Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDetective Landers (Robert Douglas), of the Los Angeles Homicide Bureau, suspects murder when the body of a transient ranch hand is found in a sleazy Los Angeles hotel. Unable to be assigned ... Tout lireDetective Landers (Robert Douglas), of the Los Angeles Homicide Bureau, suspects murder when the body of a transient ranch hand is found in a sleazy Los Angeles hotel. Unable to be assigned officially to the case , Landers takes off on "vacation", and goes to the swanky Glorietta... Tout lireDetective Landers (Robert Douglas), of the Los Angeles Homicide Bureau, suspects murder when the body of a transient ranch hand is found in a sleazy Los Angeles hotel. Unable to be assigned officially to the case , Landers takes off on "vacation", and goes to the swanky Glorietta Springs Hotel, a book of matches with that logo having been found at the scene of the mur... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Townswoman at Hearing
- (non crédité)
- Detective
- (non crédité)
- Police Photographer
- (non crédité)
- Telephone Man
- (non crédité)
- Medical Examiner
- (non crédité)
- Farm Official
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Despite a promising start, the movie descends into a lackluster crime drama with little to salvage it from the celluloid wastebasket. The plot's neither tight nor coherent, plodding along in uninspired fashion, with the usual bruising fist fights where no one gets marked up and a wounded hero who quickly recovers in true Hollywood fashion. In a better movie, these clichés could be overlooked, but here they simply add to the general contrivance. What surprises me is that this is a studio production (Warner Bros.). I could understand the slipshod results coming from a cheap indie outfit, but not from the gangster experts at Warners. Still, no film with that great tough-talking slattern Esther Howard (the landlady) can be a total loss. My suggestion-- catch the movie if the only alternative is a political speech.
Still, it's always a treat to run into Robert Alda. And the character actress playing the landlady is the real McCoy, as are the farm folk earlier in the movie.
So many noirs are lost and forgotten, I tip my hat -- fedora, of course -- to the major cable channel that unearthed this one! May it do so with many more.
Overall, this B level crime picture from Warner Bros. (not really a noir) is decidedly minor, but it does provide undemanding entertainment for fans of the genre. It goes far on the talents of Douglas, who usually played bad guys in bigger films, and the loveliness of Helen Westcott ("The Gunfighter"), the cigarette salesgirl who lends him a hand. The fight scene in the desert, late in the film, is a highlight. The supporting cast fares pretty well: Robert Alda ("Rhapsody in Blue") as bartender Andy, Monte Blue ("Key Largo") as the local sheriff, Warren Douglas ("The Inner Circle") as the "suicide", Richard Benedict ("Ace in the Hole") and John Harmon ("King of the Underworld") as thugs, James Flavin ("King Kong") as Boylan, and especially Esther Howard ("Murder, My Sweet"), with whom Douglas has good chemistry, as the landlady.
Overall, this will show lovers of vintage B crime movies a pretty good time, even if the story / mystery is not that great. At least, like so many pictures of this kind from this era, it gets to the point pretty succinctly, not going on any longer than it has to.
Six out of 10.
One police detective (Robert Douglas) thinks there's something fishy and, going by a book of matches and a saccharin tablet, takes a leave of absence to pursue his investigation to a desert spa, where the bartender (Robert Alda) suffers from diabetes. A clue! The plot involves an underground wire used by a nationwide gambling syndicate. But Douglas, operating on his own, finds that his cover is burned and his life is in danger....
Homicide's worst misstep is in the casting of its lead. The ostentatiously British Douglas (40 at the time and looking comfortably middle-aged) is passed off as a Canadian to somehow explain his working for the LAPD. A better explanation would be why they hired a detective who's thick as a brick. The most entertaining part of the movie is listening to him try to sling American slang in his brittle B.B.C. accent; it's like watching a movie with subtitles.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen the cops are at the suicide/murder scene in the flop house, James Flavin says to Robert Douglas: " Junior, you're making camels out of cloud formations." This is a reference to Shakespeare's Hamlet, Act 3, scene 2.
- GaffesLt. Landers stumbles into the hotel soaking wet and passes out. The next scene he is being treated by a doctor in his room - same suit bone dry.
- Citations
Police Lt. Michael Landers: You know, you're cute.
Jo Ann Rice: You should see my baby pictures.
- ConnexionsReferences Romance à Rio (1948)
- Bandes originalesWith a Song in My Heart
(uncredited)
Music by Richard Rodgers
Introduced in the musical "Spring Is Here" (1929)
Played as background music in the first restaurant scene
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 227 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 17min(77 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1