Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA man is in radio contact with his family when their airplane is shot down. He wants to find and punish those responsible and becomes a criminal to get a job as a deep-sea diver with those s... Leggi tuttoA man is in radio contact with his family when their airplane is shot down. He wants to find and punish those responsible and becomes a criminal to get a job as a deep-sea diver with those salvaging the plane's cargo.A man is in radio contact with his family when their airplane is shot down. He wants to find and punish those responsible and becomes a criminal to get a job as a deep-sea diver with those salvaging the plane's cargo.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Tanner
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- Cibatti
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- Bartender
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Recensioni in evidenza
Good story by Alastair Maclean and screenplay is well crafted to give a satisfying 90 minutes entertainment.
There are three main reasons why "Fear is the Key" is a class above the vast majority of contemporary adventure/mystery thrillers. #1: the chase. A film that features a nearly 20-minutes-long car chase with, behind the wheel, Barry Newman, the same cult-movie stunt driver as in the legendary "Vanishing Point"? Yes, please! Excellent Louisianan filming locations, too. #2: the cast. The aforementioned Barry Newman is cool, as always, but particularly the bad guys impress. Sure, he's typecast, but nobody depicts a loathsome villain like John Vernon does. The film also stars a young Ben Kingsley, and he's truly awesome as a silent but deadly menacing hired killer. #3: the climax. I guarantee that "Fear is the Key" has one of the most intense, captivating and edge-of-the-seat suspenseful endings you'll ever see.
The screenplay is a crafty one, with Barry Newman ploughing through the first half of the film seemingly out of control and playing a role hauntingly similar to his one in 'Vanishing Point' but this time in a Ford Gran Torino, keeping the viewer guessing what's going to happen next and why. After a slightly boggy, espionage filled middle act the film coolly builds to a dramatic nail-biting finale and it is only here in the film's dying moments do you actually discover the truth. Though the ending may not quite reach some viewers expectations, it does wrap things up succinctly, making the thrills on the way (including a fine car chase that bursts from a courthouse breakout) all the more worthwhile.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAfter appearing in this movie, Sir Ben Kingsley did not appear in theatrical movies until Gandhi (1982) where he won the Best Actor Academy Award. In between these two movies, Kingsley worked in theatre and television.
- BlooperAfter Talbot has kidnapped Sarah Ruthven from the courthouse, he steals a car and is driving through town to make his getaway. He skids on open ground to avoid a green car and the camera lens gets cracked in the top right of screen by the thrown up dirt.
- Citazioni
John Talbot: How did you recognize me?
Jablonski: I didn't. You picked a face that's well known in these parts. This is Miss Sarah Ruthven, daughter of Alexander Ruthven, spelled O I L. All those oil rigs out in the Gulf? They belong to Daddy.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Fear Is the Key Audio Commentary (2024)
- Colonne sonoreMain Theme
(uncredited)
Written by Roy Budd
Produced by Jack Fishman
Performed by Roy Budd And His Orchestra
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 43min(103 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1