AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
3,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Três homens investigam uma pequena cidade com muito cuidado, com planos de roubar o banco no próximo sábado, o que se torna violento e mortal.Três homens investigam uma pequena cidade com muito cuidado, com planos de roubar o banco no próximo sábado, o que se torna violento e mortal.Três homens investigam uma pequena cidade com muito cuidado, com planos de roubar o banco no próximo sábado, o que se torna violento e mortal.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Robert Adler
- Stan
- (não creditado)
John Alderson
- Amish Farmer on Train
- (não creditado)
Ellen Bowers
- Bank Teller
- (não creditado)
Virginia Carroll
- Carol, Martin's Secretary
- (não creditado)
Harry Carter
- Bart, Policeman
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
And tough hold-up picture with insignificant small-town stories erupt into drama . A competent bank job film that takes place in the burning light of the Midwest noonday without a shadow in sight , when a gang of hoodlums decides to steal the local bank . It results in a violent and lethal conclusion . Along the way , a number of otherwise insignificant small-town stories erupt into drama when the bunch of henchmen , often with quirky behavior , decides to rob the local bank . A father (Victor Mature) looking for pride in his child's eyes , a shy bank clerk (Tommy Noonan) who is a peeping Tom by night , a man (Richard Egan) striving to rewin his spouse's (Margaret Hayes) love , an Amish farmer (Ernest Borgnine) to defend his family has to face off the violent reality , and a proper older woman (Sylvia Sidney) become crook , all find themselves entangled with the bank thives .
This interesting movie contains marvelous performances from all concerned , suspense , thrills , exciting situations and some action . The film is part thriller , part Film Noir and part Melodrama resulting in an attractive and well-shot blending. An enjoyable caper movie adding some depiction of local characters with some really soapy elements tossed in for good measure and winding up in a peaceful weekend becomes violent . Compact drama : intense , well-made and acted , but not as incisive as it should have been . But here the really poignant and moving final half hour really stands out , as opposed to other more boring parts of the story . Any movie which features tough actors as Lee Marvin , Richard Egan , Ernest Borgnine, Victor Mature has to be some kind of primer in slobdom , but in fact Ernest plays a religious fundamentalist farmer and hero Mature soon becomes marginal when up against Marvin as a loose-lipped with a permanent head cold . Director Fleischer takes attention away from the thriller and into a moral battleground back at the farm where Borgnine faces with viciousness and ultimately gets his pitchfork . However , too much conversation and too little action bogs down this thriller , although the plot and intrigue is nice . There are excellent acting from some Hollywood's best players , including prestigious secondaries , such as : Stephen McNally , Virginia Leith , Tommy Noonan , Margaret Hayes , J. Carrol Naish , Brad Dexter , Dorothy Patrick and veteran Sylvia Sidney and brief role for Lee Marvin , being one of his several early roles where he perpormed a nasty gangster or a bad guy , before he eventually became a brave good guy/action hero.
It packs brilliant and glamorous cinematography in CinemaScope and De Luxe color by great cameraman Charles G. Clarke . Likewise , sensitive and rousing musical score by Hugo Friedhofer . One of the medium-budgeted films ever shot by Buddy Adler/Twentieth Century Fox and this motion picture was well directed by Richard Fleischer , though being marred by excessive family drama . Craftsman Richard Fleischer was a prolific filmaker with successes and flops , as he has an important , long and uneven career . The last fifteen years the Richard Fleischer's films were not exactly very bright , filming Charles Bronson or Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicles , but in his first twenty-five years had proved his own right as one of the most interesting directors of American commercial cinema . He was an expert director , including classy adventures (Vikings, 20.000 leagues under sea) , noir cinema (Narrow margin , Clay pigeons , Trapped) , Terror (Amityville 3-D) , Sci-fi (Soylent Green) , Sword and witchery (Conan the Destroyer , Red Sonja) , among others .
