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Delitti senza castigo

Titolo originale: Kings Row
  • 1942
  • Approved
  • 2h 7min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
5303
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Claude Rains, Ronald Reagan, Robert Cummings, Betty Field, and Ann Sheridan in Delitti senza castigo (1942)
A great character steps out of a great book in this trailer
Riproduci trailer3:22
1 video
61 foto
Drammi storiciRaggiungimento della maggiore etàDramma

Il lato oscuro e l'ipocrisia della vita di provincia americana sono visti attraverso gli occhi di cinque bambini che raggiungono l'età adulta all'inizio del secolo.Il lato oscuro e l'ipocrisia della vita di provincia americana sono visti attraverso gli occhi di cinque bambini che raggiungono l'età adulta all'inizio del secolo.Il lato oscuro e l'ipocrisia della vita di provincia americana sono visti attraverso gli occhi di cinque bambini che raggiungono l'età adulta all'inizio del secolo.

  • Regia
    • Sam Wood
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Casey Robinson
    • Henry Bellamann
  • Star
    • Ann Sheridan
    • Robert Cummings
    • Ronald Reagan
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,5/10
    5303
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Sam Wood
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Casey Robinson
      • Henry Bellamann
    • Star
      • Ann Sheridan
      • Robert Cummings
      • Ronald Reagan
    • 85Recensioni degli utenti
    • 24Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 3 Oscar
      • 5 vittorie e 3 candidature totali

    Video1

    Kings Row
    Trailer 3:22
    Kings Row

    Foto60

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    Interpreti principali44

    Modifica
    Ann Sheridan
    Ann Sheridan
    • Randy Monaghan
    Robert Cummings
    Robert Cummings
    • Parris Mitchell
    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    • Drake McHugh
    Betty Field
    Betty Field
    • Cassandra Tower
    Charles Coburn
    Charles Coburn
    • Dr. Henry Gordon
    Claude Rains
    Claude Rains
    • Dr. Alexander Tower
    Judith Anderson
    Judith Anderson
    • Mrs. Harriet Gordon
    Nancy Coleman
    Nancy Coleman
    • Louise Gordon
    Karen Verne
    Karen Verne
    • Elise Sandor
    • (as Kaaren Verne)
    Maria Ouspenskaya
    Maria Ouspenskaya
    • Madame von Eln
    Harry Davenport
    Harry Davenport
    • Colonel Skeffington
    Ernest Cossart
    Ernest Cossart
    • Pa Monaghan
    Ilka Grüning
    Ilka Grüning
    • Anna
    • (as Ilka Gruning)
    Pat Moriarity
    Pat Moriarity
    • Tod Monaghan
    Minor Watson
    Minor Watson
    • Sam Winters
    Ludwig Stössel
    Ludwig Stössel
    • Professor Berdorff
    • (as Ludwig Stossel)
    Erwin Kalser
    Erwin Kalser
    • Mr. Sandor
    Egon Brecher
    • Dr. Candell
    • Regia
      • Sam Wood
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Casey Robinson
      • Henry Bellamann
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti85

    7,55.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9bkoganbing

    You'll Like Our Town...........Maybe

    Besides providing Ronald Reagan with his career role and the title of his pre-presidential autobiography, Kings Row is a finely crafted piece of film making by director Sam Wood. The film got Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Director and Best black and white Cinematography for James Wong Howe.

    Incredibly though, the rich musical score that Erich Wolfgang Korngold did was overlooked by the Academy. That's the thing you will take away from watching the film, even more so than Ronald Reagan's anguished cry of 'where's the rest of me'.

    The story takes place at the turn of the last century with an interlude of ten years from 1890 to 1900 where we see the leads as children first and then as adults. Despite Ronald Reagan getting all the notice here, he's actually third billed in the cast. Above him are Ann Sheridan and Robert Cummings and it's really the Cummings character whom the film is centered around.

    King's Row is the town these folks inhabit, purportedly based on Fulton Missouri, the hometown of author Henry Bellamann. This may be set in Missouri, but don't expect no Tom Sawyer like story. If in fact the novel is based on Bellamann's experiences growing up, he must have had one Gothic childhood.

    Sam Wood assembled an incredible cast of supporting players, like Claude Rains, Judith Anderson, Charles Coburn, Harry Davenport, Minor Watson, Nancy Coleman, and Kaaren Verne. Coburn and Anderson are the parents of Coleman and they don't like the fact she's keeping company with Reagan who's playing the entire Kings Row field. In addition Coburn is a doctor who is also a sadist, he does things like perform operations without use of anesthetic. I'm sure he had heard of Dr. Morton and his successful use of ether by this time.

