NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
209
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueGannon is an imprisoned racketeer kingpin who tries to manipulate his young cell mate into staging a riot and prison break, but the cell mate tries to back out when he realizes other inmates... Tout lireGannon is an imprisoned racketeer kingpin who tries to manipulate his young cell mate into staging a riot and prison break, but the cell mate tries to back out when he realizes other inmates may be killed in the process.Gannon is an imprisoned racketeer kingpin who tries to manipulate his young cell mate into staging a riot and prison break, but the cell mate tries to back out when he realizes other inmates may be killed in the process.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Arline Hunter
- Girl
- (as Arlene Hunter)
Benjie Bancroft
- Guard
- (non crédité)
Robert Bice
- Guard
- (non crédité)
Noble 'Kid' Chissell
- Convict
- (non crédité)
John Close
- Guard
- (non crédité)
John Craven
- Guard
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Robert Blake is a young man sent to prison. The guards are corrupt, the warden, played by Emile Mayer, is an uncaring bureaucrat, and Blake's cellmate is Gene Evans, who tries to get him to start a riot to cover Evans' prison break.
R.G. Springsteen was a ver competent B western director. He was so good he survived directing them after they were long dead. A few times he got to direct crime dramas, and he knew how to take people like Evans, who usually played henchmen in oaters, and bring him up to date.
The 1930s had prison dramas that were about the reforming power, about how thoughtful, caring authorities. The 1950s brought a new look, stories about the bad, bad men -- and women -- locked up there, and how they mistreated themselves, creatures of violence from which society must be guarded; perhaps there was a bit of paranoia about communism lurking in the subtext. Robert Blake is not there to be reformed. He is a vicious, dangerous creature in the eyes of the warden, who believes the guards who plant a knife on him. If he is to be reformed, he must do it himself. He must realize that the life of a criminal will kill him and the few decent men in prison and make the effort without help.
R.G. Springsteen was a ver competent B western director. He was so good he survived directing them after they were long dead. A few times he got to direct crime dramas, and he knew how to take people like Evans, who usually played henchmen in oaters, and bring him up to date.
The 1930s had prison dramas that were about the reforming power, about how thoughtful, caring authorities. The 1950s brought a new look, stories about the bad, bad men -- and women -- locked up there, and how they mistreated themselves, creatures of violence from which society must be guarded; perhaps there was a bit of paranoia about communism lurking in the subtext. Robert Blake is not there to be reformed. He is a vicious, dangerous creature in the eyes of the warden, who believes the guards who plant a knife on him. If he is to be reformed, he must do it himself. He must realize that the life of a criminal will kill him and the few decent men in prison and make the effort without help.
This B-grade prison movie really packs a wallop, thanks to committed performances from a cast featuring Gene Evans, Tim Carey and Robert Blake. A stock story is brought to convincing, exciting life as hardened criminal Gene Evans is thrown into the "Big House". Right off the bat, he organizes a crashout. But he has other things on his mind as well. Routine as it may at first seem, this movie holds a number of surprises that make well worth anyone's time. Evans is solid as ever and expert at taking charge of the situation. He has no trouble standing up to and intimidating Tim Carey (a feat in itself). But the most impressive performance comes from young Robert Blake: his subtle use of accent and his consistency of character show true acting talent. Blake is the heart of this film while Evans is the brazen brains of it. Also on hand are stalwarts John Qualen, Emile Meyer and others, all directed by R.G. Springsteen with powerhouse impact. Great stuff. Yet another B movie that could use a restored issue on DVD.
The plot of this film has been filmed a million times: a group of prisoners start a revolt in order to make an escape attempt. What makes this worth seeing over dozens of other "B" films is the good cast. Gene Evans is excellent as Lou Barlow who tricks good kid Rudy (Robert Blake) into helping him escape. Tim Carey gives his usual good performance as the unhinged prisoner "Bugsy" who lovingly fondles guns. Glad my local video store had this one.
Apart from the 'women in prison' exploitation films of the early 1970s, prison films usually are among the better movies you can find. Now I am not saying they all are great movies...but finding a bad prison film isn't easy. So, I wasn't very surprised that "Revolt in the Big House" turned out to be very watchable and well made.
When the story begins, tough guy Lou Gannon (Gene Evans) has arrived at prison. He apparently was a very famous criminal but getting the goods on him wasn't easy...and he FINALLY has run out of luck. Once there, he meets up with an old friend, 'Bugsy' (Timothy Carey) and the pair work on a plan for a big escape. This involves coming up with a plan to smuggle guns into the prison...and you'll have to watch the film to see what's next.