This interesting movie contains marvelous performances from all concerned , suspense , thrills , exciting situations and some action . The film is part thriller , part Film Noir and part Melodrama resulting in an attractive and well-shot blending. An enjoyable caper movie adding some depiction of local characters with some really soapy elements tossed in for good measure and winding up in a peaceful weekend becomes violent . Compact drama : intense , well-made and acted , but not as incisive as it should have been . But here the really poignant and moving final half hour really stands out , as opposed to other more boring parts of the story . Any movie which features tough actors as Lee Marvin , Richard Egan , Ernest Borgnine, Victor Mature has to be some kind of primer in slobdom , but in fact Ernest plays a religious fundamentalist farmer and hero Mature soon becomes marginal when up against Marvin as a loose-lipped with a permanent head cold . Director Fleischer takes attention away from the thriller and into a moral battleground back at the farm where Borgnine faces with viciousness and ultimately gets his pitchfork . However , too much conversation and too little action bogs down this thriller , although the plot and intrigue is nice . There are excellent acting from some Hollywood's best players , including prestigious secondaries , such as : Stephen McNally , Virginia Leith , Tommy Noonan , Margaret Hayes , J. Carrol Naish , Brad Dexter , Dorothy Patrick and veteran Sylvia Sidney and brief role for Lee Marvin , being one of his several early roles where he perpormed a nasty gangster or a bad guy , before he eventually became a brave good guy/action hero.
It packs brilliant and glamorous cinematography in CinemaScope and De Luxe color by great cameraman Charles G. Clarke . Likewise , sensitive and rousing musical score by Hugo Friedhofer . One of the medium-budgeted films ever shot by Buddy Adler/Twentieth Century Fox and this motion picture was well directed by Richard Fleischer , though being marred by excessive family drama . Craftsman Richard Fleischer was a prolific filmaker with successes and flops , as he has an important , long and uneven career . The last fifteen years the Richard Fleischer's films were not exactly very bright , filming Charles Bronson or Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicles , but in his first twenty-five years had proved his own right as one of the most interesting directors of American commercial cinema . He was an expert director , including classy adventures (Vikings, 20.000 leagues under sea) , noir cinema (Narrow margin , Clay pigeons , Trapped) , Terror (Amityville 3-D) , Sci-fi (Soylent Green) , Sword and witchery (Conan the Destroyer , Red Sonja) , among others .
The wide-screen format was at most only two years old when this film was made. Yet, Charles G. Clarke's shot composition in the new wide-screen format is beautiful. This alone makes the film worth watching.
This is a good example of a color film noir; perhaps not as good as Niagara (1953) or Leave her to Heaven (1945), which were made by the same studio by the way (20th Century Fox), but still a good example from the noir cycle in color.
One way to understand film noir is that it is simply violent melodrama. Look at The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) for example. Violent Saturday (1955) is steeped in melodrama, but there is also some extraordinary violence. And the violence here--in typical noir fashion--is the resolution--however bleak--to some of the melodramatic conflict.
The film has a profound cynicism grinding beneath the surface of the beautiful color photography. And this cynicism remains at the end of the film.
If you haven't seen this film and you are interested in film noir or film of this period, then I would highly recommend the Violent Saturday.
This is a good example of a color film noir; perhaps not as good as Niagara (1953) or Leave her to Heaven (1945), which were made by the same studio by the way (20th Century Fox), but still a good example from the noir cycle in color.
One way to understand film noir is that it is simply violent melodrama. Look at The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) for example. Violent Saturday (1955) is steeped in melodrama, but there is also some extraordinary violence. And the violence here--in typical noir fashion--is the resolution--however bleak--to some of the melodramatic conflict.
The film has a profound cynicism grinding beneath the surface of the beautiful color photography. And this cynicism remains at the end of the film.
If you haven't seen this film and you are interested in film noir or film of this period, then I would highly recommend the Violent Saturday.
The main reason I like this film is that the characters show what real people were like in 1955. It's a little like going back in time to an average american town where one observes various folks in everyday life including a variety of personal problems. Of course, I have always been nostalgic about the 50s as I spent my childhood in that era.
