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IMDbPro

The Glass Key

  • 1935
  • Approved
  • 1h 20min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
597
MA NOTE
Claire Dodd and George Raft in The Glass Key (1935)
Film noirCriminalitéDrameMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueEd Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.Ed Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.Ed Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.

  • Réalisation
    • Frank Tuttle
  • Scénario
    • Dashiell Hammett
    • Kathryn Scola
    • Kubec Glasmon
  • Casting principal
    • George Raft
    • Claire Dodd
    • Edward Arnold
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    597
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Frank Tuttle
    • Scénario
      • Dashiell Hammett
      • Kathryn Scola
      • Kubec Glasmon
    • Casting principal
      • George Raft
      • Claire Dodd
      • Edward Arnold
    • 20avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Rôles principaux49

    Modifier
    George Raft
    George Raft
    • Ed Beaumont
    Claire Dodd
    Claire Dodd
    • Janet Henry
    Edward Arnold
    Edward Arnold
    • Paul Madvig
    Rosalind Keith
    Rosalind Keith
    • Opal Madvig
    • (as Rosalind Culli)
    Charles Richman
    Charles Richman
    • Senator John T. Henry
    Robert Gleckler
    Robert Gleckler
    • Shad O'Rory
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    • Jeff
    • (as Guinn Williams)
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Taylor Henry
    Tammany Young
    Tammany Young
    • Clarkie
    Harry Tyler
    Harry Tyler
    • Henry Sloss
    Charles C. Wilson
    Charles C. Wilson
    • District Attorney Edward J. Farr
    Emma Dunn
    Emma Dunn
    • 'Mom' Madvig
    Matt McHugh
    Matt McHugh
    • Puggy
    Pat Moriarity
    Pat Moriarity
    • Mulrooney
    Mack Gray
    Mack Gray
    • Duke
    Ann Sheridan
    Ann Sheridan
    • Nurse
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Bettor
    • (non crédité)
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Waiter
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Frank Tuttle
    • Scénario
      • Dashiell Hammett
      • Kathryn Scola
      • Kubec Glasmon
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs20

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    Avis à la une

    McGonigle

    Great gangster flick

    This early adaptation of Hammett's novel is not as well known as the Alan Ladd version but is very much worth seeing. Different in some ways, eerily similar in some ways, it's usually a little more raw than the later remake (the car crash that opens the film is still jarring today). And as the other reviewer notes, it has all the classic noir elements. Definitely worth seeking out.
    7bkoganbing

    Raft Fixes It For Arnold

    This 1935 version of The Glass Key is not often seen, the 1942 film with Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake, and Brian Donlevy is far better known. Still this one has some interesting features, notably for the one and only time in his career George Raft played a Dashiell Hammett hero.

    It is one of the legends of Hollywood that George Raft turned down three of the roles that made Humphrey Bogart a legend, High Sierra, The Maltese Falcon, and Casablanca. The middle one of these was taken from the Dashiell Hammett novel and Ed Beaumont is very much like Sam Spade.

    They have the same laconic personality, but unlike Spade who is a partner in a detective agency and for hire, George Raft as Beaumont is the personal retainer and fixer for political boss Edward Arnold. And Arnold is heading for some trouble. He's decided to join the 'reform' element in his town headed by Senator Charles Richman and that does not please gangster Robert Gleckler who has had a working relationship with Arnold up to this time. But Arnold who has worked his way up from poverty sees a chance at respectability and the thing that makes him interested is Claire Dodd who is Richman's daughter and who plays along with Arnold's interest in her for her father's sake.

    At the same time Richman has a wastrel son in Ray Milland who has added Arnold's daughter Rosalind Keith to his list of conquests. He's needing some money real bad to pay off gambling markers to Gleckler. Later on Milland winds up dead and suspicion falls on Arnold. It's up to Raft to investigate and get him out of the jackpot.

    Three big changes from this version of The Glass Key are readily apparent. First in the 1942 version the daughter of Arnold becomes the sister of Brian Donlevy played there by Bonita Granville. Secondly the character of Emma Dunn is here as Arnold's mother, the mother isn't in the 1942 film. Finally a most unfunny comic relief character in this film played by Tammany Young is dropped altogether from the later film. Otherwise if you know what happened in that film the same occurs here with the same ending.

