Ajouter une intrigue dans votre languePrison farm escapee Gerard Dennis teams up with Peggy for robberies. After being betrayed and beaten, he meets nurse Martha. Despite her hopes, he continues stealing and flees to LA, where h... Tout lirePrison farm escapee Gerard Dennis teams up with Peggy for robberies. After being betrayed and beaten, he meets nurse Martha. Despite her hopes, he continues stealing and flees to LA, where he targets a wealthy divorcee's social circle.Prison farm escapee Gerard Dennis teams up with Peggy for robberies. After being betrayed and beaten, he meets nurse Martha. Despite her hopes, he continues stealing and flees to LA, where he targets a wealthy divorcee's social circle.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Alix Talton
- Brenda Hall
- (as Alice Talton)
Jessie Arnold
- Undetermined Role
- (non crédité)
Lois Austin
- Mrs. Workman
- (non crédité)
Claudia Barrett
- Marian Blaine
- (non crédité)
Rodney Bell
- Man in Elevator
- (non crédité)
Tillie Born
- Maid
- (non crédité)
Margaret Brayton
- Undetermined Role
- (non crédité)
Charles Cane
- Mr. Tom Creel
- (non crédité)
Geraldine Carr
- Mrs. Creel
- (non crédité)
Russ Clark
- Guard
- (non crédité)
Leo Cleary
- Haley
- (non crédité)
Fred Coby
- Tom Colt - Convict
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Watching The Great Jewel Robber I have to wonder why an A list actor like James
Cagney or Humphrey Bogart didn't grab on to this story. David Brian did a great
job as our protagonist but had either CAgney or Bogart did this one The Great
Jewel Robber would be a classic.
Brian is a professional thief in every sense of the word. Stealing jewels and furs his is a professional attitude. He's one of the best in his trade and would prefer no violence, but is ready if needed. He also would prefer to work alone as you see in this film it's those he trusts are either cowardly, incompetent or treacherous.
Borden Chase best known for westerns Red River and Winchester 73 a couple of favorites of mine wrote the screenplay. Right up to the end Brian proves to be very clever, more lives than a cat. The last chase sequence is well done and well edited for suspense.
A really great product from Warner Brothers B picture unit.
Brian is a professional thief in every sense of the word. Stealing jewels and furs his is a professional attitude. He's one of the best in his trade and would prefer no violence, but is ready if needed. He also would prefer to work alone as you see in this film it's those he trusts are either cowardly, incompetent or treacherous.
Borden Chase best known for westerns Red River and Winchester 73 a couple of favorites of mine wrote the screenplay. Right up to the end Brian proves to be very clever, more lives than a cat. The last chase sequence is well done and well edited for suspense.
A really great product from Warner Brothers B picture unit.
When Gerry Dennis (David Brian) escapes from prison, everyone is hot on his trail. He gets money from his current girl, calls up an old girlfriend to pull more jobs, and even hooks up with a nurse when he gets injured. He must be a smooth operator. but he doesn't seem to learn his lesson, when a couple of con jobs go bad. Co-stars Marjorie Reynolds and John Archer. Story by Borden Chase, who had actually been a driver for the mob, probably giving him many fine story ideas. Directed by Peter Godfrey, a former bigshot in stage production before working in hollywood. Godfrey worked in some pretty big films, both as actor and later as director. the closing credits state that the mayor of New Rochelle actually played himself! This one is pretty plain and simple, no real surprises. as films and television always tells us, There is NO perfect crime !
He gets around, I'll give him that.
David Brian is The Great Jewel Robber, a 1950 film that begins with an intro from the real guy. Gerard Dennis was known as The Hollywood Raffles because he stole from big Hollywood stars.
Dennis (Brian) is in love, we think, with a young woman. At this point, he is in a Canadian prison farm. They plan to marry, but he complains she's not receiving his letters. The warden has a few choice words for him.
Gerard escapes and makes his way back to his one true love who gives him money and some jewelry. He leaves and says he'll return when he has what he needs for both of them to leave town.
Then he connects with his other true love, Peggy (Perdita Chandler) - more money for forged papers. This time Peggy, as big a worm as he is, and a bartender they plan on cheating, go to rob a house.
Dennis almost doesn't make it out of the place, and when he does, Peggy and the bartender are gone. Later, during a confrontation with him, he's badly beaten.
Later, confronting them, he is badly beaten and is taken to a hospital where he meets nurse Martha Rollins (Marjorie Reynolds). After three weeks under her care, it's love. She mistakenly tells him a story about a wealthy family. He immediately goes to rob the house and is shot.
Martha now knows the truth. She removes the bullet. He promises to go straight.
Right. And the pattern continues. He breaks hearts and breaks into safes.
I guess I should be more enthusiastic about this film. It's okay. Brian often played tough guys opposite women such as Joan Crawford. He had the physical presence and a tough voice.
The character is totally committed to a life of crime, and that's really all he cares about. The seduction is a means to an end. He's a clever escape artist, constantly bamboozling the police. In this film, it seemed easy to do!
It's 90 minutes, and it does hold interest.
David Brian is The Great Jewel Robber, a 1950 film that begins with an intro from the real guy. Gerard Dennis was known as The Hollywood Raffles because he stole from big Hollywood stars.
Dennis (Brian) is in love, we think, with a young woman. At this point, he is in a Canadian prison farm. They plan to marry, but he complains she's not receiving his letters. The warden has a few choice words for him.
