but was not a trained actor.
    • Errores
      As Mike Hammer drives to Laura Knapp's house his car changes from a 1962 Ford 500 to a 1956 Ford Thunderbird.
    • Citas

      Mike Hammer: Where are my clothes?

      Pat Chambers: In the garbage, which is where you belong.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane (1998)

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    • How long is The Girl Hunters?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de octubre de 1965 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Girl Hunters
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Elstree, Hertfordshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido
    • Productora
      • Fellane
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 38min(98 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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