À la demande des propriétaires d'usines et des dirigeants syndicaux, un ancien détenu coriace s'infiltre dans un gang d'usuriers qui s'attaquent à des ouvriers d'usine désespérés financièrem... Tout lireÀ la demande des propriétaires d'usines et des dirigeants syndicaux, un ancien détenu coriace s'infiltre dans un gang d'usuriers qui s'attaquent à des ouvriers d'usine désespérés financièrement.À la demande des propriétaires d'usines et des dirigeants syndicaux, un ancien détenu coriace s'infiltre dans un gang d'usuriers qui s'attaquent à des ouvriers d'usine désespérés financièrement.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Walter Kerr
- (as Larry Dobkin)
- Steve Casmer
- (non crédité)
- Hood
- (non crédité)
- Nagging Wife
- (non crédité)
- Netta Casmer
- (non crédité)
- Police Officer
- (non crédité)
- Borrower
- (non crédité)
- Plant Guard
- (non crédité)
- Mr. Howell
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Although LOAN SHARK has a somewhat weak script, the film is a fast paced, well acted, and efficient gangster thriller. Dorthy Hart, who played Jane to Lex Barkers Tarzan the same year as this film, looks lovely. Overall, LOAN SHARK is recommend for fans of George Raft and post war gangster movies.
Here, at 57, Plays an Ex-Con, Ex-Boxer, that is a Hit with the Ladies and Hits His Share of Hoods.
He's Not Only an Ex-Pug, He's Proficient in Judo too.
A B-Movie that Visually has some Unexpected Style and Flourishes.
Grounded in a Tire-Factory with Plenty of Machinery and Production Techniques Inside the Plant.
A Good Cast with Paul Stewart and Dorthy Hart and some Familiar TV and B-Movie Faces.
It's a Fast-Paced with a Goodly Amount of Contrivances as Raft Bullies HIs Way into the "Trust" of the Mob.
Overall, a Better than Average Late-Life Raft Vehicle and Early-Fifties Near Noir.
Worth a Watch.
Owner Charles Meredith has a special job in mind for Raft, investigating and finding out who's behind a group of loan sharks who have been putting many of his employees in their debt. Raft doesn't want this kind of work, but changes his mind when his brother-in-law Bill Phipps is killed.
But unfortunately this involves Raft going undercover and working for the gang until he can find out who the real boss is. He makes a lot of enemies, including Westcott and Hart until the job is done.
The film was done for B picture studio Lippert films and possibly at a major studio it would have had a lot of the plot holes filled. The writing could have used some improvement, but action goes along at a nice pace and Raft is perfectly cast in the hero part. During this time Raft was doing most of his work in B films and some of them are not bad at all. Loan Shark is one of them.
Seems Joe (Raft) is just out of prison and wants to go straight, but his sister's husband has been killed by loan sharks whose ruinous effect on working people he soon learns about. So he decides to to expose the criminal organization by going undercover and using his savvy tough-guy skills to disrupt their operation. Those scenes of him undercover in an actual tire factory are riveting and heighten the movie's general sense of menace, almost like a mechanical version of hell. On the other hand, too bad the producers used empty studio sets for supposed city streets that disrupt that general sense of realism. Also, the shootout could use less clumsy staging. Nonetheless, be sure to catch the naughty innuendo between Vince (Hoyt) and his cheap blonde mistress (Dean) - yeah, censorship's deadening 20-year grip is loosening.
Anyway, the flick's got a solid core of drama and suspense that also rewards fans of the inimitable George Raft, so don't pass it up.
In addition to Raft you have here a fine supporting cast including one of the best John Hoyt crime performances of his long distinguished career.
Factories, lunch boxes and cheap hoods. Really evokes the underside of the 1950's and moves along briskly. Surprisingly entertaining.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJoe says he takes home, after taxes, $58 per week. That would equate to about $570 per week in 2020.
- GaffesDespite using a six-shot revolver, one of the characters in the final reel fires eleven shots without reloading.
- Citations
Lou Donelli: [threatening to dump Gargen's corpse in the laundry] I been thinking' about this boiler gag a long time - you gonna be the cleanest stiff in town.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Dirty Money: Payday (2018)
- Bandes originalesPeru
by Victor Young and Edward Heyman
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 250 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 20 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1