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IMDbPro

Roaring City

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 59min
NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
199
MA NOTE
Hugh Beaumont, Edward Brophy, Wanda McKay, Richard Travis, and Joan Valerie in Roaring City (1951)
Drama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA bet on a fixed boxing match leads to death, intrigue, murder and romance in this banter-filled noir B-movie. Then a woman hires O'Brien to pretend to be a woman's husband, but she already ... Tout lireA bet on a fixed boxing match leads to death, intrigue, murder and romance in this banter-filled noir B-movie. Then a woman hires O'Brien to pretend to be a woman's husband, but she already has a husband--her cousin. Bodies keep piling up.A bet on a fixed boxing match leads to death, intrigue, murder and romance in this banter-filled noir B-movie. Then a woman hires O'Brien to pretend to be a woman's husband, but she already has a husband--her cousin. Bodies keep piling up.

  • Réalisation
    • William Berke
  • Scénario
    • Julian Harmon
    • Victor West
    • Lou Morheim
  • Casting principal
    • Hugh Beaumont
    • Edward Brophy
    • Richard Travis
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,7/10
    199
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • William Berke
    • Scénario
      • Julian Harmon
      • Victor West
      • Lou Morheim
    • Casting principal
      • Hugh Beaumont
      • Edward Brophy
      • Richard Travis
    • 13avis d'utilisateurs
    • 3avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos2

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux19

    Modifier
    Hugh Beaumont
    Hugh Beaumont
    • Dennis O'Brien
    Edward Brophy
    Edward Brophy
    • 'Professor' Frederick Simpson Schicker
    Richard Travis
    Richard Travis
    • Inspector Bruger
    Joan Valerie
    Joan Valerie
    • Irma Rand
    Wanda McKay
    Wanda McKay
    • Sylvia Rand
    Rebel Randall
    Rebel Randall
    • Gail Chase
    William Tannen
    William Tannen
    • Ed Gannon
    Greg McClure
    Greg McClure
    • Steve Belzig - alias Vic Lundy
    Anthony Warde
    Anthony Warde
    • Bill Rafferty
    Abner Biberman
    Abner Biberman
    • Eddie Paige
    Stanley Price
    Stanley Price
    • Harry Barton
    A.J. Roth
    • Sparring Partner
    Paul Brooks
    • Ted Fallon - alias Steve Rand
    Richard Monahan
    Richard Monahan
    • Henry - the Bartender
    Bing Conley
    • Bookie
    • (non crédité)
    Charles Fogel
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    Joe Gilbert
    • Waiter
    • (non crédité)
    Robert Lawson
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • William Berke
    • Scénario
      • Julian Harmon
      • Victor West
      • Lou Morheim
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs13

    5,7199
    1
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    10

    Avis à la une

    5bkoganbing

    Double Jackpot for Ward Cleaver

    Hugh Beaumont who made an indelible impression on all kids as the world's greatest dad as Ward Cleaver on television will shock the fans of Leave It To Beaver when they see him play laconic private eye Dennis O'Brien, living on the San Francisco wharf with his research man Edward Brophy in Roaring City. Definitely not the Hugh we're used to.

    You know he's got the dialog and the patter down straight, but as a detective he falls into the Miles Archer rather than the Sam Spade category. In this film which involves Beaumont in two separate stories in both cases he does a job which looks really suspicious from the start. In the first he lays down some bets for a fight manager against his own fighter under an alias. He looks real good for the homicides of both the manager and the fighter to detective Richard Travis.

    The second one is even worse, he's asked to pose as the husband of one of a pair of women in a rendezvous and the real husband comes up dead with an unconscious Beaumont with the stiff in a trash dumpster. I mean this guy's radar is really on the fritz.

    Still it's not a bad premise for a television show which it was for a brief time and it proves that Hugh Beaumont could be something other than the All American Dad.
    7AlsExGal

    One of a kind

    This poverty row noir starring Hugh Beaumont as Dennis O'Brien, San Francisco boat salesman and traveler through the back alleys of life, is hilarious. There wasn't enough money to give it atmosphere nor any big names. It distinguishes itself in three areas - a cast now known or remembered for things not noir, how it is actually two independent storylines glued together, and that concentrated noir dialogue that sounds like something out of the satire "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid".

    I wonder if this wasn't supposed to be some kind of TV pilot, because it is divided into two thirty minute tales in which the main character, O'Brien, agrees to do something for money for some shadowy or unknown character, gets double crossed, and then has to solve what happened or take the fall. A police detective, inspector Bruger, who seems to know him always shows up to accuse him of murder. So we have a protagonist who makes bad decisions and a police detective who always draws wrong conclusions. I can see why the networks thought this might not work out in the long term.

    Of course, most people know Hugh Beaumont as TV dad Ward Cleaver in Leave It To Beaver, and I have to think that gig worked out better than had he played O'Brien in a TV series knock off of this film. O'Brien's roommate and partner is "the professor" played by an out of place Ed Brophy. Brophy was an assistant director who became, after sound came in, a supporting player portraying various barely literate lugs and thugs. Here he is portraying a somewhat alcoholic intellectual who talks of Shakespeare. If you know him from any of his earlier film roles, it is a sight to be seen.

    Finally, let me get to that dialogue. Absolutely do not play a drinking game every time you hear a line of over done noir dialogue that sounds like satire rather than the way actual people - hard boiled or not - would ever talk. You'll be dead in twenty minutes.

    Recommended for the fun of it all.
    5blanche-2

    I wasn't overwhelmed

    Hugh "Leave it to Beaver" Beaumont stars in "Roaring City," from 1951. The film also features Edward Brophy and Richard Travis.

