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IMDbPro

Os Corruptos

Título original: The Big Heat
  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,9/10
31 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Glenn Ford and Gloria Grahame in Os Corruptos (1953)
Trailer for this crime drama directed by Fritz Lang
Reproduzir trailer1:43
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
CrimeDramaFilme NoirSuspense

Dave Bannion, um policial duro, assume um poderoso sindicato do crime político.Dave Bannion, um policial duro, assume um poderoso sindicato do crime político.Dave Bannion, um policial duro, assume um poderoso sindicato do crime político.

  • Direção
    • Fritz Lang
  • Roteiristas
    • Sydney Boehm
    • William P. McGivern
  • Artistas
    • Glenn Ford
    • Gloria Grahame
    • Jocelyn Brando
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,9/10
    31 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Fritz Lang
    • Roteiristas
      • Sydney Boehm
      • William P. McGivern
    • Artistas
      • Glenn Ford
      • Gloria Grahame
      • Jocelyn Brando
    • 195Avaliações de usuários
    • 109Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 vitórias e 2 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    The Big Heat
    Trailer 1:43
    The Big Heat

    Fotos127

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    Elenco principal53

    Editar
    Glenn Ford
    Glenn Ford
    • Sgt. Dave Bannion
    Gloria Grahame
    Gloria Grahame
    • Debby Marsh
    Jocelyn Brando
    Jocelyn Brando
    • Katie Bannion
    Alexander Scourby
    Alexander Scourby
    • Mike Lagana
    Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin
    • Vince Stone
    Jeanette Nolan
    Jeanette Nolan
    • Bertha Duncan
    Peter Whitney
    Peter Whitney
    • Tierney
    Willis Bouchey
    Willis Bouchey
    • Lt. Ted Wilks
    Robert Burton
    Robert Burton
    • Gus Burke
    Adam Williams
    Adam Williams
    • Larry Gordon
    Howard Wendell
    • Commissioner Higgins
    Chris Alcaide
    Chris Alcaide
    • George Rose
    Michael Granger
    Michael Granger
    • Hugo
    Dorothy Green
    Dorothy Green
    • Lucy Chapman
    Carolyn Jones
    Carolyn Jones
    • Doris
    Ric Roman
    Ric Roman
    • Baldy
    Dan Seymour
    Dan Seymour
    • Mr. Atkins
    Edith Evanson
    Edith Evanson
    • Selma Parker
    • Direção
      • Fritz Lang
    • Roteiristas
      • Sydney Boehm
      • William P. McGivern
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários195

    7,931.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9planktonrules

    Glenn Ford does a great job

    Normally, when I think of Film Noir, I DON'T think about Glenn Ford. Yes, he did a few, but his personality always seemed a little too "nice" to play in these gritty films. I was very pleasantly surprised then, when I saw this movie. Ford is an honest cop in a very crooked town. However, when the mob attacks and nearly kills him (killing his wife instead), he "pops a fuse" and becomes a very tough cop who won't take NO for an answer. I loved watching him slap people around and threaten his way to the top of the syndicate, as, with his life in ruins, he had nothing to lose.

    Along the way, the headstrong Ford encounters a lot of amazing characters--all played exceptionally well. In particular, a young Lee Marvin gives perhaps his best supporting performances as a hood who has a penchant for beating up women. In one scene, he nearly breaks a bit actress' arm (and it happens to be Carolyn Jones in a performance before she was famous). In another scene, he throws scalding hot coffee in the face of his girlfriend, Gloria Grahame. It was so brutal and realistic, I flinched and found my stomach churning at its ferocity and cruelness. As for Miss Grahame, she plays the sort of excellent role she became known for--a "dame" who, down under layers and layers of scum, beats a real human heart.

    Wonderful performances, terrific pacing and excellent writing make this one film well worth seeing and as a result, it's one of the best examples of Film Noir out there and a great example of a film about a cop who's seen enough and is on a rampage. This is probably Glenn Ford's best performance.

    FYI--In what appears to be a cool inside joke, in one of the scenes where Ford is in the bar, the song "Mame" is playing in the background--the same song made so memorable by Rita Hayworth in GILDA--a Glenn Ford film from 1946.

