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Violences à Park Row

Titre original : Park Row
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 23min
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
2,1 k
MA NOTE
Gene Evans and Mary Welch in Violences à Park Row (1952)
Regarder Park Row Official Trailer
Lire trailer2:02
1 Video
9 photos
DrameThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Ha... Tout lireThe Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Hackett decides to eliminate the competition.The Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Hackett decides to eliminate the competition.

  • Réalisation
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Scénario
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Casting principal
    • Gene Evans
    • Mary Welch
    • Tina Pine
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,2/10
    2,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Scénario
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Casting principal
      • Gene Evans
      • Mary Welch
      • Tina Pine
    • 35avis d'utilisateurs
    • 35avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Park Row Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Park Row Official Trailer

    Photos8

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Gene Evans
    Gene Evans
    • Phineas Mitchell
    Mary Welch
    Mary Welch
    • Charity Hackett
    Tina Pine
    • Jenny O'Rourke
    • (as Tina Rome)
    George O'Hanlon
    George O'Hanlon
    • Steve Brodie
    J.M. Kerrigan
    J.M. Kerrigan
    • Dan O'Rourke
    Forrest Taylor
    Forrest Taylor
    • Charles A. Leach
    Don Orlando
    • Mr. Angelo
    Neyle Morrow
    Neyle Morrow
    • Thomas Guest
    Dick Elliott
    Dick Elliott
    • Jeff Hudson
    Stuart Randall
    Stuart Randall
    • Mr. Spiro
    Dee Pollock
    Dee Pollock
    • Rusty
    Hal K. Dawson
    • Mr. Wiley
    Bela Kovacs
    • Ottmar Mergenthaler
    Herbert Heyes
    Herbert Heyes
    • Josiah Davenport
    Arthur Berkeley
    • Barfly
    • (non crédité)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Barfly
    • (non crédité)
    Robert Carson
    Robert Carson
    • Irate Liberty Fund Contributor
    • (non crédité)
    Spencer Chan
    Spencer Chan
    • Barfly
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Scénario
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs35

    7,22.1K
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    Avis à la une

    cereal_11

    An overlooked classic

    One of my favorites from Samuel Fuller; a frenzied, kinetic melodrama about journalism in the late 1800's. Although the film is laughably unrealistic at times in it's portrayal of two major newspapers competing for more readers, this is no hindrance to one's enjoyment of the film.

    Never did Fuller create a film of such sheer energy and nostalgia. The film's tracking shots and frenetically-edited montages seem to get the most attention, but there are also some great monologues and magnificent performances, particularly from Mary Welch as the head of the "evil" newspaper, The Star, and Gene Evans as the leader of their opposing newspaper, The Globe.

    The film has it's moments of campiness, but overall it's one of cinema's overlooked classics.
    8bobt145

    Park Row Gets the Fuller Brush

    Sam Fuller was a newspaperman in his younger days. This is his love letter to his earlier craft, with a full dose of Fuller filmmaking prowess.

    I doubt that Fuller was ever well-budgeted. He made do, and boy did he.

    The office of the paper is a tight web of cubicles (that are torn down at one point) that cast dark shadows and patches of light. Fuller allows his camera to capture repeated black and white shadow portraits of the characters, their emotion forming the full frame of a shot.

    At other points, the camera tours the tiny den as characters move through it as if it were dancing a marvelous ballet Outside is a square, statues of Benjamin Franklin and Horace Greeley and a narrow street allegedly populated by newspapers.

    This is all Fuller has to work with, but he makes it work so that even though your subconscious is saying, well, that doesn't look quite realistic, your movie viewing buys in and ignores the tells, absorbing the essence of the scene. Terrific film craft, more than just cinematography.

    Can't argue the storyline is up to the filmmaking, but there are touches that Fuller sprinkles throughout that are marvelous.

    The newly found paper buys its paper from the butcher. On the floor is a box of unsorted type. It took me back to junior high school in upstate New York, where for a marking period, we had print shop and learned to sort our type and grab it to compose a line in a hand-held device.

    There's Otto Morgenthaler, a character borrowed from history, who actually did invent the linotype machine and first use it at the New York Tribune, which is referred to as a competing paper in the film.

    The statue of Benjamin Franklin is still there, at the end of Park Row. At one time, the street held The New York World in the Pulitzer Building, Greeley's New York Tribune, The New York Times at #41, the Mail and Express, the Recorder, the Morning Advertiser, and the only other survivor, The Daily News at #25.

    In the story, set in 1880s, AP is referred to. The concentration of papers eventually led to the Associated Press, located on Park Row, but that wasn't until 1900.

    In the next decade, the landscape was dramatically altered with the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. It not only cast its shadow over Park Row, but also caused some of its buildings to be demolished for ramp space to the bridge.

    Why were the newspapers all there? Strangely, it's never mentioned in the film. Park Row is right around the corner from City Hall, the NYC Police Headquarters and the financial district. That's a pretty good nexus for news.

    This one doesn't pop up very often. If you find it, watch and enjoy.

    (My ratings are usually to the next highest star. In this case, about 7.5)
    6Irene212

    "You're in love with a dead woman, my boy."

    Sage old reporter Josiah Davenport says this to crusading editor Phineas Mitchell, but writer/director Sam Fuller might have been speaking to himself when he wrote the line. He is clearly pining for the long-dead old days of newspapers in New York-- and with good reason, check http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/nysnp/history.htm for a brief and amazing history.

