Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA nightclub singer is caught between a big-time gangster and a tough Broadway columnist.A nightclub singer is caught between a big-time gangster and a tough Broadway columnist.A nightclub singer is caught between a big-time gangster and a tough Broadway columnist.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Robert Arthur
- Copy Boy
- (non crédité)
Patricia Barry
- Showgirl
- (non crédité)
Richard Bartell
- Hooper
- (non crédité)
Mary Bayless
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
Edward Biby
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
Monte Blue
- Lake
- (non crédité)
William A. Boardway
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
George Boyce
- Waiter
- (non crédité)
James Carlisle
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
Eddy Chandler
- Police Announcer
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Based on the adjectives used by my IMDB colleagues below to describe this 1946 gangster film..."routine", "mediocre", "formula", "typical"...I'd say they had it pegged pretty accurately. I would only add the caveat that, for me, no film in which Zachary Scott is the star, giving his usual inimitable take on amoral, self pitying, alternately charming and sleazy bon vivants ,can be entirely shrugged off. So let me add my own adjective, one I've just coined, to delineate this film,"teeter-totter-ish". Whenever Scott's in the picture it rises a bit above the schlock line and when he's not, especially when the proceedings are weighed down by the poor man's Richard Conte, Dane Clark, and the voluptuous but talentless, as both actor and singer, Janis Page, it falls. Give it a C plus.
PS...Paradoxically, I'm happy to note that Ms. Page is (hopefully) still going strong at 100.
PSS...Sickest and therefore most interesting relationship in the film is that between Scott and his adoring, Widmark-esque, punk gunsel, Candy, played to perfection by future Los Angeles hamburger entrepreneur, Harry Lewis. Yet another reason in my opinion why this film cannot be completely thrown into the generic dumpster.
PS...Paradoxically, I'm happy to note that Ms. Page is (hopefully) still going strong at 100.
PSS...Sickest and therefore most interesting relationship in the film is that between Scott and his adoring, Widmark-esque, punk gunsel, Candy, played to perfection by future Los Angeles hamburger entrepreneur, Harry Lewis. Yet another reason in my opinion why this film cannot be completely thrown into the generic dumpster.
ZACHARY SCOTT is a nightclub owner, using his club as a front for a gambling joint. He has a singer girlfriend (JANIS PAIGE) who doesn't seem to care how involved he is with gangsters, no matter how selfish his motives are. As his loyal girlfriend, Janis Paige gives a completely lackluster and low-key performance, instead of the usual vivacious one she was capable of.
When the police raid his gambling joint, he accidentally shoots his sister (FAYE EMERSON) during the raid while taking a shot at her husband (GEORGE TOBIAS) who was trying to be a peacemaker. Scott has to go into hiding once he escapes the clutches of the police and even then his girlfriend stands by her man. In true form, he gets his comeuppance before the final shootout. DANE CLARK is a reporter with an ambiguous friendship with the heel.
Typical Warner Bros. melodrama lacks the punch it needs to make it more than average as entertainment.
Never rises above its routine script despite some terse dialog amid dangerous situations.
When the police raid his gambling joint, he accidentally shoots his sister (FAYE EMERSON) during the raid while taking a shot at her husband (GEORGE TOBIAS) who was trying to be a peacemaker. Scott has to go into hiding once he escapes the clutches of the police and even then his girlfriend stands by her man. In true form, he gets his comeuppance before the final shootout. DANE CLARK is a reporter with an ambiguous friendship with the heel.
Typical Warner Bros. melodrama lacks the punch it needs to make it more than average as entertainment.
Never rises above its routine script despite some terse dialog amid dangerous situations.
Thanks again to MOVIES Net for showing this 40s noir, saluting Janis Paige who passed at age 101 in 2024. An inspiration.
Not a classic, but close enough to the bullseye, a film that shows off her singing talents and some stunning wardrobe changes for the star attraction. Warner Brothers wisely cast all around bad guy Zachary Scott as yet another party crasher, this time a shady nightclub owner who runs a cozy gambling operation in the back. Enter Janis as Scott's lead singer and she's a dazzler.
Complications; Janis falls for two-fisted columnist Dan Corwin (Dane Clark) and three's a crowd. That said, Scott seems to somehow, someway win out, also with the death of Faye Emerson on his hands. A few well staged action scenes on tap, thanks to director Fred De Cordova (MY THREE SONS), the bullet-proof glass scene with Scott firing away is a gem. Very ingenius.
Beautiful rendition of "Body and Soul" by Janis Paige, one of the few noirs featuring musical interludes. As far as mystery ladies go, Paige is not Lizabeth Scott or Lauren Bacall, but memorable enough and fittingly teamed with Zachary Scott the master of slick.
Scott would next co-star in CASS TIMBERLANE with Spencer Tracy and Lana Turner.