Gerard escapes and makes his way back to his one true love who gives him money and some jewelry. He leaves and says he'll return when he has what he needs for both of them to leave town.
Then he connects with his other true love, Peggy (Perdita Chandler) - more money for forged papers. This time Peggy, as big a worm as he is, and a bartender they plan on cheating, go to rob a house.
Dennis almost doesn't make it out of the place, and when he does, Peggy and the bartender are gone. Later, during a confrontation with him, he's badly beaten.
Later, confronting them, he is badly beaten and is taken to a hospital where he meets nurse Martha Rollins (Marjorie Reynolds). After three weeks under her care, it's love. She mistakenly tells him a story about a wealthy family. He immediately goes to rob the house and is shot.
Martha now knows the truth. She removes the bullet. He promises to go straight.
Right. And the pattern continues. He breaks hearts and breaks into safes.
I guess I should be more enthusiastic about this film. It's okay. Brian often played tough guys opposite women such as Joan Crawford. He had the physical presence and a tough voice.
The character is totally committed to a life of crime, and that's really all he cares about. The seduction is a means to an end. He's a clever escape artist, constantly bamboozling the police. In this film, it seemed easy to do!
It's 90 minutes, and it does hold interest.
Yep, that is the motto of jewel thief David Brian (Gerry) for any situations that may involve incarceration.
This is the story of real-life gentleman thief Gerald Dennis who burgled the wealthy and the famous and carried out a blitz in Hollywood that included stars such as Joan Crawford and Errol Flynn. When he was caught, police found a list of his next targets that included Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Ginger Rogers and Louis Mayer! He was prolific. I guess he just liked jewels and furs!
The film cracks on at a good pace and Brian is good in the lead role and convincing as a smooth conman who plays on his charms so that women let him into their confidence. We have episodes with five different women in this film, six if you count Cleo Moore as the blonde at the end when he gets caught.
Some people like windows and become window-makers. This guy liked jewels and furs, so he immersed himself in that particular industry. Let's face it, they are expensive!
This is the story of real-life gentleman thief Gerald Dennis who burgled the wealthy and the famous and carried out a blitz in Hollywood that included stars such as Joan Crawford and Errol Flynn. When he was caught, police found a list of his next targets that included Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Ginger Rogers and Louis Mayer! He was prolific. I guess he just liked jewels and furs!
The film cracks on at a good pace and Brian is good in the lead role and convincing as a smooth conman who plays on his charms so that women let him into their confidence. We have episodes with five different women in this film, six if you count Cleo Moore as the blonde at the end when he gets caught.
Some people like windows and become window-makers. This guy liked jewels and furs, so he immersed himself in that particular industry. Let's face it, they are expensive!
Pretty good thick-ear, based on the true life exploits of master jewel thief Gerard Dennis. Seems Dennis has an eye for beautiful things, both women and big-time gemstones, and doesn't much care how he goes about getting them. Actor Brian looks the womanizing part with enough smiling charm to access society's higher reaches where fancy baubles suddenly disappear, while he just keeps smiling. And why not, since some of Hollywood's classiest looking dames—deWit, Talton, Chandler—fall for him in short order. But, as we were all taught by old movies like this one, crime doesn't pay, at least for some people.
I like the way director Godfrey keeps things moving, especially that nail-biting 'human fly' sequence. Also, the screenplay manages a few minor surprises, thanks to ace scripter Borden Chase, whose real life exploits give him inside exposure to crime and criminals (check out his rather surprising bio). Heck, the script even has Dennis trying to pick up cheap blonde Cleo Moore while his wife looks on, in a nifty little sequence. However, I think the material would have worked better as noir instead of less expressive docu-drama. In fact, the film has an overall drab look, unbefitting the sometimes sumptuous surroundings and the strong narrative drama.
Nonetheless, for an obscure programmer, the movie is fast moving and better than average.
I like the way director Godfrey keeps things moving, especially that nail-biting 'human fly' sequence. Also, the screenplay manages a few minor surprises, thanks to ace scripter Borden Chase, whose real life exploits give him inside exposure to crime and criminals (check out his rather surprising bio). Heck, the script even has Dennis trying to pick up cheap blonde Cleo Moore while his wife looks on, in a nifty little sequence. However, I think the material would have worked better as noir instead of less expressive docu-drama. In fact, the film has an overall drab look, unbefitting the sometimes sumptuous surroundings and the strong narrative drama.
Nonetheless, for an obscure programmer, the movie is fast moving and better than average.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesLoosely based on the real-life exploits of Gerard Dennis, who stole over $1M worth of jewelry from wealthy homes from 1947 to 1948. He started in Westchester County, New York. After almost being caught there, he moved to the Los Angeles area and began robbing homes in Hollywood, Beverly Hills, Brentwood and Bel Air. In 1949 he was sentenced to 18 years to life in Sing Sing prison in New York state.
- Gaffes(at around 21 mins) The amount of plastic explosive affixed to the safe decreases substantially from one edit to the next.
- Bandes originalesGive Me a Song with a Beautiful Melody
(uncredited)
Music by Jule Styne
Played at the party when the police arrive
Meilleurs choix
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El ladrón fantasma
- Lieux de tournage
- Glendale, Californie, États-Unis(location shooting per AFI Catalog entry for this film)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 31min(91 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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