The acting, script and direction are all good here. In fact, I can't think of any big problems with the film and a score of 8 is awfully good for such a low budgeted picture. My one complaint is when one of the prisoners gets machined gunned....and not a single hole nor speck of blood is seen...nothing. Quite enjoyable overall.
When the story begins, tough guy Lou Gannon (Gene Evans) has arrived at prison. He apparently was a very famous criminal but getting the goods on him wasn't easy...and he FINALLY has run out of luck. Once there, he meets up with an old friend, 'Bugsy' (Timothy Carey) and the pair work on a plan for a big escape. This involves coming up with a plan to smuggle guns into the prison...and you'll have to watch the film to see what's next.
The acting, script and direction are all good here. In fact, I can't think of any big problems with the film and a score of 8 is awfully good for such a low budgeted picture. My one complaint is when one of the prisoners gets machined gunned....and not a single hole nor speck of blood is seen...nothing. Quite enjoyable overall.
In most prison flicks, whenever a convict returns from solitary confinement... a week or longer in almost pitch dark... they'd emerge like from a well-lit office, maybe a little more tired, ragged...
But Robert Blake in the low-budget potboiler REVOLT IN THE BIG HOUSE has an extremely jaded expression, rubbing his eyes while suffering the proverbial devil's hangover, back into the flow of prisoners that includes our main star, Gene Barry, as a once-powerful headline-making mobster, now doing twenty years to life...
Blake's Mexican twenty-something Rudy Hernandez is his cellmate, initially providing a monologue summing up his entire wrong-side-of-the-streets existence in an overlong six minutes... and every minute counts in what's a programmer/exploitation, practically a remake of Don Siegel's RIOT IN CELL BLOCK 11...
Both have Emile Meyer as an open-minded warden, and while that's a far superior picture, REVOLT intentionally packs more of a violent wallop, including chief guard Walter Barnes... a composite of all guards... who can't stop bullying Blake... in fact he's the reason the poor kind wound up in solitaire...
The best scenes occur during the first half as Gene Evan's Lou Gannon plays it mellow and slow-burn, getting a soft job and, within the main interior set of gathered prisoners (contrasting to random grainy real-life stock footage of a real prison), he subtly collects willing criminals for the second half's anticipated and thus inevitable titular REVOLT aka attempted breakout...
And once again, Timothy Carey is the scene-stealer, about thirty-pounds too heavy for an agile and cunning heavy yet his signature gritting teeth and firebrand temper is always fun, helping to turn this BIG HOUSE into a neat ensemble of character-driven scenes that, as a whole, smoothly passes the time without feeling like doing time.
But Robert Blake in the low-budget potboiler REVOLT IN THE BIG HOUSE has an extremely jaded expression, rubbing his eyes while suffering the proverbial devil's hangover, back into the flow of prisoners that includes our main star, Gene Barry, as a once-powerful headline-making mobster, now doing twenty years to life...
Blake's Mexican twenty-something Rudy Hernandez is his cellmate, initially providing a monologue summing up his entire wrong-side-of-the-streets existence in an overlong six minutes... and every minute counts in what's a programmer/exploitation, practically a remake of Don Siegel's RIOT IN CELL BLOCK 11...
Both have Emile Meyer as an open-minded warden, and while that's a far superior picture, REVOLT intentionally packs more of a violent wallop, including chief guard Walter Barnes... a composite of all guards... who can't stop bullying Blake... in fact he's the reason the poor kind wound up in solitaire...
The best scenes occur during the first half as Gene Evan's Lou Gannon plays it mellow and slow-burn, getting a soft job and, within the main interior set of gathered prisoners (contrasting to random grainy real-life stock footage of a real prison), he subtly collects willing criminals for the second half's anticipated and thus inevitable titular REVOLT aka attempted breakout...
And once again, Timothy Carey is the scene-stealer, about thirty-pounds too heavy for an agile and cunning heavy yet his signature gritting teeth and firebrand temper is always fun, helping to turn this BIG HOUSE into a neat ensemble of character-driven scenes that, as a whole, smoothly passes the time without feeling like doing time.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRobert Blake's character is a former Hispanic gang member, which was rare in movies at this time, especially being the only protagonist of the inmates. Also, Robert Blake had played a lot of Spanish characters throughout his career leading to this point, including the little boy who sells Humphrey Bogart the winning lottery ticket in Le Trésor de la Sierra Madre (1948). He played Native Americans as well, and later, a "part Cherokee" criminal in his most famous role, De sang-froid (1967). It wasn't until later that he would be cast primarily as what he actually was, an Italian American.
- GaffesWhen Robert Blake is facing outside his cell as the men are lined-up, his hands are down. When it cuts to outside the cell, looking in at Blake, both hands are holding the cell bars.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 7 (2002)
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Revolt in the Big House
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 19min(79 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant