Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA bank teller attempts to clear his name and rebuild his career after he is wrongly accused of theft.A bank teller attempts to clear his name and rebuild his career after he is wrongly accused of theft.A bank teller attempts to clear his name and rebuild his career after he is wrongly accused of theft.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
John Close
- FBI Agent
- (non crédité)
Tom Coleman
- Bank Examiner
- (non crédité)
Hal K. Dawson
- Mr. Johnson - Bank Examiner
- (non crédité)
Sayre Dearing
- Bank Employee
- (non crédité)
George Eldredge
- Policeman
- (non crédité)
Charles Ferguson
- Bank Examiner
- (non crédité)
Sam Flint
- Sam - Bank Guard
- (non crédité)
Don C. Harvey
- Police Detective
- (non crédité)
- …
Avis à la une
Mike Donovan (Barry Sullivan) is a teller with a problem - a $49,900 shortage (the equivalent of $466,000 in today's money) in his cash for one day. Gus Slavin (Charles McGraw) from the bonding company is sent to investigate. Slavin is sure Mike stole the money, so he's arrested. The cops believe he had a female accomplice.
Everyone believes Mike except Slavin, so the bond company revokes his bond, and he is fired. Slavin also keeps him from keeping other jobs by telling the bosses they've hired a thief.
Slavin figures if he can keep Mike broke, he'll go for the money. Meanwhile Mike and his wife (Dorothy Malone) sell their house and move into a cheaper place.
Mike meanwhile gets a job as a cab driver, and the boss tells Slavin that until Mike is in prison, he's working there. It's in his cab that Mike hears a familiar voice and the wheels start turning. He and his wife devise a plan.
Charles McGraw is fantastic as a relentless investigator who doesn't have a nice bone in his body. He has the strongest role. The revelation is sweet '30s and '40s ingenue Mary Beth Hughes as a hardboiled blonde - she was terrific! Sullivan and Malone are sympathetic characters and play their parts well.
Great seeing all those old '50s cars.
Everyone believes Mike except Slavin, so the bond company revokes his bond, and he is fired. Slavin also keeps him from keeping other jobs by telling the bosses they've hired a thief.
Slavin figures if he can keep Mike broke, he'll go for the money. Meanwhile Mike and his wife (Dorothy Malone) sell their house and move into a cheaper place.
Mike meanwhile gets a job as a cab driver, and the boss tells Slavin that until Mike is in prison, he's working there. It's in his cab that Mike hears a familiar voice and the wheels start turning. He and his wife devise a plan.
Charles McGraw is fantastic as a relentless investigator who doesn't have a nice bone in his body. He has the strongest role. The revelation is sweet '30s and '40s ingenue Mary Beth Hughes as a hardboiled blonde - she was terrific! Sullivan and Malone are sympathetic characters and play their parts well.
Great seeing all those old '50s cars.
Very implausible plot. What bank is ever inspected by a team of auditors in this way who just suddenly turn up to count the money in each teller's drawer? And wouldn't the teller be casting a careful eye over what the "inspector" was doing, no matter how busy he was? Very odd.
A bank teller comes up $50,000 short and an investigator is determined to nail him for theft. The film is something of a mixed bag. The cinematography is pedestrian, the narration is hokey, and the ending is too neat to be satisfying. However, a story about someone being wrongfully accused always makes my blood boil in a way that holds my attention. Barry Sullivan is great as usual, but more interesting is Charles McGraw. McGraw usually plays a righteous character, but here he's such a relentless, contemptible bastard that you can't wait to see him get what's coming to him. The film could have paid off a little better in this respect, but it's an engaging performance. Dorothy Malone is unfortunately saddled with a dull good girl role that doesn't exploit her talents, but there is a small but delightful femme fatale part for Mary Beth Hughes. Ultimately the positives outweigh the negatives and it's a fun watch.
When a bank gets audited, one of the tellers, mike donovan, comes up massively short. The viewer sees exactly what happens, so all the suspense comes from seeing what will happen to him when it is discovered. If he had reported it right away, it wouldn't have looked quite so suspicious, but he waited until the next day to report it. It's mostly good. Lots of suspense as the coppers and bond company hound donovan, and keep him from working anywhere else. Can he ever prove his innocence? Directed by harry schuster, for allied. I had seen his marine raiders, which was pretty good! There are several later films with the same name, but only the 1981 version involves a bank robbery. The mistaken identity bit is quite similar to hitchcock's wrong man, from 1956. But of course, loophole came first! Lead barry sullivan had just made bad and the beautiful, and was busy in hollywood in the 1940s and 1950s. Even has two stars on the walk of fame!
This is a pretty interesting tale of an average Joe bank teller who is wrongly accused of masterminding a robbery at his bank. The story moves along, the acting is good, and the direction is adept. The movie really ignites flames when CHARLES MACGRAW, as a vengeful bail bondsman, and MARY BETH HUGHES, as a platinum blond femme fatale, are on screen. They both light up the screen with their world-wary, jaded, magnetism. I wish the film had been about them instead of rather dull BARRY SULLIVAN. And DOROTHY MALONE is wasted as the dutiful, loyal wife. In one particularly cringe-worthy scene, Sullivan's boss, Jim Starling (DAYTON LUMMIS), physically hold up his hand up to shush Malone when she tries to make a suggestion, and barks, "I'll handle this, Ruthie." That about sums up how Malone's character was written. Don Beddoe is great as the mild-mannered bank teller in over his head with Hughes, and Richard Reeves is a scene-stealer as Sullivan's new boss who has no time for MacGraw!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe house on Westward Beach Rd., Westward Beach, Malibu (CA), in the final scenes also appears in the final scenes of En quatrième vitesse (1955) and Qu'est-il arrivé à Baby Jane? (1962).
- GaffesWhen Donovan drives away from the telephone booth on the road to the Malibu beach-house the camera and cameraman are reflected in the window of his cab.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Couleur
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