On Warner Brothers dvd, likely re-issued with the passing of Janis Paige. Keep watch for blu ray releases.
Not a classic, but close enough to the bullseye, a film that shows off her singing talents and some stunning wardrobe changes for the star attraction. Warner Brothers wisely cast all around bad guy Zachary Scott as yet another party crasher, this time a shady nightclub owner who runs a cozy gambling operation in the back. Enter Janis as Scott's lead singer and she's a dazzler.
Complications; Janis falls for two-fisted columnist Dan Corwin (Dane Clark) and three's a crowd. That said, Scott seems to somehow, someway win out, also with the death of Faye Emerson on his hands. A few well staged action scenes on tap, thanks to director Fred De Cordova (MY THREE SONS), the bullet-proof glass scene with Scott firing away is a gem. Very ingenius.
Beautiful rendition of "Body and Soul" by Janis Paige, one of the few noirs featuring musical interludes. As far as mystery ladies go, Paige is not Lizabeth Scott or Lauren Bacall, but memorable enough and fittingly teamed with Zachary Scott the master of slick.
Scott would next co-star in CASS TIMBERLANE with Spencer Tracy and Lana Turner.
On Warner Brothers dvd, likely re-issued with the passing of Janis Paige. Keep watch for blu ray releases.
A good cast does its best with "Her Kind of Man," a 1946 Warner Brothers film directed by Frederick DeCordova. The film stars Zachary Scott, Janis Paige, Dane Clark, and Faye Emerson.
Scott plays Steve Maddox, a gambler who eventually opens his own nightclub with a gambling establishment in the back. His sister Ruby (Emerson) is married to another club owner, Joe (George Tobias).
Steve is in love with the beautiful Georgia (Paige), a singer. Dane Clark plays a reporter who is in love with her, too, and would love to get her out of Steve's clutches.
Pretty much by the book. The big interest for me was seeing the young Paige. Growing up, she was always the glamorous older woman. My father loved her. She was a gorgeous young woman, too.
Though a good singer, her voice was that of a belter, so she's dubbed here for a more lyrical sound. I was disappointed the whole song "Body and Soul" wasn't performed. It's one of my favorites.
Okay.
Scott plays Steve Maddox, a gambler who eventually opens his own nightclub with a gambling establishment in the back. His sister Ruby (Emerson) is married to another club owner, Joe (George Tobias).
Steve is in love with the beautiful Georgia (Paige), a singer. Dane Clark plays a reporter who is in love with her, too, and would love to get her out of Steve's clutches.
Pretty much by the book. The big interest for me was seeing the young Paige. Growing up, she was always the glamorous older woman. My father loved her. She was a gorgeous young woman, too.
Though a good singer, her voice was that of a belter, so she's dubbed here for a more lyrical sound. I was disappointed the whole song "Body and Soul" wasn't performed. It's one of my favorites.
Okay.
"Her Kind of Man" is a second-tier A-picture. In other words, it's a feature film...but it stars a cast of folks who were Warner Brothers' lesser stars. Now this does NOT mean it's a bad or second-rate film....as I certainly enjoyed it.
Two men are in love with a professional singer, Georgia (Janis Paige). One is a slick gambler who is GENERALLY an honest guy (Zachary Scott). The other is a very decent reporter who is easy to like (Dane Clark). Inexplicably, she chooses the gambler and marries him, though considering how many enemies he's made, you know their marriage won't be a rousing success!
This is a nice noirish film. I enjoyed the very downbeat plot and the various sleazy characters. My only complaint, and it's a minor one, is that I found it very hard to believe the lady would choose the gambler and do all in with him...it just seemed a bit confusing. But, in real life, I guess things like this do happen from time to time. Well worth seeing.
Two men are in love with a professional singer, Georgia (Janis Paige). One is a slick gambler who is GENERALLY an honest guy (Zachary Scott). The other is a very decent reporter who is easy to like (Dane Clark). Inexplicably, she chooses the gambler and marries him, though considering how many enemies he's made, you know their marriage won't be a rousing success!
This is a nice noirish film. I enjoyed the very downbeat plot and the various sleazy characters. My only complaint, and it's a minor one, is that I found it very hard to believe the lady would choose the gambler and do all in with him...it just seemed a bit confusing. But, in real life, I guess things like this do happen from time to time. Well worth seeing.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOne of very few films that took advantage of leading lady Janis Paige's singing ability, which would be fully capitalized on several years later in "The Pajama Game" (1954) on Broadway. That said, the soprano section of her numbers in Her Kind of Man (1946) were likely dubbed by a studio singer.
- ConnexionsReferences Tugboat Annie (1933)
- Bandes originalesSomething to Remember You By
Music by Arthur Schwartz
Lyrics by Howard Dietz
Performed by Janis Paige (uncredited) and ensemble
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Su tipo de hombre
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 18min(78 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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