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La vengeance de Scarface

Original title: Cry Vengeance
  • 1954
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
770
YOUR RATING
Skip Homeier, Martha Hyer, and Mark Stevens in La vengeance de Scarface (1954)
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

Violent ex-cop Vic Barron comes to Ketchikan, Alaska seeking revenge on an old enemy.Violent ex-cop Vic Barron comes to Ketchikan, Alaska seeking revenge on an old enemy.Violent ex-cop Vic Barron comes to Ketchikan, Alaska seeking revenge on an old enemy.

  • Director
    • Mark Stevens
  • Writers
    • Warren Douglas
    • George Bricker
  • Stars
    • Mark Stevens
    • Martha Hyer
    • Skip Homeier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    770
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mark Stevens
    • Writers
      • Warren Douglas
      • George Bricker
    • Stars
      • Mark Stevens
      • Martha Hyer
      • Skip Homeier
    • 26User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Top cast15

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    Mark Stevens
    Mark Stevens
    • Vic Barron
    Martha Hyer
    Martha Hyer
    • Peggy Harding
    Skip Homeier
    Skip Homeier
    • Roxey Davis
    Joan Vohs
    Joan Vohs
    • Lily Arnold
    Douglas Kennedy
    Douglas Kennedy
    • Tino Morelli
    Cheryl Callaway
    • Marie Morelli
    Mort Mills
    Mort Mills
    • Johnny Blue-Eyes
    Warren Douglas
    Warren Douglas
    • Mike Walters
    Lewis Martin
    Lewis Martin
    • Nick Buda
    Don Haggerty
    Don Haggerty
    • Lt. Pat Ryan
    John Doucette
    John Doucette
    • Red Miller
    Dorothy Kennedy
    • Emily Miller
    Edward Clark
    Edward Clark
    • Shop Owner
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Deacon
    Richard Deacon
    • 'Shiny' Sam - Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    Bert Stevens
    Bert Stevens
    • Bar Patron
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mark Stevens
    • Writers
      • Warren Douglas
      • George Bricker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.3770
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    Featured reviews

    4ccthemovieman-1

    No Excuse To Have This Movie Lag In So Many Spots

    This is a late entry in the film noir genre and maybe helped ruin this wonderful type of film. This was just too boring, too melodramatic for a good noir.

    It starts off fine but cools off - no pun intended - shortly after "Vic Barron" (Mark Stevens) arrives in Alaska. We see the slow transformation of a hard-nose vengeful man into a decent guy. At least I liked the Alaskan scenery. Who doesn't?

    Actually, the villain "Roxey Davis" (Skip Homeier) was somewhat cool with this strange blonde head of hair. The women, led by Martha Hyer, were decent to watch, too. However, an 83- minute film, especially with good villains and good scenery - shouldn't lag this much.
    mgtbltp

    Not a bad film at all

    Here is another off the radar Noir, its not listed in the Encyclopedic Reference to American Film Noir but its no doubt a Noir though "noir light" most of the action takes place in Ketchican, Alaska and the film has great locations and action sequences using the town and its environs making full use of the vertical aspect of the town, its waterfront docks and the paper mill.

    Story is ex cop Vic Barron (Stevens) was not only framed (and sent up for 3 years) by the mob, but also had his face partly blown off while his wife and child were killed in a a car explosion, is out of prison and looking for vengeance. He's looking for mob boss Morelli (Kennedy) who has changed his name and is living as a model citizen with is young daughter and a bodyguard in Ketchican. Mob hit man Roxy (Hormeier) is sent by San Francisco racketeer to take care of all three.

    Martha Hyer & Cheryl Callaway provide some nice eye candy, the daughter of mob boss takes a liking to Barron a bit too easily (different times compared to today's zeitgeist of not trusting strangers) but its nothing that will detract from the film if you keep the times in mind, streaming on Netflix
    dougdoepke

    Holds Interest

    Fast and efficient slice of thick-ear, with a plot borrowed from previous year's The Big Heat (1953). The producers, however, had the good sense to locate the action in Ketchican, Alaska, definitely not an over-used locale. Director Stevens makes good use of the outdoor settings, lending exotic flavor to the action. To bad that the photography is definitely non-noir. But then the interiors were filmed in a TV studio.

    The plot may be borrowed, but there's an interesting wrinkle. Namely, nominal, good guy Stevens is more fearsome than the ostensible mobster, bad guy Kennedy. That's because Stevens thinks Kennedy killed his family and framed him. Now, ravaged with revenge, Stevens wants to kill Kennedy's family, including his winsome little daughter. So, we're left wondering just who to root for. Then there's the psycho hit-man Homeier who's kind of a wild card in a mop of ultra- blonde hair. (Note, for example, the cold-hearted abruptness of the execution scene.) Add a number of familiar supporting players, like Mills and Doucette, and you've got a generally persuasive cast. And, oh yes, on the blondined distaff side mustn't forget barfly Vohs or the fetching Martha Hyer.

    Considering this movie along with Stevens' tour-de-force Timetable (1956), it's too bad his niche with b&w B-films was giving way to TV. In my book, he shows himself a filmmaker of more than average aptitude. Anyway, the movie's both interesting to follow and scenic to eyeball, a pretty good combination for any film.
    4secondtake

    The Alaska stuff is a nice aspect in a routine crime noir

    Cry Vengeance (1954)

    Leading man Mark Stevens falls something short of a cult figure. He is director and first actor in four movies from 1954 (this one, his first) to 1963. He plays his roles as if he is in control, which he is, literally, from the director's chair. He's the hardened type, and here he is bitter bitter bitter, to the point that he is not quite a fully developed character and it's hard to get absorbed in his problem.

    The rest of the movie is functional. It doesn't lack interest--for one thing, it's shot in Alaska, mostly (the exterior shots)--and the supporting cast is middling to good, filling roles we've seen before from pretty girl befriending the unlikely hero to chatty bartenders to a sweet kid who turns the man around through her innocence. And the filming (William Sickner, a routine cameraman with nearly two hundred B-movies to his credit) and editing, likewise, are workaday...the job gets done, but it lacks some kind of richness or aura or plain old drama.

    Then to make it a little more disappointing, a couple of the main themes are taken a little too directly from earlier noirs, namely "The Big Heat" which came out the year before. The theme, established right away, is a cop who is out for vengeance against whoever killed his wife and child in a car bomb meant for him. Stevens plays this part with cold certitude. It's an interesting film in some ways, but a clunker in many others. Take it for what it was, and what it is.
    6bmacv

    Knockoff of Big Heat shows fatigue of late noir cycle

    Cry Vengeance owes a debt to the previous year's Fritz Lang film The Big Heat. It too tells the tale of an honest cop whose family was killed in a mob-engineered explosion and who sets out as a crazed vigilante seeking redress. But while The Big Heat sizzles, Cry Vengeance stays tepid, perhaps owing to its sub-Arctic setting.

    The star of earlier noirs The Dark Corner and The Street with No Name, Mark Stevens directs himself as the hate-twisted protagonist, just out of prison after being framed and losing his wife and daughter. (Stevens has aged visibly, and it's not just the scarred-face makeup his character sports.) Strong-arm tactics with plenty of karate chops elicit the information that the man he holds responsible has assumed a new identity in Ketchikam, Alaska. But not only is Steven's arrival expected, he's followed by a platinum-haired gunsel who's the real killer (Skip Homeier, who bears a resemblance to Lee Marvin, The Big Heat's sadistic torpedo).

    Cry Vengeance matches its predecessor in brutality but comes up short everywhere else. Muddy photography wastes the scenic north, while the bland dialogue lacks the epigrammatic edge that's one of the joys of film noir (no "sisters under the mink" insinuation here as in Lang's film). The plot, with its double-crosses, needs a more baroque approach to sell itself.

    On the whole, Cry Vengeance falls victim to the fatigue that, by 1954, was beginning to beset the entire noir cycle. Plots and characters amount, basically, to retreads. Joan Vohs, as Homeier's sozzled moll, couldn't have given this performance without Gloria Grahame's the year before in The Big Heat. With Stevens looking tired, too, it doesn't augur well for Cry Vengeance. But it holds distinction as the only film noir set in the Alaskan Territory, as Hell's Half Acre of the same year was the only one set in the Hawaiian (it wasn't until 1959 that statehood was conferred on both territories).

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The Ketchikan airline depicted, Ellis Air, was an authentic Ketchikan company, founded by Bob Ellis in 1936. The aircraft shown in the movie is a Grumman G-21 Goose amphibious craft. If you look closely at the bottom of the plane you can see the wheels, which were used for ground landings. Ellis Air merged with Alaska Coastal Airlines in 1962, and this concern was itself taken over by Alaska Airlines in 1968.
    • Goofs
      Though Mark Stevens' character is named Vic Barron, his pinky ring clearly has his real initials, "MS."
    • Connections
      Referenced in Real Time with Bill Maher: Quentin Tarantino/Max Brooks/Dan Carlin (2021)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 26, 1957 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Cry Vengeance
    • Filming locations
      • Ketchikan, Alaska, USA
    • Production company
      • Lindsley Parsons Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Skip Homeier, Martha Hyer, and Mark Stevens in La vengeance de Scarface (1954)
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