Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn Houston, a man working as an oil driller comes up with a scheme for stealing millions of dollars worth of oil from the fields. He insinuates himself with a local mobster in order to get f... Tout lireIn Houston, a man working as an oil driller comes up with a scheme for stealing millions of dollars worth of oil from the fields. He insinuates himself with a local mobster in order to get financing for his scheme.In Houston, a man working as an oil driller comes up with a scheme for stealing millions of dollars worth of oil from the fields. He insinuates himself with a local mobster in order to get financing for his scheme.
- Willie Lucas
- (as Jack V. Littlefield)
- Clara Phelan
- (non crédité)
- Police Inspector Gregg
- (non crédité)
- Don Stokes
- (non crédité)
- Police Detective Talbot
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
***** The Houston Story (2/56) William Castle ~ Gene Barry, Barbara Hale, Edward Arnold
Barry wants to slant or side drill some existing oil fields. You might remember in the Paul Newman film The Drowning Pool, oil millionaire Murray Hamilton makes some illusions to slant drilling. Basically it's drilling into an existing pool on an angle and pumping out hat you need.
The big surprise her is Barbara Hale best known as Della Street on the Perry Mason series. She's one sultry chanteuse and she's good. But they should gave dubbed her singing of Put The Blame On Mame as they did for Rita Hayworth. Hale just is not a good singer.
Edward Arnold is a mid level hood in the Houston organized crime scene and Paul Richards as usual does a fine job as a torpedo for hire.
As for Barry he does good for a while, but in the end he's batting way out of his league.
Lee J. Cobb was originally planned to play the lead role, but I really can't imagine him in this role. Barry ('Naked Alibi') does a great job and also has nice chemistry with Hale ('The Clay Pigeon'), who is an almost unrecognizable platinum blonde femme fatale here. The rest of the cast are good, but it's Barry and Hale who excel here. Hale even pulls off a convincing 'Put The Blame On Mame', altho she's no Rita Hayworth.
A bit of a derivative story (and title), but who cares when it's executed this well. This was director William Castle's last noir ('Johnny Stool Pigeon', 'New Orleans Uncensored') and he keeps things interesting, aided by some nice cinematography by Henry Freulich ('Chicago Syndicate', 'The Miami Story'). I was more than pleasantly surprised by this late noir. Recommended! 8/10
Gene Barry plays Frank Duncan, an oil worker who has dreams of being a big man. So he comes up with a scheme to do some slant drilling (in essence, drilling sideways instead of down) and tapping into other folks' oil claims. But he lacks the money to do this and makes a pitch to some guys in organized crime. After a short time, it becomes very apparent that Frank is pretty nutty as he wants to scheme to replace the hoods running this local deal. And, for a while it looks like he'll succeed....at first!
This is a good, tough film. I enjoyed the dialog, the femme fatale and the story idea. But it also felt very rushed....as Frank goes from a nobody to a huge man too quickly and it just felt a bit ridiculous...though STILL a very good film...especially for noir fans.
Wildcatter Gene Barry has ambitions that go beyond collecting his paycheck for working on the oil rigs. He dreams up a scheme for siphoning off oil from the big pipelines and selling it to fly-by-night distributors or foreign interests. He approaches Edward Arnold, local boss of a sinister "combine" based in St. Louis, who goes for the plan (meanwhile planning to dispose of Barry once the oil and the money start flowing). It turns out Barry is a bit smarter and more ruthless than he seemed; forty years later, he would have been a vice-president (at least) of Enron.
Along with his slithering around to evade the various minions of the complicated syndicate, he finds romantic complications as well. On the right shoulder sits good-gal Jeanne Cooper, waitress in an eatery called The Derrick. But on the left side is Temptation, in the person of Barbara Hale. Identified almost entirely with her television role as Perry Mason's loyal and efficient Girl Friday Della Street, Hale displays an unsuspected side to her talents. Gussied up in strapless gowns and a platinum "Italian" crop, she plays a shantoozie kept by a racketeer. Of course, she falls for Barry (well, sort of) and he for her (again, sort of). She's also the most memorable thing in this watchable but confusing and derivative film.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesLee J. Cobb was to star. After production had already begun in May 1955, he had a heart attack and was not able to film. Producer Sam Katzman wanted to keep going, and so director William Castle played Cobb's character in long-shots. After it was sure Cobb couldn't return, Gene Barry replaced him. In Castle's autobiography, he states footage of himself and Cobb, albeit unrecognizable, remains in the picture.
- GaffesDuncan was supposed to meet Zoe at the Justice Building Observatory at 10:30. The sign on the door said it closed at 10:00, but he walked right in.
- Citations
Zoe Crane: You're making me use muscles I don't even know I had.
Frank Duncan: Did you ever see yourself while you were singing? Any muscles you don't use, you haven't got.
Zoe Crane: That's why women were born.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Spine Tingler! The William Castle Story (2007)
- Bandes originalesPut the Blame on Mame
Written by Allan Roberts and Doris Fisher
(c) 1946
Originally written for the movie Gilda (1946)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Houston Story
- Lieux de tournage
- Hermann Park/Mecom Fountain, Houston, Texas, États-Unis(Opening Scene)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 19 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1