Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen a mob boss sends gambler Harry Lane to Vegas to deliver 20K to a contact, Harry gambles the money away and must somehow recover it before getting into trouble with his employer.When a mob boss sends gambler Harry Lane to Vegas to deliver 20K to a contact, Harry gambles the money away and must somehow recover it before getting into trouble with his employer.When a mob boss sends gambler Harry Lane to Vegas to deliver 20K to a contact, Harry gambles the money away and must somehow recover it before getting into trouble with his employer.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Earle S. Dewey
- Dr. Winters
- (as Earl Dewey)
Wheaton Chambers
- Conductor
- (non crédité)
Jack Cheatham
- Cop
- (non crédité)
Gordon B. Clarke
- Desk Clerk at Dalton
- (non crédité)
Carl Cohen
- Craps Cashier
- (non crédité)
Eddie Coke
- Desk Clerk at Flamingo
- (non crédité)
Gino Corrado
- Walter - Bellhop
- (non crédité)
Rex Downing
- Bellhop
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
10www1125
After watching THE, I went straight to this movie, and man I was not disappointed. This movie has a bit of a mix of everything you could want. Comedy, drama, horror, everything is perfect. I wont spoil anything regarding the title character, but wow! That's a force to be reckoned with. See this movie!
Don Castle gets out of prison and goes back to work for boss gambler Edward Keane. He's sent to Las Vegas to pay off a high roller, but gets taken by a con man, kills the con man, imitates the con man and hooks up with the con man's widow, Virginia Christine. At that point, earlier plot lines are abandoned by fiat.
Eugene Forde's last movie is a ramshackle affair that has some nice performances, but little in the way of a plot that makes much sense. Jeff Chandler and Mary Gordon are in it, although they don't have any scenes together. It's one of those movies where the protagonists identify a problem, prepare to fight it, take a hearty swing at it, only to find there's is no problem. In the end, it's a bore.
Eugene Forde's last movie is a ramshackle affair that has some nice performances, but little in the way of a plot that makes much sense. Jeff Chandler and Mary Gordon are in it, although they don't have any scenes together. It's one of those movies where the protagonists identify a problem, prepare to fight it, take a hearty swing at it, only to find there's is no problem. In the end, it's a bore.
From 1947, the Invisible Wall is a B movie starring Don Castle, Virginia Christine, and Richard Gaines.
Don Castle plays Harry Lane, fresh from the service, who goes back to work for Marty Floyd (Edward Keane), a gambler. He has a job for Harry, but he warns him that this time, if he wants to gamble, he has to use his own money, and not payoff money. Harry promises he will stick to that, and is given $20,000 to deliver to a woman flying into Las Vegas shortly. I mean, why not give Dracula the keys to a blood bank while you're at it.
In Vegas, Harry meets Richard Ellsworth (Richard Gaines) who is gambling at roulette using a system. He keeps winning, and Harry joins him, winning as well. The next day, Harry starts losing. It's time for him to tap into the $20,000 - which he does.
At Ellsworth's house, Harry finds a telegram about a copper mine getting ready to strike and wants in on it. Ellsworth hesitates, but brings him in for $5,000.
Later on, an associate of his boss Floyd (Jeff Chandler) happens to be in Vegas and mentions that Ellsworth is a well-known con man. Desperate to get the $5,000 back. Ellsworth doesn't have it - he's sent it to himself via registered mail to a hotel in Colorado. During a fight with Harry, Ellsworth hits his head on brick and is dead.
Impersonating Ellsworth, Harry heads to Colorado. There he meets a woman, Mildred (Virginia Christine), an associate of Ellsworth's. When Harry talks to Ellsworth's partner on the phone, the partner knows he isn't talking to Ellsworth. Harry and Mildred wind up on the run.
The story is told in flashback by Harry himself as he sits in a police station.
There's a twist at the end, and it's not very believable.
