AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
1,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter he learns that a gangster has taken over his nightclub and murdered his partner, returning WW2 hero Joe Miracle steals the money from the club's safe and hides in a settlement home, wh... Ler tudoAfter he learns that a gangster has taken over his nightclub and murdered his partner, returning WW2 hero Joe Miracle steals the money from the club's safe and hides in a settlement home, while the mob is on his tail.After he learns that a gangster has taken over his nightclub and murdered his partner, returning WW2 hero Joe Miracle steals the money from the club's safe and hides in a settlement home, while the mob is on his tail.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Leon Alton
- Piano Mover
- (não creditado)
William Bishop
- Radio Broadcaster
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Oscar Blank
- Tenant
- (não creditado)
Angela Clarke
- Clara Christopher
- (não creditado)
Gene Collins
- Yanzi's Cohort
- (não creditado)
Heinie Conklin
- Towel Deliveryman
- (não creditado)
Mikel Conrad
- Officer Miller
- (não creditado)
Ralph Dunn
- Tollgate Policeman
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
I was expecting a crime drama, maybe even a noir...what I wasn't expecting was a holiday film just shy of a holiday romance. WWII veteran Joe Miracle comes home to find a gangster has killed his best friend and business partner and taken over their night club. Joe has an inspired idea and steals the money out of the nightclub safe, although as one reporter put it...it is not exactly stealing if it is your money. With both the gangster with his men and the police after him, Joe seeks out first an old friend. There, he is mistaken for the friend and almost arrested if not for the interference of citizen do-gooder Jenny Jones. She offers up an alternative to arrest on Christmas Eve, counseling at the settlement home...but when Joe discovers the boat ticket his friend purchased for him isn't for another day and a half, he decides that a good place to hide might be in jail with his new mistaken identity. He proceeds to ring a bell and create a ruckus until the police return and arrest him. Unfortunately, Jenny Jones ends up interfering with the judge once again...which is how Joe ends up staying at the settlement home where he is put to work decorating for their upcoming Christmas party.
With bell ringing Santa's, Christmas trees, Christmas decorations, bells and a Christmas choir singing Christmas carols...this was a surprisingly festive holiday film. There is an overall moral message and a romance...the only thing I was surprised by was the ending it didn't quite match the overall holiday cheer. I loved the interaction between Joe and the boys in the Settlement house, but my favorite scene besides the bell-ringing one was the boys cutting down a Christmas tree in the park.
This is recommendation from me, while not my favorite crime drama it was fun to have a holiday offering in the genre.
With bell ringing Santa's, Christmas trees, Christmas decorations, bells and a Christmas choir singing Christmas carols...this was a surprisingly festive holiday film. There is an overall moral message and a romance...the only thing I was surprised by was the ending it didn't quite match the overall holiday cheer. I loved the interaction between Joe and the boys in the Settlement house, but my favorite scene besides the bell-ringing one was the boys cutting down a Christmas tree in the park.
This is recommendation from me, while not my favorite crime drama it was fun to have a holiday offering in the genre.
A war hero returns from the service and winds up stealing his own money back from the mob in "Mr. Soft Touch," a 1949 film starring Glenn Ford, Evelyn Keyes, John Ireland, and Ted de Corsa.
Ford plays Joe Miracle (shortened from his Polish name) who comes home before Christmas and finds out his partner in a club has been murdered by the mob, and the mob has taken his money. Joe retaliates by breaking into the club and stealing $100,000 from the safe. With everyone looking for him, Joe has a friend buy him a ticket to Japan, but the ticket is for a later date. So he takes off and enters a settlement house run by Jenny Jones (Evelyn Keyes). Jenny thinks Joe is a musician down on his luck. Meanwhile, a newspaper columnist who knows what happened wants Joe's story and is trying to track him down. In writing about Joe, the mob picks up his trail.
Given the cast, Mr. Soft Touch was obviously intended to be a noir but turns into kind of a Christmas romance with comic aspects. For some reason it failed to hold my interest, even though I love Glenn Ford. The acting was good all around, but I preferred the beginning noir and wish it had stayed on that route. The original director was replaced, possibly to change the direction of the movie.
Someone on this board mentioned that John Garfield would have been better in this role. He would have been very good as he always was, but he and Ford were different kinds of types and actors. Garfield looked and acted tough, and Glenn Ford was Everyman. I think his casting in this is the better choice. Joe is a likable, nice guy who was ripped off by the mob while he was off serving his country. Glenn Ford didn't have Garfield's range, but in the right role, he was very effective. And, I might add, easy on the eyes.
Ford plays Joe Miracle (shortened from his Polish name) who comes home before Christmas and finds out his partner in a club has been murdered by the mob, and the mob has taken his money. Joe retaliates by breaking into the club and stealing $100,000 from the safe. With everyone looking for him, Joe has a friend buy him a ticket to Japan, but the ticket is for a later date. So he takes off and enters a settlement house run by Jenny Jones (Evelyn Keyes). Jenny thinks Joe is a musician down on his luck. Meanwhile, a newspaper columnist who knows what happened wants Joe's story and is trying to track him down. In writing about Joe, the mob picks up his trail.
Given the cast, Mr. Soft Touch was obviously intended to be a noir but turns into kind of a Christmas romance with comic aspects. For some reason it failed to hold my interest, even though I love Glenn Ford. The acting was good all around, but I preferred the beginning noir and wish it had stayed on that route. The original director was replaced, possibly to change the direction of the movie.