    Also FYI--I recently saw this film for the second time. I rarely watch films twice, but this one impressed me so much the first time, I couldn't resist. The film was, believe it or not, better the second time around and I noticed so many wonderful Film Noir touches that I truly love this movie.
    10bengleson

    big steaks, big spuds, big heat

    This punchy little noir moves along at brisk clip. Glenn Ford simmers the whole time like a boiling kettle about to blow . This man has no pleasures that are obvious except his Westinghouse wife and child. Lee Marvin barely maintains control for much of the film. He is a catalogue of evil and greedy excess. Gloria Grahame is marvelous, witty, beautiful, bitter beyond hope. There is no redemption to be had for most of the characters in this sordid little universe. Conspiracy theorists of the 21st century will look back at the kind of simple-minded corrupt worldview espoused by Lang in this and other films and lament its loss. In THE BIG HEAT, evil and rot have names and faces and with enough fortitude, and the willingness to lose everything, they can be conquered. At least for a day. We know today that the whole infrastructure of power is poisoned beyond repair. The fifties held out a modicum of hope. Brief, fleeting hope. This is a violent film. Others have commented that much of the horror is committed off screen. But you can easily imagine it. Lang doesn't pull many punches here. The treadmill of denouement speeds up rapidly in the last few sections of the film. After viewing a film like THE BIG HEAT, I often want to wander down some dark street and find a corner diner, something like the one portrayed in Hoppers's NIGHTHAWKS, and have a cup of java, listen to some Brubeck on the jukebox, and wait for someone to come in from the chilly street . But the diners in my neighbourhood are either in the middle of the block or close early because of street crime. So I stay home, have a cup of tea, and dream noirish thoughts half asleep on my couch. This is a fine entry into the film noir lexicon.
    9krorie

    Corruption

    Coming full cycle, Hollywood seems to be back on the theme of good cop vs. bad cops controlled by the mob. Recently "16 Blocks" successfully pitted honest Bruce Willis against dishonest city hall. For a time, with "The Big Easy" being an early example, this type movie presented the image of a totally corrupt government from top to bottom with omnipresent mob ties indicating cynical times, even the one good cop being tainted, just not as much as others. "The Big Heat" is a prime example of this type film in the early Cold War period, emphasizing the importance of one good man standing up against all odds, in particular unconcerned citizens who either themselves become tainted or who are simply apathetic as long as they are left alone. "The Big Heat" like "High Noon" showed that the good must take a stand or the entire house will come crumbling down with the rodents taking over.

    Glenn Ford was never a versatile actor. In the right role he could carry the load sufficiently to get by. In the wrong role, his acting was amateurish. That he had potential is indicated by his performances in two movies, "Gilda" and "The Big Heat." Arguably, his role as Det. Sgt. Dave Bannion is the better of the two. Perhaps it is the inimitable director Fritz Lang that prods Ford on to realize his true talents. There is no doubt that Ford makes Sgt. Bannion come alive and puts real flesh on his bones. Ford is so good in this film and in "Gilda" that he deserved more recognition than he got from the Hollywood big wigs.

    The two shining performances are given by Gloria Grahame and Lee Marvin who run away with the show. They provide one of the legendary scenes in film history that just about everyone has either seen or read about, when Vince Stone (Marvin)--note the last name of Stone--pitches a container of boiling coffee into Debby Marsh's (Grahame) face, scarring her for life. Vince Stone's demise is also memorable. The coffee sequence alone is worth the price of admission.
    10Quinoa1984

    a hard boiled egg of a classic, with a side of coffee...

    Fritz Lang can conjure up a paranoid thriller with the greatest of ease (actually, it's probably a lot of work, but it looks easy, which is a feat unto itself), and The Big Heat provides some of his classic paranoia to the proceedings of a story of a good, hard cop on the trail of a case that's gone way too corrupt. There are simple visual touches, amid what looks like a standard-shot thriller (when compared to, say, M, which is Godly in its vision of the darkness of humanity's layers peeled back). But it's got the kind of grit to it that most likely inspired Dirty Harry, even if, arguably, Glenn Ford isn't quite as great a star as Clint Eastwood. He's got a style to himself, anyway, like someone who is almost TOO good, and knows it, which is why he'll get the job done even if it means some busted knuckles and a few cracked heads. He's a compelling force as Dave Bannion, and he's perfectly cast against a bunch of sinister, slimy characters (save for the women, and even one of them is just rotten).

