Un vicedirettore di banca di Los Angeles escogita un piano per rubare denaro dal caveau della banca e fuggire in Brasile con la moglie ignara.Un vicedirettore di banca di Los Angeles escogita un piano per rubare denaro dal caveau della banca e fuggire in Brasile con la moglie ignara.Un vicedirettore di banca di Los Angeles escogita un piano per rubare denaro dal caveau della banca e fuggire in Brasile con la moglie ignara.
- Raglin - Bank Teller #2
- (as Bill Hudson)
- Cleaning Woman
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- Man in Barber Chair
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- Bank Teller
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- Bank Teller
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- Airplane Passenger
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Recensioni in evidenza
The film made a lasting impression on me, especially the New Orleans setting, as I was living there at the time. The scenes were all familiar places and very nostalgic, bringing to mind the New Orleans I remembered from my childhood of the early 1950's. All of the New Orleans characters and extras spoke in an authentic New Orleanean manner and had the "look" and style of locals.
The dramatic tension in the film was almost unbearable, with Joseph Cotton performing a masterful ex post facto narration. This added to the suspense of the film. It certainly prevented me from taking my planned nap. After the film ended, there was no chance of going to sleep--I was totally awake and mentally back in "the big easy."
I've never been able to locate the film for viewing again, but hope that Netflix or Blockbuster will one day have it available. Apparently, TCM doesn't have it in their portfolio. If you ever get a chance to watch this film, don't miss it--a real noir thriller!
Despite the innate implausibilty of the plot, the editing by Otto Ludwig maintains the momentum throughout whilst Dimitri Tiomkin's instantly recognisable chords and orchestration underline the tension.
An earlier reviewer has expressed the view that some might find it awkward watching Cotten and Wright playing husband and wife having previously seen them in 'Shadow of a Doubt' as uncle and niece, to which I would respond: It's called ACTING!
So why hasn't this little sleeper been repeated more often on TV. It sure as heck merits an audience, even among today's digital addicts. It's an expertly observed, tightly written, fluidly paced little thriller. Director Stone was known for insisting on location staging. His insistence here pays off with an everyday realism that heightens the petty annoyances threatening to undo Osborne's daring scheme.
So the banker's got a million in cash in that suitcase to get out of the country. But then life's minor delays and hang-ups intrude, becoming major headaches for both him and us. Just listen to the airline stewardess cackle while we wait and wait to take off, or watch the booking agent fumble around while we squirm and squirm. The filming is like a microscope held up to everyday irritants that suddenly assume gigantic proportions, while a routine escape path turns into a nail-biting obstacle course. Poor Osborne, he'll be in fat city if he doesn't have a nervous breakdown first.
Cotten's fine as the regular Joe looking for a way out of his workday routine. Ditto Wright, as Osborne's compliant wife, the light slowly coming on that this isn't just an ordinary business trip. Also, director Stone managed a number of compact thrillers during this period, including The Night Holds Terror (1955) and Blueprint for Murder (1953). Too bad his skills aren't more widely recognized. Note here how neatly his screenplay completes Osborne's journey with that routine walk home— cast now in a reaffirming light.
I expect I'll catch the film again even though I know how it turns out. But for darn sure, I'll still keep my sweat bucket handy.
It has a rather pale look with mostly unremarkable Camera set-ups, although there are a couple that are noteworthy, and it all takes place in bright lights illuminating the plight of the Anti-Hero's inability to hide from the deed done and the escape route he has set in motion.
It is extremely suspenseful and the screws are forever tightening as one scene to the next lays out never ending barricades and pitfalls. The Movie can be at times quite breathtaking and never fails to pull the Viewer along with unsuspecting twist and turns.
The ending is up for debate, for it can be quite surprising and at the same time some might say a cop out. It does manage to separate this one from quintessential Noir and land it somewhere in the Film-Noir netherworld, just not at the forefront.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis is the second movie that Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright appeared in together. They were previously in Alfred Hitchcock's L'ombra del dubbio (1943) as uncle and niece.
- BlooperSeveral times it is noted by airline personnel that the suitcase with the cash weighs 115 pounds, and yet neither Cotton nor others who handle it have any trouble picking it up, as if it weighed no more than 30 or 40. Picking up 100 pounds with one hand, without straining, is not easy, and cannot be done without showing effort.
- Citazioni
[first lines]
[as the film begins, a family of three can be seen exiting a house, a man, a woman, and their daughter. This is Jim Osborne, his wife Laurie, and their daughter, Susan. They can be seen approaching a car and entering it. As this is going on, Osborne can be heard narrating]
Jim Osborne: I left the same house at approximately the same hour every working day for over eleven years...
[the camera then fades to a scene of Jim arriving at a train station, where he can be seen walking up to a train]
Jim Osborne: I caught the same car...
[the camera fades to show Jim exiting a station in the city]
Jim Osborne: I emerged from the same terminal and dodged the same traffic...
[the camera then fades to show Jim rounding a street corner]
Jim Osborne: Rounded the same corner...
[the camera than shows Jim walking up to a bank and entering]
Jim Osborne: Entered the same bank...
- ConnessioniReferenced in Screen Directors Playhouse: The Final Tribute (1955)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Steel Trap
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Bourbon Street and Bienville Street, New orleans, Louisiana, Stati Uniti(In front of The Old Absinthe)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1