Combination crime-drama and soap opera, presumably a contract picture from Fox with many familiar faces (and Ernest Borgnine inexplicably cast as an Amish farmer!), turns out to be a pretty exciting movie. Three hoods plot to stick up a small town bank; meanwhile, hormones are boiling over at the new copper plant where the foreman's son is drinking himself into a stupor while his cheating wife runs around on the golf course ("You're an alcoholic," she tells him, "and I'm a tramp!"). There's also a married banker who lusts after a shapely nurse, a librarian with sticky fingers, and Victor Mature as a graduate whose oldest child is ashamed that his father never served his country. Director Richard Fleischer sets up the pieces of this story almost sluggishly, yet after about an hour of exposition the plot really starts cooking. There are some strong images here, and vivid cinematography by Charles G. Clarke (with excellent location shooting in Bisbee, Arizona and terrific usage of De Luxe color stock). The ensemble cast works admirably together, no one person upstaging the other; however, crooked Lee Marvin makes a fantastic entrance into town stepping on a child's hand in the street! Gripping, tense, and surprisingly well-written, with Richard Egan getting an emotional monologue at the end about the unfairness of death. An injured Amish child is forgotten about in the rush of excitement, and Borgnine in an Abraham Lincoln beard strains credulity, but the technical aspects and direction of the film are top-notch. *** from ****
The town of Bradenville is in for a Violent Saturday because three men, Stephen McNally, Lee Marvin, and J. Carrol Naish have come to town to rob their bank. McNally is the brains of the trio and for any number of reasons including the town's isolation, small police force, and the fact that the bank is open on Saturday until noon have made him determine this is the place for a stickup. He's even got a fourth guy Richey Murray staked out at an Amish farm holding the farmer Enest Borgnine and his family hostage, picked because of its isolation and the fact they have no electricity or modern communication to send up an alarm.
But this is some town Bradenville, while we see the bank robbers carefully timing out their job, we also get a glimpse of Bradenville's citizenry. Quite a little Peyton Place that town is.
Richard Fleischer as director managed to skilfully combine a soap opera and a crime caper film and it works. The script is very tight, not one frame of film is wasted. We get any number of interesting side stories in the 90 minute time of the film that do not detract in any way from the caper portion.
Victor Mature is the nominal hero of the piece, he gets carjacked and kidnapped, but proves to be a bit more than the robbers can handle. Ernest Borgnine stands out in the cast as the Amish father who has to question the pacifist tenets of his faith to protect his home and family.
A little bit of noir, a little bit of soap opera mixed very well in a good thriller of a film in Violent Saturday.
But this is some town Bradenville, while we see the bank robbers carefully timing out their job, we also get a glimpse of Bradenville's citizenry. Quite a little Peyton Place that town is.
Richard Fleischer as director managed to skilfully combine a soap opera and a crime caper film and it works. The script is very tight, not one frame of film is wasted. We get any number of interesting side stories in the 90 minute time of the film that do not detract in any way from the caper portion.
Victor Mature is the nominal hero of the piece, he gets carjacked and kidnapped, but proves to be a bit more than the robbers can handle. Ernest Borgnine stands out in the cast as the Amish father who has to question the pacifist tenets of his faith to protect his home and family.
A little bit of noir, a little bit of soap opera mixed very well in a good thriller of a film in Violent Saturday.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesOne of the lowest-budgeted films ever shot in CinemaScope and De Luxe color.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe car is started and put into gear so that it will crash through the barn door after which the engine stalls but, while it's still in gear, Stadt and Martin are able to easily push it out.
- Citações
Mrs. Emily Fairchild: Would you like me to have you thrown out?
Linda Sherman: Why don't you get mad enough to try it. All I want is an excuse to pull that hair right out of your stupid head.
[Mrs. Emily Fairchild looks away]
Linda Sherman: Guess you don't have the guts.
- ConexõesEdited into Verifica incerta - Disperse Exclamatory Phase (1965)
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- How long is Violent Saturday?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 955.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 30 min(90 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.55 : 1
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