Someone on this board mentioned that John Garfield would have been better in this role. He would have been very good as he always was, but he and Ford were different kinds of types and actors. Garfield looked and acted tough, and Glenn Ford was Everyman. I think his casting in this is the better choice. Joe is a likable, nice guy who was ripped off by the mob while he was off serving his country. Glenn Ford didn't have Garfield's range, but in the right role, he was very effective. And, I might add, easy on the eyes.
"Mr. Soft Touch" is an odd sort of film. It's like merging a film noir movie with a schmaltzy family film--and the results are far from great. Now I am not saying it's a bad picture--but it could have easily been a lot better--mostly because of its saccharine script.
The film begins with Glenn Ford on the run. It seems he held up a nightclub and stole $100,000. But was it exactly stealing? It seems that the club had belonged to Ford but while he was off fighting in the war, it was stolen out from under him. So, the money is just payback for what was rightfully his--at least in his mind. The problem is that the mobsters who now run the place are not about to let him get away with it...and Ford needs to get out of the country ASAP.
Now here is where it gets bizarre. His boat doesn't leave for a day so Ford tries to get himself locked up for the night--as he figures at least he'll be safe. But a do-gooder social worker feels sorry for him and gets the police to agree to release him to her program--something Ford really doesn't want. And, after a while, Ford's tough-guy persona is slowly eroded as he starts to think of others and care about the people in this Salvation Army-like setting. What's next? Well, it is predictable but a bit ridiculous--so watch it if you are really, really curious. I wouldn't.
Ford's character is a bizarre enigma. He's supposed to be tough and nasty--and he's good at that. But later, he's supposed to be a softy--and this just never range true. Nor, for that matter, did the script.
The film begins with Glenn Ford on the run. It seems he held up a nightclub and stole $100,000. But was it exactly stealing? It seems that the club had belonged to Ford but while he was off fighting in the war, it was stolen out from under him. So, the money is just payback for what was rightfully his--at least in his mind. The problem is that the mobsters who now run the place are not about to let him get away with it...and Ford needs to get out of the country ASAP.
Now here is where it gets bizarre. His boat doesn't leave for a day so Ford tries to get himself locked up for the night--as he figures at least he'll be safe. But a do-gooder social worker feels sorry for him and gets the police to agree to release him to her program--something Ford really doesn't want. And, after a while, Ford's tough-guy persona is slowly eroded as he starts to think of others and care about the people in this Salvation Army-like setting. What's next? Well, it is predictable but a bit ridiculous--so watch it if you are really, really curious. I wouldn't.
Ford's character is a bizarre enigma. He's supposed to be tough and nasty--and he's good at that. But later, he's supposed to be a softy--and this just never range true. Nor, for that matter, did the script.
Joe Miracle (Glenn Ford) is on the run from the law. He's a returning vet who finds his San Francisco nightclub under the control of the mob. His friend and partner Leo is presumed dead. He steals $100k from formerly his own club and tries to sail for Yokohama on Christmas Eve. He assumes a different identity to hide until his ship arrives. Sweet social worker Jenny Jones believes him to be a down-and-out musician named Victor Christopher.
This is mostly crime drama with a touch of Christmas inspired goodwill. I don't care that much about the crime drama. The feel-good scenes are really touching. I love the blanket scene. I really wish that this is more a Christmas movie rather and less a neo-noir crime drama.
This is mostly crime drama with a touch of Christmas inspired goodwill. I don't care that much about the crime drama. The feel-good scenes are really touching. I love the blanket scene. I really wish that this is more a Christmas movie rather and less a neo-noir crime drama.
I see from other reviews that some viewers are troubled by this film's failure to fall squarely into the comedy or noir genres. Maybe that's why I like it, for isn't life a mixture of comedy and tragedy? My interest didn't flag during the movie as I found it fresh and original and the plot twists unpredictable. I'm not a big Glenn Ford fan but he hits this nail squarely on the head. Even though his Joe Miracle is more accurately a victim than a baddie, he has been sucked into the world of crime and violence. Can the beautiful Jenny Jones redeem him, and can he even survive? It's lineball all the way. Evelyn Keyes is just lovely to look at, and there's lots of character actors doing their bit, some of them only children. I'm going off to do a bit of research on who wrote it and who directed it. They deserve kudos. Surprisingly good entertainment.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesActor Roman Bohnen passed away from a heart attack shortly after filming on February 24th, 1949 a little more than 5 months before the movie's release.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn a long shot, Joe is driving through an alley that has one trash can. In a closeup shot, there are two tall trash cans and one short can into which he dumps the dough. When he returns to retrieve the money, the shorter can is on pavement with its top nowhere near where it was, almost level with the taller cans in the earlier shot.
- Citações
Joe Miracle: What's that smell?
Jenny Jones: Poverty.
- Trilhas sonorasLight Cavalry Overture
(uncredited)
Music by Franz von Suppé
Played when Joe is putting up Christmas decorations in the gym
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is Mr. Soft Touch?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Mr. Soft Touch
- Locações de filme
- Varennes Street and Union Street, San Francisco, Califórnia, EUA(police chasing Joe near the beginning - they make a right turn on to Union St. here)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 33 min(93 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente