IMDb रेटिंग
6.9/10
3.1 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
तीन लोग एक छोटे शहर में बहुत ही सावधानी से, आने वाले शनिवार को बैंक को लूटने की योजना बनाते हैं, जो हिंसक और प्राणघाती हो जाता है.तीन लोग एक छोटे शहर में बहुत ही सावधानी से, आने वाले शनिवार को बैंक को लूटने की योजना बनाते हैं, जो हिंसक और प्राणघाती हो जाता है.तीन लोग एक छोटे शहर में बहुत ही सावधानी से, आने वाले शनिवार को बैंक को लूटने की योजना बनाते हैं, जो हिंसक और प्राणघाती हो जाता है.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
Robert Adler
- Stan
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
John Alderson
- Amish Farmer on Train
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Ellen Bowers
- Bank Teller
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Virginia Carroll
- Carol, Martin's Secretary
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Harry Carter
- Bart, Policeman
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The wide-screen format was at most only two years old when this film was made. Yet, Charles G. Clarke's shot composition in the new wide-screen format is beautiful. This alone makes the film worth watching.
This is a good example of a color film noir; perhaps not as good as Niagara (1953) or Leave her to Heaven (1945), which were made by the same studio by the way (20th Century Fox), but still a good example from the noir cycle in color.
One way to understand film noir is that it is simply violent melodrama. Look at The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) for example. Violent Saturday (1955) is steeped in melodrama, but there is also some extraordinary violence. And the violence here--in typical noir fashion--is the resolution--however bleak--to some of the melodramatic conflict.
The film has a profound cynicism grinding beneath the surface of the beautiful color photography. And this cynicism remains at the end of the film.
If you haven't seen this film and you are interested in film noir or film of this period, then I would highly recommend the Violent Saturday.
This is a good example of a color film noir; perhaps not as good as Niagara (1953) or Leave her to Heaven (1945), which were made by the same studio by the way (20th Century Fox), but still a good example from the noir cycle in color.
One way to understand film noir is that it is simply violent melodrama. Look at The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) for example. Violent Saturday (1955) is steeped in melodrama, but there is also some extraordinary violence. And the violence here--in typical noir fashion--is the resolution--however bleak--to some of the melodramatic conflict.
The film has a profound cynicism grinding beneath the surface of the beautiful color photography. And this cynicism remains at the end of the film.
If you haven't seen this film and you are interested in film noir or film of this period, then I would highly recommend the Violent Saturday.
"Violent Saturday" was not an outstanding movie, nor very original, but that is not to say that it had no merit. Richard Fleischer's direction goes much farther than skin-deep. From one angle, "Violent Saturday" is about a hold-up and the normal guy (Victor Mature) who tries to stop the criminals. That's fine, and there are some very exciting moments toward the end of the film. But another angle is more interesting: it's a study of what normal small-town-folks do in secret. Indeed, in comparison to the unscrupulous dealings of a voyeuristic bank manager, a larcenous librarian, and a trampy wife and her alcoholic husband, the sadistic bad guys (including a memorable Lee Marvin) seem less sinister. In its studies of the dynamics between husband and wife, parent and child, and its Everyman hero and hard-bitten villains, "Violent Saturday" is half a tribute to noir tradition, half a fifties family-drama. The mixture is sometimes uneasy. Particularly annoying are the conversations between doofy dad Mature and his cute little son who wishes his dad was more of a hero. But the drama between the weirder citizens of the little town is intriguing. A masterful use of the camera and Hugo Friedhofer's strident score are other assets. All in all, "Violent Saturday" is worth a look.
The main reason I like this film is that the characters show what real people were like in 1955. It's a little like going back in time to an average american town where one observes various folks in everyday life including a variety of personal problems. Of course, I have always been nostalgic about the 50s as I spent my childhood in that era.
Three hoodlums plot to rob a bank in a small town. But the town has secrets of its own: The bank president is a Peeping Tom. The librarian is a petty thief. The son of the strip-mine owner is an alcoholic; his wife is openly carrying on an affair with the local golf pro. The son of the strip-mine foreman is ashamed of him because he didn't fight in Word War II. The strip-mine nurse is the object of several men's sexual fantasies.
With a great tough guy turn by Lee Marvin as one of the bank robbers, alternately sniffing an inhaler and stomping on kids' fingers, and Ernest Borgnine as an Amish farmer (!) who isn't completely pacifistic. (Inspiration for WITNESS?) The strip-mining is a wonderful metaphor for the secrets that lurk just underneath the surface of a seemingly placid small town. Would be good on a double bill with BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK.
With a great tough guy turn by Lee Marvin as one of the bank robbers, alternately sniffing an inhaler and stomping on kids' fingers, and Ernest Borgnine as an Amish farmer (!) who isn't completely pacifistic. (Inspiration for WITNESS?) The strip-mining is a wonderful metaphor for the secrets that lurk just underneath the surface of a seemingly placid small town. Would be good on a double bill with BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK.
There are 50+ IMDb reviews already, so I'll try to make this brief and succinct.
The first 55 minutes is a melodramatic soap opera that's borderline boring. This section gets 4 out of 10. The remainder is a thrill ride that gives the film its title. This section gets 8 out 10. Averaged out, this motion picture gets 6 out of 10.
Several reviewers take issue with the casting. I had no problem with it. Everyone does a decent, or above decent, job at acting. I could feel that they cared about their roles and were professional, carrying out the director's and producers' visions.
Considering the decade/century in which it was made, this film's violence is quite shocking. Apparently, critics took issue with this fact. By today's standards, it's no more than a PG rating.
The first 55 minutes is a melodramatic soap opera that's borderline boring. This section gets 4 out of 10. The remainder is a thrill ride that gives the film its title. This section gets 8 out 10. Averaged out, this motion picture gets 6 out of 10.
Several reviewers take issue with the casting. I had no problem with it. Everyone does a decent, or above decent, job at acting. I could feel that they cared about their roles and were professional, carrying out the director's and producers' visions.
Considering the decade/century in which it was made, this film's violence is quite shocking. Apparently, critics took issue with this fact. By today's standards, it's no more than a PG rating.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाOne of the lowest-budgeted films ever shot in CinemaScope and De Luxe color.
- गूफ़The car is started and put into gear so that it will crash through the barn door after which the engine stalls but, while it's still in gear, Stadt and Martin are able to easily push it out.
- भाव
Mrs. Emily Fairchild: Would you like me to have you thrown out?
Linda Sherman: Why don't you get mad enough to try it. All I want is an excuse to pull that hair right out of your stupid head.
[Mrs. Emily Fairchild looks away]
Linda Sherman: Guess you don't have the guts.
- कनेक्शनEdited into Verifica incerta - Disperse Exclamatory Phase (1965)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Violent Saturday?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $9,55,000(अनुमानित)
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 30 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.55 : 1
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