    The best in the cast though is Claude Rains, something he usually was in a lot of films. He's another doctor, totally different from Coburn. He's a famous medical practitioner who has chosen to hide himself away in this small and obscure town. He's got a wife who never comes out and a daughter who grows up to be Betty Field who is suddenly and abruptly taken out of school as a child. It's with him who Robert Cummings studies medicine with to pass the examination and go to school in Europe to become a doctor.

    Rains's tragic story is what sets in motion the rest of the story that climaxes with Reagan's anguished cry. Rains creates such a mysterious and sad air about him that you think about him more than anyone else in the movie.

    Kings Row begs comparison to Our Town which is partly set in the generation where the Cummings, Field, Reagan, and Sheridan characters all grow up. Grover's Corners has its share of tragedies as well as happy times.

    Kings Row and Our Town should be run back to back in order to see what I'm referring to. It's not a bad double bill, in fact quite a literate one.
    9arturus

    Quite marvelous

    I've only recently seen this film in its entirety (after decades of watching the clip of Ronnie Reagan's best scene in it) and am totally surprised by how fine this film really is; in fact, when it ended, I found myself wanting to burst into applause. But to appreciate it you must put yourself into the time it was made, mid- to late 1941. This picture was meant to be an "A" picture (that is, the first picture to be shown on a double bill, or the only film being shown) showcasing the up and coming generation of Warners actors. None of the young players was particularly well-known, except in supporting roles. The older players were all familiar to film, theater and radio audiences. Radio, since radio drama was a major national venue then and all of these older players, in fact, most major stars, had starring roles in radio plays.

    This picture would have been shown in its first run in the chain of theaters owned by Warners, mostly large ones, and shown in a large house, holding an audience of a thousand people or more, with a very large screen yards wide and high and a sound system that was louder and definitely more "high fidelity" than any member of the audience had at home or had heard anywhere else.

    The book on which the film was based had been a scandalous best seller two years before and many if not most had read it (people read books then!) and in fact many in the audience were probably alive when this film takes place, in the last decade of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th. Everyone would have been familiar with the style of dialogue and acting, which seems stilted to us, since it originated on the stage, with no microphones; the costumes, customs and speech would have been in living memory for many watching it in its first run, if not theirs, then their parents'.

    As for Korngold's superb score, this too was a familiar part of a theatrical experience at the time. Most stage plays had live incidental music accompanying them. All major Broadway plays did. Opera, operetta and vaudeville were all part of the audience's experience, all with live music as part of the experience, and no one would have found Korngold's score obtrusive, just part of the show and gorgeous to hear. In fact, Korngold's score for "Robin Hood" in 1938 was premiered live on network radio as a major event, before the picture opened!

    As for black and white, these films were truly in "black and white" on the big screen. Blacks WERE black and whites were silvery white. We see then on video screens, and so far, even with the best of those, these films look to be in "gray and grayer", with not the high contrast they had in the theater. So we dismiss them as flat and lifeless; in the theater, black and white has quite a lot of depth and sparkle.

    So in its proper context, this film is really quite astonishingly good. The production design is by the same man who designed the look of "Gone With the Wind", so there are the gorgeously composed shots, the depth of field, use of light and shadow and attention to detail in that film. Even the landscapes, matte paintings that so many of them are, most have looked quite beautiful projected large. The acting is all first rate. All the actors, in their late twenties and early thirties, are playing younger than their ages. Cummings has the right wide eyed innocence of an only child reared in relative isolation by his grandmother, Sheridan is beautiful and true, Reagan lively and cocky, and Field, the disturbed adolescent. Reagan is the real surprise here; totally unaffected, he acts effortlessly here on film, building a character, listening to the actors in the scene and reacting in the moment. And his best scenes, "THAT" one, and the final scene, are excellent.

    And when it ends, with a flourish those audiences would have found entirely familiar and even comforting, I can imagine an audience of a thousand bursting into prolonged applause.
    Doylenf

    Before 'Peyton Place' there was 'Kings Row'...powerful small-town melodrama studded with great performances...

