Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA brilliant, successful criminal defense attorney's life is turned upside down when he takes on a case of a murdered woman who turns out to be an old flame who left him 10 years ago.A brilliant, successful criminal defense attorney's life is turned upside down when he takes on a case of a murdered woman who turns out to be an old flame who left him 10 years ago.A brilliant, successful criminal defense attorney's life is turned upside down when he takes on a case of a murdered woman who turns out to be an old flame who left him 10 years ago.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Don Brodie
- Reporter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Claire Du Brey
- Mrs. North
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
George Guhl
- Mr. Willis
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Robert Homans
- Cop
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Olaf Hytten
- Page
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
One of the shining examples of the mastery of screenwriting from the Golden Age of Hollywood, by F. Hugh Herbert (not to be confused with comic actor Hugh Herbert from the same era). Viennese-born Herbert (Sitting Pretty, The Moon is Blue, etc.) was also the President of the Screen Writer's Guild.
In this film we experience the commanding embrace of a well-conceived story brought to resplendent life by the notable actor Otto Kruger and a fine cast. Kruger, a major Broadway star of the 1920s later became a reliable and extraordinary screen character actor.
Today gems like this can be encountered only fleetingly on Turner Classic Movies. Worthy of study, they are not to be found on Home Video, another oversight of movie moguls who often sit on top of forgotten gold mines while churning out garbage that sustains illiteracy and decimates popular values. This is just one of hundreds for which we owe Ted Turner a debt of gratitude.
In this film we experience the commanding embrace of a well-conceived story brought to resplendent life by the notable actor Otto Kruger and a fine cast. Kruger, a major Broadway star of the 1920s later became a reliable and extraordinary screen character actor.
Today gems like this can be encountered only fleetingly on Turner Classic Movies. Worthy of study, they are not to be found on Home Video, another oversight of movie moguls who often sit on top of forgotten gold mines while churning out garbage that sustains illiteracy and decimates popular values. This is just one of hundreds for which we owe Ted Turner a debt of gratitude.
Kent Barringer (Otto Kruger) is a self-assured cynical womanizing successful defense lawyer. He gets another guilty man off. He uses every trick to win his cases. He keeps a picture of an old flame to remind him that love is an illusion. He gets a case defending a supposed innocent murderer. He is shocked to find the victim to be his pictured ex.
This is a pre-Code drama. I really like the premise and the start. I would like a more dashing and younger lead. Otherwise, Otto Kruger is pretty good. I don't buy the doppelganger defense. Everybody has a doppelganger. Kent didn't actually prove anything. As for the big case, I thought he would do more investigating after the loss. The second half is not as compelling.
This is a pre-Code drama. I really like the premise and the start. I would like a more dashing and younger lead. Otherwise, Otto Kruger is pretty good. I don't buy the doppelganger defense. Everybody has a doppelganger. Kent didn't actually prove anything. As for the big case, I thought he would do more investigating after the loss. The second half is not as compelling.
Otto Kruger was an excellent actor and this film was a wonderful opportunity for him to demonstrate his skills. The film begins in Kruger's swank office. He's a rich and successful attorney with very few scruples as well as a rather jaded view of life and women. To sum him up, though successful, he's a self-centered jerk.
Into this office arrives a young woman whose father is up on murder charges. Kruger is too busy and way too egocentric to give the young woman a chance--even when he initially agrees to help her. Again and again, she's left waiting for him to get around to listening to her story. However, when he finally does, he is shocked to hear that the murder victim is actually Kruger's ex-wife who'd left him many years before! It seems that Kruger's idealism and sense of compassion left with her and all the old memories of her came flooding back. To make things worse, he learns that she was a horrid person and realizes what a waste his life has been since she left. Kruger then runs to the cemetery where she was buried--even though it was pouring down rain--and throws himself on the grave. A few days later, he turns up in the hospital suffering from the effects of exposure and nearly dies.
During this little episode, the girl's father's case came up in court and because Kruger wasn't there, the man was easily convicted sine it was passed off to a lawyer who was unprepared. When Kruger FINALLY recovers, he feels horrible for what he'd done and vows to make things right.
While this plot sounds a bit melodramatic (and it was), the acting and action were exceptional and the story very engaging. I really don't want to say more--it may spoil the film, but it's a nice story with a very tense ending. It's well worth a look--especially because of Kruger's terrific performance and range.
Into this office arrives a young woman whose father is up on murder charges. Kruger is too busy and way too egocentric to give the young woman a chance--even when he initially agrees to help her. Again and again, she's left waiting for him to get around to listening to her story. However, when he finally does, he is shocked to hear that the murder victim is actually Kruger's ex-wife who'd left him many years before! It seems that Kruger's idealism and sense of compassion left with her and all the old memories of her came flooding back. To make things worse, he learns that she was a horrid person and realizes what a waste his life has been since she left. Kruger then runs to the cemetery where she was buried--even though it was pouring down rain--and throws himself on the grave. A few days later, he turns up in the hospital suffering from the effects of exposure and nearly dies.