    After a cop seems to have killed himself, the case looks open and shut. But there seems to be more for Bannion, as he didn't seem like a guy, from some accounts, to do himself in. Turns out there's a big cheese named Lagana who wants this put hush-hush like, and pays off the widow to keep a letter he wrote under wraps. But Bannion is suddenly put to the test, if only of himself, when his family is put in danger (with, of course, tragic results). Lang doesn't stop for a detail that isn't worthy of the attention of the narrative, and there's a connection that he makes between the world of the criminal underworld and the law: it's a place where there's some gray, but the black and white aspect rings through due to the situation at hand: corrupt cops, dirty criminals, and only a couple of dames to trust in the mix of it (one of them Debby, played in another great turn by Gloria Grahame, takes a savage incident with a pot of coffee via Lee Marvin's hand to wise up).

    It might not have the depth of an M or Scarlett Street, but the Big Heat is about as solid a genre piece as one could ask for, getting more harrowing from the first gun shot of the picture all the way to the final moment when Bannion leaves the office for a hit-and-run case (a cop's work is never finished, one might suggest). It's also got more intelligence for its conventional roots with the little things; for example, there's a point in the movie where something pivotal could've happened with Bannion's daughter and the thugs, but Lang makes a good step to push aside it, keeping the focus squarely on the task at hand instead of sidestepping the climax into cliché. Land understands how, for the sake of a piece of pulp fiction like this, to keep the lines in order, even if it might seem standard for today: keep Bannion's family wholesome, maybe TOO wholesome, with stories of three little kittens, and keep the criminal elements savage, sinister in their grins and suits and violence brimming underneath.

    One things for sure, it doesn't get much less thrilling than seeing Ford and Marvin in an unpredictable shoot-out. A+
    bob the moo

    Gritty, brutal, intense and powerful – a fantastic pot-boiler than stands out almost half a century later

    An honest, family man cop with a wife and daughter is put onto the investigation of another cop's suicide. He closes the case as suicide due to ill health. However when a women tells him another story and is promptly killed, Bannion just investigates further to find that powerful criminals and powerful politicians share the same table at dinner. When his family is split in an attack meant for him he loses his job and becomes bitter – he starts to become more like his enemies as he pursues them.

    This is a hardboiled thriller that would still stand up today as a tough film – violence and attitudes that make it feel more modern than it is. The story follows the descent of family man Bannion into violence and bitterness when he not only loses what is important to him, but when he finds that corruption at high levels has fed down into rank and file officers causing him to stand out when he tries to catch a criminal.

    The brutality of this film shouldn't be underestimated – Fritz Lang is no softy! Here we have women beaten and killed, we have sex crimes, we have a women disfigured by scalding coffee in her face. Of course all these things are unseen but this was the 50's! However it is still powerful and adds to the intensity of the film. The story may well have been done many times now – but imagine seeing something like this back then!

    The cast are great. Ford descends into bitterness really well and seems at ease as both thug and family man. The female cast are good in different ways but the one that catches the eye is a young Lee Marvin. I suspect Marvin got fame because his coffee attack stuck in people's minds – even today he is best know as a tough guy in the movies.

    Overall this is well worth hunting out – it is still being copied by many video thrillers and it just goes to show that you don't have to show gory or graphic violence on screen to be powerful, gritty or shocking.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Columbia wanted to borrow Marilyn Monroe from 20th Century-Fox to play the role of Debby Marsh, but Fox's asking price was too high. Gloria Grahame was cast instead.
    • Erros de gravação
      The street address for the junkyard on Bannion's list is "101", yet the number "1024" is seen on a large sign over the yard's shed.
    • Citações

      Debby Marsh: [to Bannion] Oh, well, you're about as romantic as a pair of handcuffs.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Caminhos Perigosos (1973)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      It's a Blue World
      (uncredited)

      Written by Chet Forrest and Bob Wright

      Heard instrumentally during one of the scenes at The Retreat

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    • How long is The Big Heat?Fornecido pela Alexa
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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 16 de novembro de 1953 (Canadá)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Los sobornados
    • Locações de filme
      • Columbia/Sunset Gower Studios - 1438 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 7.083
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 29 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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