Um gerente-assistente de um banco de Los Angeles elabora um plano para roubar dinheiro do cofre do banco e fugir para o Brasil com a sua mulher desprevenida.Um gerente-assistente de um banco de Los Angeles elabora um plano para roubar dinheiro do cofre do banco e fugir para o Brasil com a sua mulher desprevenida.Um gerente-assistente de um banco de Los Angeles elabora um plano para roubar dinheiro do cofre do banco e fugir para o Brasil com a sua mulher desprevenida.
- Raglin - Bank Teller #2
- (as Bill Hudson)
- Cleaning Woman
- (não creditado)
- Man in Barber Chair
- (não creditado)
- Bank Teller
- (não creditado)
- Bank Teller
- (não creditado)
- Airplane Passenger
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
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.
Cotten has a likable everyman quality about him, so as he decides one day to make his day dream become a reality it's easy for the audience to identify with him. Yes, he's breaking the law and by all the moral codes of society he is wrong to do so. Yet we can't help but root for him because of the intelligence and audacity that his character displays.
This film is quite suspenseful at times and tightly paced by director Andrew Stone. It's a short little 85 minute feature and doesn't waste any time in telling it's simple but involving tale, with all the unexpected complications that arise threatening to scuttle Cotten and his plans for a new life with all that loot.
Since The Steel Trap was made in the '50s when the Hollywood production code dictated that no film character can attempt such a plan without paying a price for it, I was pleasantly surprised at the film's resolution, which I found to be both unexpected and satisfying.
One more thing for film noir buffs. Visually The Steel Trap has none of the chiaroscuro lighting effects that we so love about '40s noirs. In fact, the visuals of this film are the least of its virtues. The emphasis is upon plot development and, increasingly as the film progresses, its pacing. The film also reunites Cotten with his Shadow of a Doubt co-star, Teresa Wright. Wright gives a lovely performance (the moral conscience of the film) as Cotten's wife who initially hasn't got a clue as to her husband's plans. Her character eventually turns out to play an important role in the flow of the narrative.
Joseph Cotten was a fine actor, capable of playing a smooth talking charming psychopath (Shadow of a Doubt) as well as personifying an everyman, as an earnest, slightly awkward leading man (The Third Man). He also gets my nomination as the actor who possibly appeared in more outstanding Hollywood productions during the 1940s than any other.
While The Steel Trap hardly rates among Cotten's best films, it does have something in common with the actor, that of being good, largely neglected and underrated.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis is the second movie that Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright appeared in together. They were previously in Alfred Hitchcock's A Sombra de uma Dúvida (1943) as uncle and niece.
- Erros de gravaçãoSeveral 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.
- Citações
[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...
- ConexõesReferenced in Screen Directors Playhouse: The Final Tribute (1955)
Principais escolhas
- How long is The Steel Trap?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Steel Trap
- Locações de filme
- Bourbon Street and Bienville Street, New orleans, Louisiana, EUA(In front of The Old Absinthe)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 25 min(85 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1