    Kings Row is perhaps the granddaddy of all small-town epics--a strong story line, an excellent cast and all of it punctuated by one of Erich Wolfgang Korngold's most melodious background scores. Considering this was done in the early '40s, the subject matter is handled honestly but with the kind of discretion it would never receive by any of today's filmmakers. Instead, you are asked to connect the dotted lines on the subject of incest, insanity, sadism and moral corruption behind closed doors and come up with your own observations. Two outstanding leads are Ann Sheridan (never more heartbreakingly honest and moving as the girl from the wrong side of the tracks) and Ronald Reagan as the carefree man she loves and sticks by when fate deals him a hard blow. Robert Cummings is too weak in the central role of Parris--he was always much more suited to comedy than strong drama. But the rest of the large supporting cast are extremely effective--Nancy Coleman (on the brink of insanity after her doctor father's horrific act), Judith Anderson, Charles Coburn (as the sadistic doctor), Claude Rains and Betty Field. Wonderful black and white photography by James Wong Howe, excellent script by Casey Robinson, meticulous production design by William Cameron Menzies and, of course, that pulsating Korngold score--all create one of the most powerful films of the '40s. Ann Sheridan was never better--and Ronald Reagan is fully up to the requirements of a difficult role.
    9edwagreen

    Kings Row- A Welcomed Addition to Any Neighborhood ****

    The absolute best picture that Ronald Reagan ever made. Why wasn't he given better film roles after his impressive performance as Drake McHugh? Ditto for Bob Cummings. So sad to realize seeing both of them in the scenes of this picture, young and charming. Unfortunately, both fell victim to Alzheimer's Disease.

    The picture is first rate. 1942 seemed to be a big year that Hollywood spoke about mental illness. Claude Rains also starred in "Now, Voyager" that dealt with Bette Davis's breakdown following a regimented life with a tormenting mother.

    "Kings Row" deals with schizophrenia. Betty Field did an outstanding job as the doomed Cassie.

    The film also deals with a sadistic surgeon played by Charles Coburn, in a terrific brief dramatic performance. As his wife, Judith Anderson was at her usual eerie self.

    There are so many themes in this film. We see the class differences among Drake, Dr. Mitchell (Cummings) and in a terrific performance, Ann Sheridan as a girl from the wrong side of the tracks that shows her devotion to Drake when he has a series of unbelievable misfortunes befall him.

    Drake's line "Where's the rest of me," when he awakes to find that his legs have been amputated is unforgettable.

    "Kings Row" was nominated for best picture in 1942. It would take a classic such as "Mrs. Miniver" to have beaten it out.
    9tomsview

    Before Peyton Place...

    Set at the turn of the 20th Century, Henry Bellamann's novel seemed to embrace the whole town of Kings Row. Many characters received a page or two then faded into the background. It also contained Bellamann's worldview with insights into just about every aspect of the human condition from birth to death with liberal doses of incest, lust, racism, fraud and bigotry along the way. Kings Row was a busy place.

    Some things just couldn't be included in a 1940's movie. Screenwriter Casey Robinson masterfully eliminated buggy loads of peripheral characters while retaining the central story and much of the novel's unique wisdom, although the ending was changed.

    This film is a super-charged emotional experience as it follows the three main characters, Parris Mitchell, Drake McHugh and Randy Monaghan from childhood to often-painful adulthood.

    The breathless enthusiasm of Robert Cummings' Parris takes some getting used to, but it is Ronald Reagan as Drake who burns himself into the memory with his cry of "Where's the rest of me?" Ann Sheridan glows in her role as Randy, the girl from the other side of the tracks who has more class and substance than most from the snootier end of town.

    The supporting cast adds much to "Kings Row" especially Claude Raines and Betty Field as the troubled Dr. Tower and his daughter Cassandra. Charles Coburn plays Dr. Henry Gordon, creating the most sadistic M.D. this side of a horror movie.

    Inspired script, direction and photography are topped off with Erich Wolfgang Korngold's sweeping score. His music communicates the unspoken thoughts of the characters and helped create many lump-in-the-throat moments. Remove his music and "Kings Row" wouldn't be the same.

    The emotional level may be off the Richter scale, but there is a seductive magic to this old movie. It defies you to remain unmoved.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Erich Wolfgang Korngold's score was played during the inauguration of Ronald Reagan as President.
    • Blooper
      When Parris is speaking to his instructor in Vienna, Dr. Kendell strikes a match to light his pipe. In the next shot, the match has disappeared, and there is no evidence that he lit the pipe.
    • Citazioni

      Col. Skeffington: [Referring to the dying Madame von Eln] When she passes, how much passes with her! - a whole way of life, a way of gentleness and honor and dignity. These things are going, Henry, and they may never come back to this world.

    • Versioni alternative
      Also shown in computer colorized version.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in American Experience: Reagan: Part I (1998)
    • Colonne sonore
      My Gal Is a High-Born Lady
      (1886) (uncredited)

      Written by Barney Fagan

      Sung by the folks in the buggy

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 28 ottobre 1948 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Francese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Abismo de pasión
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Santa Fe La Grande Railroad Station Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Warner Bros.
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 5.093.000 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 7min(127 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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