Un criminale del molo di Brooklyn intimidisce i proprietari delle barche costringendoli a pagare il pizzo, ma due pescatori stanchi decidono di eliminare il gangster loro stessi piuttosto ch... Leggi tuttoUn criminale del molo di Brooklyn intimidisce i proprietari delle barche costringendoli a pagare il pizzo, ma due pescatori stanchi decidono di eliminare il gangster loro stessi piuttosto che denunciarlo alla polizia.Un criminale del molo di Brooklyn intimidisce i proprietari delle barche costringendoli a pagare il pizzo, ma due pescatori stanchi decidono di eliminare il gangster loro stessi piuttosto che denunciarlo alla polizia.
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Recensioni in evidenza
When the smalltime gangster Harold Goff (John Garfield) arrives in Brooklyn, he extorts money from Jonah and Olaf to "protect" their boat from fire and dates Stella. Jonah tries to convince his daughter that Goff is a racketeer that takes money out of poor ordinary people but she does not care to her father since she sees Goff as her chance to have a comfortable life and visit new places. When she discloses to Goff that her father has savings, Goff demands the money to Jonah. Now the old man is convinced that the only chance to get rid off Goff is to fight back.
"Out of the Fog" is a good drama with John Garfield performing a cold racketeer and Ida Lupino kind of lost in a contradictory role of a silly young woman that seems to love her father but even after knowing that her boyfriend is extorting him, she continues to date the racketeer. Despite the bleak and amoral conclusion, "Out of the Fog" is a great classic. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Quando a Noite Cai" ("When the Night Falls")
John Garfield takes some chances here with his fan base as he plays a very one-dimensional hood, Goff, who goes for the easy pickings. Rather than go to the big city where he would most probably have to contend with gangsters rougher and smarter than himself, he moves in on a fishing community and chooses to shake down the peace-loving and gentle populace.
Thomas Mitchell and John Qualen play pals Jonah Goodwin and Olaf Johnson, who live for the nights they go fishing - they both have day jobs. They comprise most of the comedy and the most touching parts of the drama as they gradually come to realize that the law won't help them get the ruffian Goff out of their lives, and they may just have to take action themselves. With someone like Goff, there is only one action that will work - murder.
Ida Lupino plays a rather one-dimensional character herself - Jonah Goodwin's daughter Stella - and as such she is just made for Goff, whom she desperately wants on any terms regardless of what he is doing to her own father. She finds existence in the fishing village boring and is looking for a way out when Goff comes along and sweeps her off her feet by dazzling her with dollars and his devil-may-care attitude. I have to really applaud John Garfield's performance here - he shows not a shred of humanity. Considering he had already built up a reputation as playing sensitive loners, this was quite a chance he was taking.
The end pulls punches compared to the story it is based upon, but you have to lay the blame for that at the feet of the censors at the time, not Warner Brothers. Highly recommended.
As for the characters themselves, they are largely one-dimensional, and unconvincingly unworldly for big-city people of the late 1930s. I found the Ida Lupino character hardly credible in her inability to resist the lure of small-time thrills promised by a fling with Goff: she does in fact resist him initially, she is gently warned about his likes by her father, with whom she has an excellent relationship, and despite her yearning for something more than what she has, Goff is no different from scores like him that she would have seen come and go over the years.
Lupino and Garfield are cast as "types," resulting in neither having an opportunity to utilize their considerable talents. Eddie Albert, as he so often does, plays an ineffectual nice guy. Aline McMahon is a complaining wife, a role that seems to have no particular function in the story. The honors do indeed go to Thomas Mitchell and John Quaylen, who make the most of characters given an opportunity to weigh things in the balance, change their minds, and act according to their principles. Even so, the "comical" closing scene is out of keeping with the overall mood of the picture.
At the opening, we see the John Garfield character going toward someone's boat tied onto a post before he sets fire to it, in the middle of the night. And he dodges from being spotted from the lone police officer. He then ducks inside a diner nearby, where we are then introduced to a bunch of other characters, including Telephone operator, Stella Goodwin (Ida Lupino) sitting with her boyfriend, George Watkins (Eddie Albert). The cook, Olaf Johnson (John Qualen) and server/ cashier/ front counter Eddie (Leo Gorcey), the co-owner of the diner Caroline Pomponette (Odette Myrtil), and the lone police officer, Magruder (Robert Homans). And when a fire is chanted in the diner, almost everyone rushes out except the John Garfield character we find out his name is Harold Goff. And it was at this point, as soon as Goff hears fishing buddies, cook, Olaf Johnson (John Qualen) and Jonah Goodwin (Thomas Mitchell) who works behind the diner about their little boat, Goffs eyes begin to light up. And as soon as Goff discovers what kind of boat they were using, he threatens to destroy it unless they agree to his terms of paying him $5.00 a week. It was during then we finally understand why and what is Goff's racket.
Despite a running time of 1:29 the film still felt long dragging viewers to something that can easily be avoided. Also, I thought Ida's character was beginning to be annoying. Meaning that both characters played by Ida Lupino and John Garfield are unlikable.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizHumphrey Bogart was originally chosen to play Harold Goff. However, Ida Lupino had just finished shooting Strada maestra (1940) and Una pallottola per Roy (1941) with Bogart, and they had not gotten along. Lupino protested, and because she was a bigger name than Bogart at the time, she got her way. An angry Bogart shot off a telegram to Jack L. Warner asking, "When did Ida Lupino start casting films at your studio?"
- Blooper(at around 18 mins) Stella is talking to Goff, but not looking at him, and says "You must be a very successful man; you've got a successful attitude." There's an immediate cut to Goff responding, and Stella is is looking directly at his face.
- Citazioni
Olaf Johnson: She's 37 today. She wants me to go to her birthday party - her 37th birthday... so she says.
Jonah Goodwin: 37! She's fifteen minutes younger than the Roman Empire.
- Versioni alternativeThe available version on VHS in Argentina was lifted from a 16mm print in English with Spanish language subtitles. The credits were also redone in Spanish.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The John Garfield Story (2003)
- Colonne sonoreConcert in the Park
(uncredited)
Written by Cliff Friend and Dave Franklin
[Played in the bar at the beginning; also played when Jonah and Olaf discuss moving the boat to Gravesend Bay and at the end]
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- Out of the Fog
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 25 minuti
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- 1.37 : 1