During this little episode, the girl's father's case came up in court and because Kruger wasn't there, the man was easily convicted sine it was passed off to a lawyer who was unprepared. When Kruger FINALLY recovers, he feels horrible for what he'd done and vows to make things right.
While this plot sounds a bit melodramatic (and it was), the acting and action were exceptional and the story very engaging. I really don't want to say more--it may spoil the film, but it's a nice story with a very tense ending. It's well worth a look--especially because of Kruger's terrific performance and range.
This movie would have been mediocre at best had it not been for Otto Kruger's performance. His acting in this movie is so natural, so unlike most precode acting where the acting is over dramatic. I honestly kept wTching just for him, he totally drew me in.
Kent "Barry" Barringer (Otto Kruger) is a hard cynical lawyer. He gets clients acquitted he knows are guilty using cute "tricks" such as having the defendant's double sit in court being identified by witness after witness only to introduce the real defendant sitting out in the crowd, thus causing reasonable doubt.
Barringer has women betting a night with their bodies over a pinball game. He distrusts even "the women in his life" as cheating chiselers. You see, his wife ran out on him ten years before and something inside him died at the time, so he's spent his time becoming the world's best criminal attorney and "hate bedding" women ever since.
Then one day an innocent appears at his office door - Her father is accused of killing her stepmother. When Barringer sees the dead woman's photo, he realizes that she is the wife who left him ten years ago. He breaks down - as long as there was life there was hope, but now she's dead. She'll never come back. Barringer abandons his practice and his clients and goes on a bender. But what of the girl's father and his trial? Watch and find out.
This is one of my favorite legal precodes. It has everything and its pacing and ability to seamlessly transition from one genre to another is excellent. At first, the film is a courtroom drama, by the end it is a gangster tale. It really has no big stars in it, and Otto Kruger is in rare form in a rare leading role.
Though made by MGM, it really doesn't seem like a film of the era or one that the studio cared very much about, and as a result of MGM's neglect it turned out to be something special. The best way I could describe it is as though MGM and WB had a child. And that child - this film - has the MGM class and WB's sass. I'd highly recommend it.
With Una Merkel as Barringer's unflappable secretary, Ben Lyon as Barringer's straight arrow junior partner, Isabel Jewell as the woman who loves Barringer but might as well be talking to a rock when it comes time to talk of love, and Roscoe Karns as the same kind of wise-cracking assistant he played in 20th Century the following year.
Barringer has women betting a night with their bodies over a pinball game. He distrusts even "the women in his life" as cheating chiselers. You see, his wife ran out on him ten years before and something inside him died at the time, so he's spent his time becoming the world's best criminal attorney and "hate bedding" women ever since.
Then one day an innocent appears at his office door - Her father is accused of killing her stepmother. When Barringer sees the dead woman's photo, he realizes that she is the wife who left him ten years ago. He breaks down - as long as there was life there was hope, but now she's dead. She'll never come back. Barringer abandons his practice and his clients and goes on a bender. But what of the girl's father and his trial? Watch and find out.
This is one of my favorite legal precodes. It has everything and its pacing and ability to seamlessly transition from one genre to another is excellent. At first, the film is a courtroom drama, by the end it is a gangster tale. It really has no big stars in it, and Otto Kruger is in rare form in a rare leading role.
Though made by MGM, it really doesn't seem like a film of the era or one that the studio cared very much about, and as a result of MGM's neglect it turned out to be something special. The best way I could describe it is as though MGM and WB had a child. And that child - this film - has the MGM class and WB's sass. I'd highly recommend it.
With Una Merkel as Barringer's unflappable secretary, Ben Lyon as Barringer's straight arrow junior partner, Isabel Jewell as the woman who loves Barringer but might as well be talking to a rock when it comes time to talk of love, and Roscoe Karns as the same kind of wise-cracking assistant he played in 20th Century the following year.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe opening scene features Otto Kruger playing a Pinball Machine. This is the earliest known on-screen appearance of a Pinball Machine in a major production. At the time, flippers had not yet been invented and pinball machines were often used for gambling. There was a lot of public debate at the time as to whether pinball was a game of skill or chance, and it was banned in many parts of the country. The movie played on that debate with Kruger making a bet with his lady-friend, and when complimented for his luck, replies "Not luck - skill."
- BlooperTutte le opzioni contengono spoiler
- Citazioni
Kent Barringer: In a case like yours, an ounce of showmanship is worth a ton of evidence.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood (2008)
- Colonne sonoreWe Must Have One More Rum-Tum-Tum
(uncredited)
Composer unknown
Sung a cappella by Roscoe Karns and Irene Franklin
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 15 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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