    But the leads are the exact same, tightlipped and tough. George Raft and Alan Ladd are just about the same as actors except for hair color. Veronica Lake is a bit more sultry than Claire Dodd, but then again she was more sultry than most of the women ever born on planet earth.

    I think Donlevy convinced himself in his version that he was really in love with Veronica Lake. Arnold whose character mouths the words was married before and now that he's a widower is looking for that all important trophy wife this time around.

    It's hard to choose between Guinn Williams and William Bendix who played the sadistic Jeff who was the button man for Gleckler. Williams could be brutal in films if he had to, though most of the time he played amiable lunkheads. There's no element of latent repressed homosexuality in Williams's performance as there is with Bendix however.

    Although both versions from Paramount of The Glass Key standup well today, it's really a pity that Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall never got to do this story. It would have been perfect for both of them.
    7Bunuel1976

    THE GLASS KEY (Frank Tuttle, 1935) ***

    Crime novelist Dashiell Hammett is best-known for penning THE THIN MAN and THE MALTESE FALCON and, like the latter's original 1931 film version was completely overshadowed by John Huston's classic 1941 remake, the same fate practically befell another of his filmed works. In fact, the original 1935 version of THE GLASS KEY has been all but impossible to see until recently, while its 1942 remake was easily available on DVD in Europe. Although I do own a copy of the latter, it has been ages since I watched it last and cannot sensibly compare the two versions now; having said that, the credits for the original – director Frank Tuttle (who would later make a star out of Alan Ladd in THIS GUN FOR HIRE and whose next picture, ironically enough, was the aforementioned remake of THE GLASS KEY!), stars George Raft (this obviously made him the first choice for Sam Spade in the remake of FALCON, but he turned it down to Bogie's eternal benefit!), Ray Milland and Ann Sheridan, plus character actors Edward Arnold, Guinn Williams and Irving Bacon – are sufficiently interesting to merit its re-evaluation as a worthy precursor to the noir subgenre.

    Raft is influential lawyer Arnold's right-hand man who, carrying on from his own star-making turn in Howard Hawks' SCARFACE (1932), has an eye for his boss' sister; when the former decides to become the ally of the local political candidate (because he too has his heart set on the latter's sister!), everything starts to go wrong for him, especially after turning down the defense of a drunken motorist from a manslaughter charge and when setting his foot down on the nightclub owned by the local underworld kingpin. However, it is the politician's inveterate gambler son Milland who proves to be the catalyst for disaster as, ostensibly pursuing the affections of Arnold's daughter, he is truly after milking the girl out of her funds to satiate the aforementioned criminal with whom he is indebted. This state of affairs naturally pits Arnold and Milland at loggerheads and it is up to the quick-witted Raft to shuffle his boss out of a murder rap when Milland's corpse is found lying in the gutter one night after the latest scuffle with his prospective father-in-law!

    At one point in the narrative – in a brutal sequence anticipating the later ones featuring Dick Powell's Philip Marlowe and Ralph Meeker's Mike Hammer in, respectively, Edward Dmytryk's MURDER, MY SWEET (1944) and Robert Aldrich's KISS ME DEADLY (1955) – Raft suffers greatly at the hands of the criminal's chief henchman Williams (effectively cast against type) and, eventually, ends up in hospital where he is nursed by a pre-stardom Sheridan. Yet, despite having also been assaulted by a massive dog, he goes back for more and, ultimately, defeats the thug by turning him against his own employer. The identity of the real murderer is not all that mysterious in itself but the journey to the denouement is an exciting ride and, indeed, it is kickstarted by a spectacular car-crash right in the very opening scene! For what it is worth, the characters of Arnold's mother and card-trick obsessed odd-job man, providing here the requisite elements of sentimentality and comic relief, were dispensed with for the remake in those somber days of WWII.
    9ROCKY-19

    A perfect match of styles

    Stark cinematography, crisp story-telling and quirky humor make this a ground-breaking film, showing later film noir creators the basics.

    The classic Dashiell Hammitt story gets a unique treatment. The still, anticipatory mood punctuated with abrupt, staccato dialogue is an inspired match for George Raft, playing perfectly to his strengths. Like Raft the film is stylish, watchful and reticent. He doesn't have to fake a thing. Edward Arnold is at his best as Paul Madvig in the center of the drama.

    As for plot, the ne're-do-well son of a senator is found dead in the gutter, and all the "evidence" points to his girlfriend's father, Madvig, a political boss in town. Arch-enemy Shad O'Rory (Robert Gleckler) pulls out all the stops to bring him down while Madvig's right-hand man Ed Beaumont (Raft) goes through hell to prove his innocence.