    The IMDb reviewer, st-shot, who called this movie a "valentine" hit the mark. This valentine has a fair amount going for it, but it's more flawed than faithful. A newspaperman himself (ca. 1930), Fuller prided himself on the historical accuracy of "Park Row" and there is truth behind, if not in, many of the people and events alluded to in the screenplay: The base of the Statue of Liberty, which was unveiled in 1886 when the movie takes place, was indeed partly paid for by a newspaper campaign (Joseph Pulitzer's "New York World"). A Bowery bookie named Steve Brodie did claim to have jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge that same year, and survived to both acclaim and controversy. Linotype was indeed invented by German immigrant Ottmar Mergenthaler in 1886, but it wasn't for a Park Row newspaper, it was for lawyers wanting a way to get legal papers printed faster. The young political cartoonist called "Thomas Guest" is obviously a thinly veiled Thomas Nast, who would have been in his mid-40s and very famous by 1886.

    Much of that cinematic license can be forgiven, because the problem isn't the lack of historical accuracy; it's Fuller's proud claim that it WAS accurate. Perhaps he was referring to the typesetting and printing processes he shows in such loving detail-- which certainly are fun and fascinating to see.

    Then there's the plot, another big problem. Melodrama was Fuller's Achilles' heel (see THE NAKED KISS for Fuller at his lawless heights) and he pours it on rather thickly here-- injured towheaded kid, heroic journalists, rival editor and publisher as the Clark Kent & Lois Lane of 1886. But, while the movie is more frenetic than energetic, there's enough camera movement and odd angles to establish this firmly as a Fuller film, and therefore worth seeing. Once.
    8martylee13045burlsink342

    A poor mans "Citizen Kane"?...low budget homage to early days of american journalism is full of the same electrically vital love of cinemacraft...and is even more honest about the world of new

    Sam Fuller's brilliant direction combines a tatty set, low watt cast, and potentially preachy and pedantic script into a small masterpiece...seemingly with the sheer electric passion of his film sense. Superb use of camera takes ordinary talking head shots and makes them off kilter peeks into the clash of opposing souls. The passion filled but low key love/hate/love interplay between opposing editors played by Gene Evans and Mary Welch is one of the most adult and genuine dark romances in cinema history (how sad that this was only major appearance for Welch...who died in 1958). Fuller's lauded tracking shots...including some which seem to have the camera being tossed about like a football in an effort to keep up with the action..are very much in evidence...but film is most striking for it's effortless ability to capture the quiet passion and integrity of one mans devotion to the craft of journalism...a devotion so strong that great love for an unscrupulous competitor was no obstacle...a devotion so great that his insight and passion helped transform the press into the behemoth it is today. Any film that can turn the creation of linotype into a miracle of discovery is a wonder. Check out this 83 minute masterwork...rediscover how alive film can be.
    rick_7

    Fuller's labour of love - repetitious, but sometimes dynamic

    Park Row (Samuel Fuller, 1952) – Maverick director and former tabloid hack Sam Fuller made 22 features. This 1952 labour of love remained his favourite: a hymn to the founders of modern American journalism that begins with a long, sentimental speech about the titans of Park Row (America's Fleet Street) and features a great action sequence in which crusading editor Gene Evans repeatedly dashes a low-level gangster's head against a statue of Benjamin Franklin. Nice.

    Our story proper begins in that most Fuller-ish of places, a saloon. There, a bunch of hacks on New York's bestselling daily, The Star, spends their evenings swilling booze and exchanging dreams and bitter bon mots. When idealistic reporter Gene Evans takes a break from the bar to nail an epitaph to the grave of an executed man that reads 'Murdered by The Star' – an acerbic bolt of pure fury from Fuller that's among the neatest things he ever did – the 'paper's owner (Mary Welch) marches in, sacking him and his chums on the spot.

    So Evans starts up the 'paper he's always dreamt of – The Globe – and cheery, impressionable young buck George O'Hanlon throws himself off the Brooklyn Bridge for a laugh, giving him a first-rate first splash. But Welch doesn't take such competition lying down, especially not from a man she quite fancies, and so begins a circulation war that spills over into resentment, hatred and good old-fashioned violence.

    As you would expect, Fuller has a real feel for the material, filling his script with the usual insider terminology and slang. Leaving just enough in his account for some vodka and cigars, the writer-director-producer spent the rest of his savings – some $200,000 accrued making hit war films – on this pet project. Much of the cash went on a fastidiously complete recreation of the Park Row of his memory, including a multitude of four-storey buildings. The film's designers queried his logic, saying the tops of the structures would never be seen on camera. Fuller said he didn't care: "I had to see it all. I had to know everything was there, exact in every detail." The sets are constructed in an ingenious way that allows Fuller's camera to wind his way through the nooks and crannies of the offices, the intensity of the shooting schedule belied by the wealth of innovation behind the camera. The director's crab dolly, a wheeled platform that allowed the camera to move in any direction, aids the spectacular direction, getting us up close and personal during Evans' periodic stomps up and down the titular street, generally looking for someone to thump.

    Park Row is a punchy, sometimes dynamic blend of heartfelt sentiment and acerbic cynicism that could only have come from one director. Whilst it occasionally appears over-earnest or self-congratulatory, and has too much repetition across its 80 minutes, it's flavourful and immersive, with a no-name cast that ideally suits its ink-stained universe.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Thriller

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Samuel Fuller put up his own money to make the movie and lost it all.
    • Gaffes
      Approximately 20 minutes into the film, there's a wall calendar showing the date as "1886 June 15 Monday." In 1886 June 15 was a Tuesday.
    • Citations

      Phineas Mitchell: The press is good or evil according to the character of those who direct it.

    • Crédits fous
      Instead of "The End", the picture ends with "Thirty"; newspaper jargon for "that's all. There ain't no more!"
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Typewriter, the Rifle & the Movie Camera (1996)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Park Row?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 février 1971 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Park Row
    • Lieux de tournage
      • General Service Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Samuel Fuller Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 200 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 23min(83 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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