Nothing special, but Virginia Christine was the Folger's coffee lady and did a lot of TV when we boomers were growing up. Don Castle was new to me - he apparently was contracted by a studio because of his resemblance to Clark Gable. Stardom eluded him, however, and he wound up producing for Jack Wrather of the "Lassie" TV show. He overdosed on pills at the age of 47, suffering from depression.
Don Castle plays Harry Lane, fresh from the service, who goes back to work for Marty Floyd (Edward Keane), a gambler. He has a job for Harry, but he warns him that this time, if he wants to gamble, he has to use his own money, and not payoff money. Harry promises he will stick to that, and is given $20,000 to deliver to a woman flying into Las Vegas shortly. I mean, why not give Dracula the keys to a blood bank while you're at it.
In Vegas, Harry meets Richard Ellsworth (Richard Gaines) who is gambling at roulette using a system. He keeps winning, and Harry joins him, winning as well. The next day, Harry starts losing. It's time for him to tap into the $20,000 - which he does.
At Ellsworth's house, Harry finds a telegram about a copper mine getting ready to strike and wants in on it. Ellsworth hesitates, but brings him in for $5,000.
Later on, an associate of his boss Floyd (Jeff Chandler) happens to be in Vegas and mentions that Ellsworth is a well-known con man. Desperate to get the $5,000 back. Ellsworth doesn't have it - he's sent it to himself via registered mail to a hotel in Colorado. During a fight with Harry, Ellsworth hits his head on brick and is dead.
Impersonating Ellsworth, Harry heads to Colorado. There he meets a woman, Mildred (Virginia Christine), an associate of Ellsworth's. When Harry talks to Ellsworth's partner on the phone, the partner knows he isn't talking to Ellsworth. Harry and Mildred wind up on the run.
The story is told in flashback by Harry himself as he sits in a police station.
There's a twist at the end, and it's not very believable.
Nothing special, but Virginia Christine was the Folger's coffee lady and did a lot of TV when we boomers were growing up. Don Castle was new to me - he apparently was contracted by a studio because of his resemblance to Clark Gable. Stardom eluded him, however, and he wound up producing for Jack Wrather of the "Lassie" TV show. He overdosed on pills at the age of 47, suffering from depression.
Don Castle, one of those slightly decent people earning his money in a slightly shady racket, comes up against an INVISIBLE WALL keeping him from happiness and success because he can't conquer a gambling problem. Can ingénue Virginia Christine, with the slightly shady past and the prior unfortunate marriage, save him from the dark fate that awaits most noir heroes?
This one is one a watcher really would like to like better -- given the location shooting at the Flamingo in Las Vegas -- but this one really starts off dull and predictable -- and only starts dishing out the wacky plot twists in the second half. Some of the twists are good ones -- but the ones at the very end suggest the lesser Cornell Woolrich stories with happy endings. You just don't buy the elaborate way the movie gets its lead out of the mess he's in.
Leads are OK. Direction is straightforward. It's a decent B, no worse than many similar movies with better reputations. But, unless you want to see film of Bugsy Siegel's famous casino just after its opening, there is no reason to seek this one out.
This one is one a watcher really would like to like better -- given the location shooting at the Flamingo in Las Vegas -- but this one really starts off dull and predictable -- and only starts dishing out the wacky plot twists in the second half. Some of the twists are good ones -- but the ones at the very end suggest the lesser Cornell Woolrich stories with happy endings. You just don't buy the elaborate way the movie gets its lead out of the mess he's in.
Leads are OK. Direction is straightforward. It's a decent B, no worse than many similar movies with better reputations. But, unless you want to see film of Bugsy Siegel's famous casino just after its opening, there is no reason to seek this one out.
IMO, a noir is a dark tale of desperate character with a tragic ending and a moral.
I gave it a 7 as it was good, but, it had a major flaw.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFinal film of veteran "B" director Eugene Forde.
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Невидимая стена
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 12 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant