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IMDbPro

The Fat Man

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1 h 18 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
649
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Rock Hudson, Emmett Kelly, Julie London, and J. Scott Smart in The Fat Man (1951)
CrimeDramaFilme NoirSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA dentist's murder is investigated by hefty sleuth Brad Runyan.A dentist's murder is investigated by hefty sleuth Brad Runyan.A dentist's murder is investigated by hefty sleuth Brad Runyan.

  • Direção
    • William Castle
  • Roteiristas
    • Harry Essex
    • Leonard Lee
    • Dashiell Hammett
  • Artistas
    • J. Scott Smart
    • Julie London
    • Rock Hudson
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    649
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • William Castle
    • Roteiristas
      • Harry Essex
      • Leonard Lee
      • Dashiell Hammett
    • Artistas
      • J. Scott Smart
      • Julie London
      • Rock Hudson
    • 21Avaliações de usuários
    • 5Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos10

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    Elenco principal58

    Editar
    J. Scott Smart
    J. Scott Smart
    • Brad Runyan
    Julie London
    Julie London
    • Pat Boyd
    Rock Hudson
    Rock Hudson
    • Roy Clark
    Clinton Sundberg
    Clinton Sundberg
    • Bill Norton
    Jayne Meadows
    Jayne Meadows
    • Jane Adams
    John Russell
    John Russell
    • Gene Gordon
    Jerome Cowan
    Jerome Cowan
    • Police Lieutenant Stark
    Emmett Kelly
    Emmett Kelly
    • Ed Deets
    Lucille Barkley
    Lucille Barkley
    • Lola Gordon
    Robert Osterloh
    Robert Osterloh
    • Fletcher
    Harry Lewis
    Harry Lewis
    • Happy Stevens
    Teddy Hart
    • Shifty
    Eric Alden
    Eric Alden
    • Guard
    • (não creditado)
    Parley Baer
    Parley Baer
    • Police Detective O'Halloran
    • (não creditado)
    Ray Bennett
    Ray Bennett
    • Phil
    • (não creditado)
    Peter Brocco
    Peter Brocco
    • Racetrack Bookkeeper
    • (não creditado)
    Douglas Carter
    • Stage Manager
    • (não creditado)
    Jack Chefe
    • French Chef
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • William Castle
    • Roteiristas
      • Harry Essex
      • Leonard Lee
      • Dashiell Hammett
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários21

    6,2649
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7skallisjr

    Media Crossover

    When I was growing up, pre-television, we used to listen to many radio shows. One of these was The Fat Man, starring J. Scott Smart. This, as with some other radio shows, was made into a movie. The casting of Smart in the title role was good, since he looked the part and the sound was identical to the radio program.

    In virtually every radio show, Bradford Runyan is hired to solve a crime; the film carries on the tradition. However, the radio program lasted for only a half hour, and even though there was a "time compression" effect, there was time to do significantly more in the film. As an example, Runyan asks a lady to dance, and when she accepts, he acquits himself well. That could never have worked on the radio program, to be sure.

    For those of us who remember the program, there's a lot of nostalgia in the film. For those who never heard the show (such as my wife), it's still okay, but probably not as valued.
    7grainstorms

    Biggest PI in radio moves gracefully to Hollywood

    William Castle is today mostly remembered for his clever exploitative gimmicks, which made horror films like "Macabre," "House on Haunted Hill," "The Tingler," etc., both terrifying and fun.

    But he started out making movies in another tradition—noir. Without gimmicks.

    In 1951's low-budget "The Fat Man," made for Universal, Castle borrows from another medium, taking a popular radio mystery program and transforming a broadcast melodrama into an exciting yet droll movie thriller, with unexpected pleasures.

    His lead, the basso profundo J. Scott Smart, is exceptionally good in his role as Brad Runyon, alias The Fat Man, a private detective who is not your average PI. Brad is a well-spoken, well-read, pleasure- loving, sweet-tempered, middle-aged, 270-lb mountain of a man wearing a quirky moustache right out of a Nineteenth-Century daguerreotype.

    However, The Fat Man is neither a hog nor a dunce. J Scott Smart's full and fine performance turns an unconventional private eye into a charming and intelligent investigator who is much cleverer than anyone else around him. (He's also tough when need be, packing a snub-nosed .32, and even graceful when the occasion calls for it, wowing with his agile and bouncy, if pachydermic dance steps.)

    After her employer is found dead, dental nurse Jayne Meadows (in real life, married to pioneering late night TV host Steve Allen) seeks out the food-loving Fat Man, who, in an entertaining intro, is showing a collection – a mélange, if you will -- of a great many chefs how to not spoil the broth.

    Certain dental records are missing, and the nurse believes this may have something to do with the dentist's death. (Meadows plays the dental nurse with sympathy and with more than a little sadness.)

    The unusual details of the dentist's death and his nurse's obvious distress hit a nerve, and The Fat Man takes on the case for nothing! (Always interested in filling himself, he just can't brush off such a toothy puzzle.)

    The trail of the missing dental X-Rays leads Private Eye Runyon from New York City to California -- and to an ex-con, nicely played by a young Rock Hudson.

    A sensible professional, Runyon works closely with the police, who cooperate courteously, if warily. Detective Lt. Stark, well-acted by Jerome Cowan, who himself a decade earlier had played Sam Spade's doomed partner in "The Maltese Falcon," treats him as a colleague, a refreshing change from the usual movie thriller adversarial relationship of PI vs. police.

    However, another movie tradition, the great sleuth's assistant who is dumber than a pound of wet liver, is still upheld. In a nicely comic turn, Clinton Sundberg handles the chores this chowderhead is saddled with a sweet enthusiasm, submitting to all sorts of indignities with a cheerful grace. Take note that nowhere in this movie does he get a salary check or even a tip.

    But The Fat Man has more to worry about than meeting a payroll. He has to sift through a couple more murders, outsmart a den of thieves, figure out the answers to an unsolved half-million-dollar armored car heist involving a posse of rent-a-cops, and face a mysterious, rather scary pratfall of clowns. (In much more than the usual gratuitous guest-star appearance, famous clown Emmett Kelly pops up here in a fully-realized three-dimensional portrayal. He even speaks – and well, at that!)

    The plump private eye is put on the trail of a night-club entertainer played by the sultry Julie London, who possesses a valuable secret. Vulnerable under her veneer of hardness, the sensual beauty, who, in real life, was married to TV cop Jack Webb, sends Runyon in the right direction, leading eventually to an exciting show-down which is both scary and surrealistic.

    Cameraman Irving Glassberg (celebrated for being one of the discoverers of Clint Eastwood) allocates his limited budget prudently, nourishing the film's noirishness with skill and finesse. His intelligent camera moves restlessly across patterned floors, picking up random gleams from the polished glass and metal of an elegant hotel lobby late at night, the few humans abroad seen as ominous shadows.

    A circus subtheme effectively adds still another dimension to the film. At one point, for instance, the Fat Man rents a British two- seat sports car -- an MG or a Morgan -- that looks like it may be too tiny for a five-year-old, let alone a behemoth like himself. As he shoehorns himself into the tiny car, which isn't much more than a roller skate with a motor, you can practically hear it groan. The camera mercifully looks away, before we learn how he manages to squeeze out of it.

    In another telling, even unsettling scene, what looks to be a whole platoon of bank guards in black SS-like uniforms tumble out of an armored truck, like one of those teeny-weeny circus clown cars that can hold an entire sideshow of grease-painted circus clowns plus their painted poodles and made-up monkeys plus a lifetime supply of inflated balloons .

    Filmed only a few years after the Second World War, in crisp black and white, "The Fat Man," though an unpretentious B movie that sort of got lost in the crowd, is a rich chowder of admirable acting and appealing directorial details. Without gimmicks.
    7LeonLouisRicci

    INTERESTING PARTICIPANTS...SOME STYLE...RICH & REWARDING PLOT

    This Movie, Fashioned from a Long-Running (341 Episodes) Radio-Mystery.

    The Show Featured the Detective of the Title and J. Scott Smart Transformed the Role to this Film.

    Fans could Now put a Face to the Suave, Cultured, Rotund Crime-Solver.

    This Dashiell Hammett's Character can Claim to be the Opposite of His "Mega-Star, the "The Thin Man".

    But Didn't Click On-Screen and the Film Failed to Become a Series.

    No-Doubt Television Took On the Source of Many B-Movies.

    Detective-Series Radio Now Detective-Series TV.

    This Movie had the Foundations of a Very Smart and Fun Film-Series.

    William Castle Directed with His Seasoned B-Movie Credentials.

    J. Scott Smart Successfully Cultivated the Character on Radio and seems Natural On-Screen.

    Bringing a Sense of Humor, Type, and a Certain Confidence Despite His Over-Size.

    However, one of the Film's Shortcomings is the Over-Reliance on Comedy Relief.

    Rock Hudson in His First Real Performance is Fine as an Actor, and as was Said at the Time...

    "The Camera Loves Him"

    Also of Note, the Cast Includes...

    Jayne Meadows (the Honeymooners Wife of Ralph Kramden, Alice.

    Julie London, Exotic, Sultry Recording Star.

    John Russell went on to have a Successful Career as an Adventurer on TV and Movies.

    Last but Not Least, Emmett Kelly.

    Famous Hobo Circus Clown, and in this Movie...He Speaks.

    With All these Things Surrounding this Good Effort, it is Certainly...

    Worth a Watch.
    UNOhwen

    HighlyUnderrated Noir!

    I recently caught this film, and inspire of its ...slightly above middle-range rating, I decided to watch it.

    After all, it's an early Rock Hudson film,but, for me, the real clincher was it had a rare film appearance by the incomparable Ms Julie London.

    I'm too young to have experienced the age of radio (but, I did grow up listening, nightly, to CBS Radio Myster Theater to understand just how great it could be), and an eclectic group of actors, as well as directed by Mr William Castle made this too intriguing to not give a chance.

    I'm very happy I did.

    The story's a classic, 'whodunnit', and it's got all the 'bells and whistles' of a really good noir film (aside from inky-black scenes shot in various locations), including a couple of character actors who should be familiar to most - if not by name, nor appearances, but, by their singular voices, and mannerisms (Messers William Castle,and Marvin Kaplan, as the 'fat man's' assistant, bill, and as 'pinkie', an uncredited role as a delivery truck assistant/brother-in-law).

    I never knew Mr Castle had made any noir films, a d after enjoying this one, I really wish he had, because, he knows how to use his abilities in this genre, and have them work to their fullest.

    This is a real hidden gem!
    6csteidler

    Somewhat hard to figure but entertaining

    The Fat Man opens with the murder of a dentist. We spend a good chunk of the next hour wondering not so much who did it, as why. It's a fairly straightforward plot, but one with many threads and characters, including a clown, some dental records, a just-released convict who comes into some money and then disappears, and a police detective who—unusually for private eye movies—is open, cooperative, and even intelligent!

    J. Scott Smart looks comfortable in the role of Brad Runyan, aka the Fat Man. Familiar faces fill the rest of the cast, including Jayne Meadows in a good serious role as the dentist's nurse; Jerome Cowan as the helpful if bemused policeman; Clinton Sundberg as a kind of goofball assistant; and an eager-looking young Rock Hudson as the con and Julie London as his sometime girlfriend.

    The Fat Man was apparently a radio detective making a jump to movies that didn't take; not having any familiarity with the radio program, I can only say that this portly detective is considerably more physically active than the obvious comparison: whereas Nero Wolfe rarely emerges from his brownstone on 35th Street, Brad Runyan thinks nothing of hopping a flight to California, risking life and limb in a shootout, or even dancing in a nightclub. (He does, however, share Wolfe's passion for fine food.) To put it another way—Smart as Runyan is easily closer akin to William Conrad as Cannon than Conrad as Wolfe.

    The film as a whole offers bits of humor, some action, and a pretty fair mystery with quite a well done climactic scene. If they had indeed turned this into a series, I would seek out the other entries; however, I'm afraid 1951 was not the right time to start a detective series—at least, not one for the big screen.

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    • Curiosidades
      As Jane Adams (Jayne Meadows) is searching the files for a dental record, she passes an index card bearing the name Ray Chandler, an inside reference to the detective-story writer Raymond Chandler.
    • Trilhas sonoras
      A Dream Ago
      (uncredited)

      Music by Milton Rosen

      Lyrics by Everett Carter

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How long is The Fat Man?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 19 de maio de 1951 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Muerte en el circo
    • Locações de filme
      • Biltmore Hotel - 506 S. Grand Avenue, Downtown, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 18 min(78 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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