Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBrass is assigned to uncovering a counterfeiting ring that has stolen bona fide treasury plates and is converting $1 bills to $100 bills through a Mexican casino.Brass is assigned to uncovering a counterfeiting ring that has stolen bona fide treasury plates and is converting $1 bills to $100 bills through a Mexican casino.Brass is assigned to uncovering a counterfeiting ring that has stolen bona fide treasury plates and is converting $1 bills to $100 bills through a Mexican casino.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Butch
- (as Stevan Darrell)
- First Detective on Train
- (non crédité)
- Townsman
- (non crédité)
- Mexican Police Chief
- (non crédité)
- Policeman
- (non crédité)
- Border Police Officer
- (non crédité)
- Second Detective on Train
- (non crédité)
- Mexican Soldier Playing Strip Poker
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Besides that, it's plain and simple lousy. Reagan plays a Secret Service agent who is tasked to find a money scam in Mexico. Someone has stolen official treasury plates and is printing fake currency. Do you think the good guys will capture the bad guys before it's too late? What about inflation? Well, that's not really discussed. This movie is only an hour long, so there's not much time for details. It's a C-picture, showing how the USA always has good guys running around capturing bad guys, so you'd better not think about stealing from us! Folks, stick with Kings Row.
I suggest anyone interested in the background of this film read the IMDb trivia section - it's very good.
People are constantly demeaning Ronald Reagan's acting - at least they have since he went into politics. His range wasn't great, but he had a certain charm in lightweight supporting roles, and he always looked good on a horse.
Apparently this was part of a B serial, the first film being Secret Service of the Air, which I also haven't seen. And may skip.
Reagan plays Brass Bancroft, who is assigned to investigate and break up a counterfeit ring operating out of Mexico. Eddie Foy Jr. Is on hand for some humor, and he actually is quite good, as are Rosella Townes and Moroni Olson.
I don't know if it's true, but a re-edit got this film into some sort of shape. I admit I didn't think it was terrible. I've seen probably 6000 films, and I can assure you I've seen much worse. I think a big deal is made about how bad it is because Reagan is in it.
Don't concentrate on the details too much, and you may find it okay. By the way, it was proven to Reagan that a book can stop a bullet.
It's a good thing that Reagan went on to better parts in his film career because stuff like this could have sunk him. For reasons that the plot does not explain Reagan and sidekick Eddie Foy, Jr. are instructed not to notify the Mexican officials. That single fact is responsible for nearly all of Reagan's problems as he's accused of the murder of John Gallaudet, the original agent on the case. Reagan spends the entire film avoiding the police as well as trying to track down the ring.
Rising somewhat above this drivel is Moroni Olsen playing a padre who's definitely not what he seems. He overacts outrageously because he knows that this isn't Citizen Kane he's doing.
I'm not sure devoted fans of the Gipper could sit through this.
Actually, it resembles a cliffhanger that could have been used as a serial for Saturday afternoon programming in the kind of serial chapters that were used in the '30s and '40s to keep the kids in their seats. Reagan keeps finding himself and Townes in precarious situations that they have to use a little ingenuity to get out of, always escaping in time to keep one step ahead of villainous MORONI OLSEN.
Not bad at all, as these crime capers go, with Reagan and Townes both giving earnest performances in what feels like a Republic serial but is actually a Warner Bros. B-film with a brief running time.
Interesting mainly for a glimpse of early Reagan as action hero in a programmer.
Reagan once again plays the character "Brass Bancroft", though oddly, he isn't a pilot in this film nor does it have much to do with the last one--especially in tempo. Instead of an action-adventure film, this film lacks depth and has so many logical errors that it looks like a bad movie serial (such as SPY SMASHER) and condenses it all into one very brief movie. Again and again, characters defy logic and the plot is amazingly banal because the emphasis is on fist fights and guns like a bad B-Western--making Reagan seem to have the charisma of a tomato. Some examples of how bad it was were the plane Reagan rode on at the beginning of the film changed from a Lockheed airliner to a Douglas DC-3 (taking off as one and landing as the other), a car that whipped around corners on a dirt rode that sounded exactly like one on asphalt and Reagan almost getting killed again and again by the Mexican police yet all he had to do was show him his i.d. and let them know he was a US Secret Service agent!! The bottom line is that this is a super-bad B-picture that is bad enough it should be considered a "C-picture"--it's THAT bad. Warner Brothers should have been ashamed of themselves.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn interviews during his presidency, Ronald Reagan called this movie, "the worst picture I ever made" and also said, "never has an egg of such dimensions been laid". He recalled that a movie usher who had seen the film once told him, "You should be ashamed." However, the film did have one positive effect for Reagan. After seeing the movie, a young man named Jerry Parr was inspired to enter the Secret Service. On March 30, 1981, Parr was the agent who quickly pushed Ronald Reagan into his limousine when John W. Hinckley Jr. fired six shots at the President outside the Washington D.C. Hilton. Parr's quick reaction, and his decision to take the wounded Reagan immediately to George Washington University Hospital, were credited with saving the President's life.
- GaffesDuring the opening scene when Eddie Foy Jr. asks Reagan if he can go with him on the assignment, his hands are down by his sides in the closeup. but in the supposedly matching medium shot they are on his hips.
- Citations
Gabby: What assignment did you get?
Lt. 'Brass' Bancroft: The Treasury stick-up.
Gabby: Right down my alley. When do we leave?
Lt. 'Brass' Bancroft: Well, you'll have to include yourself out this trip, Gabby. Well, you couldn't go anyway. Aren't you guarding the President?
Gabby: Nah. He went fishin' again. Besides you need a man like me to look after yuh.
Lt. 'Brass' Bancroft: Who's gonna look after you?
Gabby: [Initially laughs but quickly realizes this is no compliment and he frowns] Whatta yuh mean?
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Reagan Show (2017)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El fraile impostor
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée58 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1