Na China do pós-guerra, um piloto submetido a tribunal marcial transporta mercadorias contrabandeadas para o país, mas cedo vê a sua mentalidade desafiada quando se torna amigo de uma assist... Ler tudoNa China do pós-guerra, um piloto submetido a tribunal marcial transporta mercadorias contrabandeadas para o país, mas cedo vê a sua mentalidade desafiada quando se torna amigo de uma assistente social que desaprova as suas ações.Na China do pós-guerra, um piloto submetido a tribunal marcial transporta mercadorias contrabandeadas para o país, mas cedo vê a sua mentalidade desafiada quando se torna amigo de uma assistente social que desaprova as suas ações.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Mike the Bartender
- (as J.C. Flippen)
- Louie Chin
- (as Phillip Ahn)
- Chinese Official
- (não creditado)
- Air Force Pilot at Bar
- (não creditado)
- Chinese Boy
- (não creditado)
- Hotel Cigar Stand Clerk
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
An enjoyable George Raft thriller that paints the dark underbelly of black marketing very well. It's a bit preachy, but can be quite moving in places. June Havoc does well as a shady character. Helena Carter is good as the romantic interest, and who helps guide George Raft to do the right thing, and fight against black marketeering. Quite fast-paced with some good action and drama.
Brad Dunham (George Raft) is an ex-US Army Air Corps pilot. He apparently was dishonorably discharged and instead of returning home, he's stayed in China. Now, he has a chance to become a big-wig in the black market...but his newspaper friend (Tom Tully) is disgusted and confronts Brad. What's next? See the film.
While George Raft's emotional and acting range in his films is limited, here he's pretty good and I attribute most of this to the script. Well written and never dull...this one surprised me in a pleasant way.
But another side of him pulls him toward Helena Carter, come from the States to vindicate her dead brother, one of his disgraced buddies. And into the mix, too, comes another old friend (Tom Tully), a roving newspaper man investigating the black market that keeps the city's populace near starvation but that's also Raft's bread and butter. The sloe-eyed orphans which Carter helps to feed start to gnaw away at Raft's sense of his `right to live first cabin.'
A romantic adventure along the lines of Singapore, Saigon and Calcutta, Intrigue could use a good deal more of it. The movie starts strongly and promises twists and turns as intricate as the back alleys of Shanghai. But then it hits a sentimental, sermonizing slump about how the black market devalues the Chinese dollar, thus keeping rice and `canned goods' from the mouths of enfeebled children, and it never quite climbs out again.
Because not much else is going on, it becomes hard to ignore the clichés that keep piling up: Jay C. Flippen as a salt-of-the-earth bartender, Philip Ahn as the trusty native sidekick, Miller and Dan Seymour as Hollywood heavies who fall short of any real menace. Havoc's glamorous presence can't compensate for the thin writing in one of her too few movie roles (she was far more fun with Alan Ladd in Chicago Deadline). His bomber jacket and white aviator's scarf can't quite disguise Raft's thickened midriff or the fact that he's on the shady side of 50 (he commands attention only when he's nattily tailored). The movie should have been slimmed down and barbered up, too; it might just have made the jump from forgettable to passable.
Not best pleased at being in the cockpit of a crate full of bullet holes, the bold, brash Raft demands a meeting with the boss, the MR BIG of the organization, who turns out to be MISS BIG, June Havoc. With his foot firmly in the door, passions start to ignite and a tacky, showy affair begins, leaving those close to Havoc seriously underwhelmed.
Raft's unseemly dismissal from the armed forces rears its ugly head when the sister of one of his deceased crew (Helena Carter) befriends him, forewarning her with, "I'm a bottle with a label....says poison." Another blast from Raft's past is old buddy, Tom Tully, now a journalist, fervently striving to expose black market corruption and its devastating impact on ordinary people, ravaged by off the scale inflation, meagre diets and the very real threat of starvation.
Take away the unusual setting and you have a formulaic, identikit noir: The cynical loner, complicit with a corrupt lifestyle, the femme fatale, the dutiful girl, the bully boy syndicate and even the title song trundled out during a night club scene. A generous Len Goodman se-ven, for a steadily maintained tempo, decent entertainment value and a couple of surprises. It's an enjoyable movie. Raft clearly enjoyed breaking a chair over Marvin Miller's head, though whether the experience was appreciated in equal measure by Miller...or the chair is open to question.
Você sabia?
- Curiosidades"Lux Radio Theater" broadcast a 60 minute radio adaptation of the movie on May 10, 1948 with George Raft and June Havoc reprising their film roles.
- Citações
Mme. Tamara Baranoff: You are most insolent, Mr. Andrews.
Marc Andrews: The truth often is.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Doldrum: Intrigue (1954)
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 30 min(90 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1