Agrega una trama en tu idiomaCarlyle, a man who hires pilot Harry Black to fly him to Istanbul, is murdered there. Now, mysterious Diane Reed and a local gangster, Rashi, are after Harry, believing that he has the price... Leer todoCarlyle, a man who hires pilot Harry Black to fly him to Istanbul, is murdered there. Now, mysterious Diane Reed and a local gangster, Rashi, are after Harry, believing that he has the priceless plates Carlyle used to counterfeit money.Carlyle, a man who hires pilot Harry Black to fly him to Istanbul, is murdered there. Now, mysterious Diane Reed and a local gangster, Rashi, are after Harry, believing that he has the priceless plates Carlyle used to counterfeit money.
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- Guionista
- Elenco
- Lisa Boulez
- (as Katy Fraysse)
- Sulley Boulez
- (as Christian Barbier)
- Francesca
- (as Anna Capri)
- (solo créditos)
- Simon Scott
- (solo créditos)
- Valdez
- (as Jack Leonard)
- (solo créditos)
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Opiniones destacadas
Harry Black is a private pilot who flies Jason Carlyle (Stanley Holloway) into Istanbul where Carlyle gets murdered. Harry gets associated with the murder and his paths cross with mysterious woman Diane Reed (Suzanne Pleshette) and powerful crime lord Mosul Rashi (Victor Buono). Harry finds out that Carlyle was carrying plates for counterfeiting money that got lost. Both, Reed and Rashi, thinks that Harry got them, or at least he knows where they are. One double cross follows another and so on.
'Target: Harry' is nothing spectacular in the pile of similar James Bondish spy themed action films that were popular at that time. Even the main score is awfully similar to one of James Bond. The acting is good and there are some fine moments in dialogue to make 'Target: Harry' passably entertaining while watching but nothing else. Rather forgettable and not very thrilling action piece.
I seeked this film because of the colorful cast (Morrow, Romero, Stanley Holloway, Michael Ansara, Victor Buono and Suzanne Pleshette) and also because it's directed by Roger Corman (a director that has some sort of cult following). In the first part it looked good but after it looked like it took a detour to laziness, and there was a scene that kinda scared me; a goon enters Ruth Carlyle (Charlotte Rampling)'s apartment and he squeezes her head to the point we hear her skull cracking! If you can overlook this, it's just a time passer.
Unsure of what to expect, I dove into its opening Gran Prixesque formula high-tension race car pile up action sequence, while lapping up raw location scenery from Monaco, Turkey and environs with laconic, tosseled haired Vic Morrow and sizzling Suzanne Pleshette in her prime, decked out in chic colorful ensembles; young freckled laser blue-eyed Charlotte Rampling, fey Victor Buono as the heavy; decent action sequences and plenty of softcore porn interludes (some are violent) all served up from the Corman Company with a cheezy score. If your interest is peaked, this one's for you!
Harry Black (Vic Morrow) is an ex-con who flies tourists around on private flights and based in Monte Carlo. He gets hired by Jason Carlyle (Stanley Holloway) to transport him to Istanbul where Carlyle, without Harry's knowledge, is going to sell the plates for five pound notes to the underworld. When Carlyle ends up dead on the streets of Istanbul, without the plates, Harry ends up the center of a hunt for them with the police, represented by Lieutenant Duval (Cesar Romero), and the underworld, represented by two competing personalities, Diane Reed (Suzanne Pleshette) and Mosul (Victor Buono). There's also Carlyle's daughter, Ruth (Charlotte Rampling), he gets to deal with.
The basic story is pretty standard Hitchcockian, wrong-man stuff. The small musical motif that comes up from time to time is borderline plagiarizing the James Bond theme. Mosul is effectively Sydney Greenstreet's characters from The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca. This movie really does wear its influences on its sleeve. And they tend to be where the film is the most fun, especially Buono who knows exactly what he's doing, even imitating Greenstreet's verbal delivery.
However, Harry Black is largely just trapped in an adventure that's not that interesting. There's the requisite opaqueness to the mystery early on, but Harry's actual involvement is never that compelling. For instance, he's nowhere near Carlyle when he dies, so the suspicion that Duval has towards him, despite, you know, being a policeman in Monte Carlo and not Istanbul where the murder actually happened, never feels like any sort of threat. Harry ends up feeling like he's involved because he has nothing better to do.
Now, the better way to package this would be to have Carlyle die in Harry's arms, Carlyle fly away on his own, apologize directly to Ruth for what happened, and then go with Ruth to continue the adventure, protecting her while he tries to clear his name. Except, the two don't meet until about halfway through the film, and then she's gone moments later (in one of two scenes that Gene Corman directed to sex the film up). All this while Harry has no real reason to get involved at all.
The unraveling of the plot, the big action/adventure sequence that ends the film, has its charms, but it's largely an empty exercise in film mechanics. The best part of this is really Buono who has to lumber through everything while making wisecracks. It's amusing.
Making movies is hard work that requires many hours and a lot of concentration, but I'm getting the sensation now that Corman is putting in something like a minimum effort in this late stage of his directing career. It's not a huge surprise to me that he'd give up in a few years. He feels like he's just going through the motions, giving his professional effort and no more. The creative spark that marked his Poe cycle is done and dusted. Corman still isn't a bad filmmaker by any measure. He still gets decent performances, things look good, and there's a good clip to the action. However, the script is just generic without any good reason for our hero to be involved at all.
It's forgettable, uninspiring, and kind of just bland. However, it has its small moments.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOn some prints, the film was entitled "How To Make It"; on these prints, Roger Corman was credited as director under his own name.
- Citas
Harry Black: I figure once in a while, somebody has to remember a loser.
Diane Reed: You're the loser, Harry.
Harry Black: Yeah, that's right.
- ConexionesVersion of The Maltese Falcon (1931)