    This was apparently one of three feature films that combined two half-hour stories, which answers the question as to why these stories weren't connected. Denny O'Brien (Beaumont) is man with a ship he rents, but he also does odd jobs. He rooms with an alcoholic ex-professor (Brophy) who does some work for him.

    The first story concerns a fixed fight that O'Brien is hired to bet on; in the other one, he is hired to pretend to be a woman's husband. These jobs are not without problems. In the fight story, it doesn't go the way it was supposed to; in the other -- well, it's not as straightforward as it first seemed.

    Denny usually winds up unconscious or beaten and in hot water with a police inspector. Hugh Beaumont does a good job in the role - he's natural and charming.

    I'm not exactly the audience for these low-budget Bs, but I appreciate that they have their place in the noir canon.
    8django-1

    Hugh Beaumont as detective Denny O'Brien--two stories, one film

    Hugh Beaumont, who previous had played Michael Shayne for a series of detective movies at PRC in the 1946-47 season (entertaining films, but having little to do with the Shayne character as depicted in the Brett Halliday novels), put the trench-coat back on for a series of three hour-long feature films as detective Denny O'Brien, released in short succession through Lippert Pictures in 1951. One interesting element about these films is that each consists of two half-hour-long stories, almost as if one is watching back-to-back episodes of a television show. Another interesting element is that the films seem to have borrowed a number of elements from the radio show PAT NOVAK FOR HIRE, starring Jack Webb. Not only is O'Brien a man who rents a ship at the pier and does odd jobs, not only does each film start with monologues very similar to those of Webb, not only does O'Brien have a drunken ex-college-professor sidekick who does some legwork for him, but one of the three films has a plot line lifted directly from a Novak episode! (Perhaps other plots of these movies are lifted from Novak episodes I haven't heard) In any event, these three films are all enjoyable outings with Beaumont radiating the same kind of charm he always did, yet still being convincing as a tough PI spouting hard-boiled dialogue. This particular film has two stories: one of a fixed fight that O'Brien is hired to bet on, and the other where O'Brien is hired to pose as a woman's husband for an evening. Like the PAT NOVAK series, someone hires the detective to do something, he winds up getting beaten up or knocked out, and he wakes up with a dead body, and a police inspector who doesn't like him trying to pin the murder on the detective. That's the formula, and I like it. As often happens with Lippert films, there is a fine b-movie supporting cast, and there is no time wasted on non-essential items. I've owned this film for about 15 years, and I have no doubt watched it five times in those years. Beaumont fans will NOT be disappointed. The other two Denny O'Brien films are DANGER ZONE and PIER 23, both of which I also recommend to detective film fans who do not mind bargain-basement productions in the PRC/Lippert vein. These are directed by the ever-reliable William Berke.
    4mmipyle

    Decent programmer that was probably originally going to be a TV series...Acting by actresses is amateurish...gangsterish dialogue is actually ludicrous.

    "Roaring City" (1951) was the second of three "Dennis O'Brien" mystery films starring Hugh Beaumont. Actually, each of the three has two parts, each a half-hour segment episode that somewhat obviously was supposed to be part of a planned television series which didn't materialize. They're all actually pretty decent little shows, though the dialogue is such that Dashiell Hammett would have had to use a sledgehammer to cut the radio-style gangsterese down to size. In this "feature", as in all of them, Ed Brophy is a drunken partner - a live-in - an ex-professor whose own dialogue is basically nothing but ten dollar gibberish to say anything. It's the humor of these pieces, and it's okay, but that's about it; and Richard Travis is a cop who constantly tries to pin the murders that ubiquitously occur on O'Brien, but in the end has to admit defeat and be "glad" O'Brien helped him - I guess. Joan Valerie, Wanda McKay, and Rebel Randall fill out the female bills in the two episodes which occur here. Bad girls, all of them. Valerie and McKay give rather poor performances. Randall is better. Anthony Warde, Greg McClure, William Tannen, Abner Biberman, and a couple of others are all complicit in being bad. Mediocre stuff, but easy to watch anyway. Directed by William Berke.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Edited down to two segments, each re-titled, this was sold to television in the early 1950s as two parts of a syndicated half hour mystery show.
    • Gaffes
      O'Brien lays on the couch starting with one hand over the other then he interlaces them. However, on the next immediate cut, O'Brien now has his left hand resting on his right wrist. Then on the next cut after that, he is back to having the hands interlaced.
    • Citations

      Dennis O'Brien: [opening narration] San Francisco's a conservative place; famous for good food, good families, good business. And sometimes even people from Boston move out here. But down on the Waterfront, it's a different story because a bluenose down here is a guy who is either drunk or dead. Along the Embarcadero, the piers come in different sizes, like a chorus line in a cheap nightclub. And they go from south of the Ferry Building clear past the China Docks. Almost out of sight, about the same place you'll find a price tag on a new suit, you'll find Pier 23. From there it's a short trip to Denny O'Brien's Boat Shop. My place. I rent out boats and do anything else that means long odds and short hours. My sideline's trouble. And as long as I get paid, I can't be responsible for the guys that hire me.

    • Connexions
      Followed by Pier 23 (1951)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 4 mai 1951 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Sisters in Crime
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Sigmund Neufeld Productions
      • Spartan Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      59 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Hugh Beaumont, Edward Brophy, Wanda McKay, Richard Travis, and Joan Valerie in Roaring City (1951)
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    By what name was Roaring City (1951) officially released in India in English?
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