    In one torturous sequence, Raft never speaks a word while being abused (not to mention mocked), and that silence is visually compelling. There is a delicious use of stark shadows throughout. Instead of a bombastic soundtrack we get subtle use of organic sound. A key scene of violence is underscored marvelously by a swinging light fixture and a solo rendering of "Walkin' the Floor" echoing up the stairs.

    Pig-eyed Guinn Williams is somehow both comic and brutal as Shad's hired thug. Charles Richman is everything a senator should be. Claire Dodd is the passionate sister of the murder victim, and Rosalind Culli makes a watery Miss Madvig.

    It is entertaining to see a very young Ray Milland in the brief role as the murder victim. And then there's Ann Sheridan, memorable in only one scene as one tough nurse.

    This does not have elements that became stereotypical in the more fully developed film noir - such as the femme fatale and overt lustiness, which were in the popular Alan Ladd remake of this story. This version does hedge on some violent elements and is a little too simplistic in others, leaving some plot points unclear at first. But the its consistent sense of its own style and sense of reality with the more believable cast let this first version stand on its own.
    8springfieldrental

    George Raft's Finest Performance With Early Film Noir Elements

    Dashiell Hammett's 1931 novel, 'The Glass Key,' has been compared favorably to his earlier 1930 detective thriller, 'The Maltese Falcon." Paramount Pictures, buying the rights to the book as soon as it was hot off the presses, was the first Hollywood studio to bring the yarn to the screen in June 1935's "The Glass Key." George Raft plays the lead character Ed Beaumont, an assistant to crime boss and politician Paul Madvig (Edward Arnold).

    A number critics cite Raft's performance as one of his best. "Raft is letter-perfect as the fast-talking, faster-thinking gambler who plays his cards close to his chest, speaking only with his mouth while his face says nothing, just his flashing eyes giving evidence of the wheels turning behind his outwardly calm visage," describes blogger Educated Guesswork.

    Beaumont is the strong-arm enforcer to political big-wig Madvig, who also runs the city's crime syndicate. Directed by veteran Frank Tuttle, "The Glass Key" has been categorized by film historians as one of the first 'film noirs' brought to the screen. One scene especially qualifies its membership to the world of noirs' expressionistic lighting. Critic Dan Stumpf notes, "There's a particularly fine moment where he (Beaumont) watches a brutal murder without a flicker of emotion. Tuttle keeps the camera on Raft, his face lit by a wildly swinging overhead light that slows as a life slowly ebbs away." While directing "The Glass Key," Tuttle joined the American Communist Party, seeing it as a force to tamp down the rising power of Adolf Hitler. His membership ultimately hurt his career after World War Two, and was listed as one of 36 names linked by the Congressional House Committee in the late 1940s to be blacklisted in Hollywood.

    Young actress Ann Sheridan, who claimed she was genealogically linked to Civil War Union general Philip Sheridan (her father was his grandnephew), showed an interest in acting at Denton Texas High School before earning a bit part in the 1934 movie 'Search for Beauty.' After twenty small uncredited roles, the 20-year-old actress appeared in "The Glass Key," playing the nurse overseeing the beaten up Ed in the hospital. Sheridan was one of Hollywood's more prominent screen actresses, whose career was cut short at 51 from cancer in 1967.

    Gary Cooper was originally scheduled to play the George Raft role, but he was in the middle of a contract dispute with Paramount. "The Glass Key" was remade in 1942 with Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake, while the Coen Brothers made a more stark version of the Hammett story in their 1990 "Miller's Crossing" with Albert Finney.

    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in Le grand sommeil (1946)
    Film noir
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Criminalité
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drame
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystère

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Gary Cooper was originally announced for the role of Ed Beaumont, but he had a contract dispute with Paramount and George Raft replaced him.
    • Gaffes
      At the 9-minute mark George Raft is shown sitting on a desk, in a close and long shot, then getting up and walking into next room. He is then shown sitting as before in two close shots but in the next long shot he is not seen where he was supposed to be sitting.
    • Citations

      Jeff: That's between me and Shad and the lamppost. And you ain't no lamppost!

    • Connexions
      Version of La Clé de verre (1942)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The Glass Key?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 15 juin 1935 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La llave de cristal
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 20min(80 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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