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IMDbPro

Le Pacte des tueurs

Original title: Big House, U.S.A.
  • 1955
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Charles Bronson, Lon Chaney Jr., Broderick Crawford, Felicia Farr, and Reed Hadley in Le Pacte des tueurs (1955)
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

Gerry Barker finds a lost boy whose rich father is extorted into paying a ransom for his return but the boy accidentally dies and Gerry goes to prison.Gerry Barker finds a lost boy whose rich father is extorted into paying a ransom for his return but the boy accidentally dies and Gerry goes to prison.Gerry Barker finds a lost boy whose rich father is extorted into paying a ransom for his return but the boy accidentally dies and Gerry goes to prison.

  • Director
    • Howard W. Koch
  • Writers
    • John C. Higgins
    • George W. George
    • George F. Slavin
  • Stars
    • Broderick Crawford
    • Ralph Meeker
    • Reed Hadley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Howard W. Koch
    • Writers
      • John C. Higgins
      • George W. George
      • George F. Slavin
    • Stars
      • Broderick Crawford
      • Ralph Meeker
      • Reed Hadley
    • 24User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos57

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    Top cast19

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    Broderick Crawford
    Broderick Crawford
    • Rollo Lamar
    Ralph Meeker
    Ralph Meeker
    • Gerry Barker
    Reed Hadley
    Reed Hadley
    • Special FBI Agent James Madden
    William Talman
    William Talman
    • 'Machine Gun' Mason
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    • Alamo Smith
    • (as Lon Chaney)
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Benny Kelly
    Felicia Farr
    Felicia Farr
    • Emily Evans
    • (as Randy Farr)
    Roy Roberts
    Roy Roberts
    • Chief Ranger Will Erickson
    Willis Bouchey
    Willis Bouchey
    • Robertson Lambert
    • (as Willis B. Bouchey)
    Peter J. Votrian
    Peter J. Votrian
    • Danny Lambert
    • (as Peter Votrian)
    Robert Bray
    Robert Bray
    • Ranger McCormick
    William Boyett
    William Boyett
    • Ranger at Park Exit
    • (uncredited)
    Nelson Leigh
    Nelson Leigh
    • Madden's FBI Supervisor
    • (uncredited)
    Gregg Martell
    Gregg Martell
    • Accomplice on Fishing Boat
    • (uncredited)
    Bill McLean
    Bill McLean
    • Dipsy
    • (uncredited)
    Jan Merlin
    Jan Merlin
    • Tommy
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Ploski
    Joe Ploski
    • Convict
    • (uncredited)
    Stafford Repp
    Stafford Repp
    • Prison Warden Machek
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Howard W. Koch
    • Writers
      • John C. Higgins
      • George W. George
      • George F. Slavin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.61.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7masonfisk

    GREAT OPENING HALF GETS A LITTLE LOST IN THE BOTTOM...!

    A 1955 docudrama of a kidnapping gone wrong & the man who tried to make it happen. When an asthmatic kid goes missing in a national park, a crooked opportunist hears of this & tries to milk the situation by collecting ransom from his distraught father. Little does all concerned know that the poor boy would fall to his death from an elevated cabin which he escaped from, only for the kidnapper, played by Ralph Meeker, to toss his body into a forest canyon below. The FBI is called in & they capture Meeker sending him to jail w/o getting the particulars of the crime (Meeker is dubbed the Iceman for his reticence in not divulging any information). Once in stir, he meets up w/a group of convicts (Charles Bronson, Broderick Crawford, Lon Chaney, Jr. & William Talman make up some of this unit) looking to break out of prison w/the remaining ransom money (which Meeker stashed) used as a boon to keep himself alive during the escape which goes off w/o a hitch w/some of the team being killed along the way until the law finally catches up w/them back at the park. A great first half of the film gets lost in the second (almost feeling like two separate narratives which don't congeal in this 90 minutes affair!) w/a lot of the story beats sped along just to reach the end credits but I'd still recommend it for the terse first 45 minutes as the kidnapping & aftermath is thrilling & heartbreaking. Also starring Felicia Farr (she was married to Jack Lemmon) as one of Meeker's helpers, Stafford Repp (Chief O'Hara from TV's Batman) as the prison warden & William Boyett (from Adam 12) as a park ranger.
    dougdoepke

    Juicy Slice of Thick Ear

    The early 1950's witnessed a number of high profile kidnappings of wealthy offspring, the most notorious being the Greenlease grab in Kansas City for which the perpetrators were executed and the arresting detectives jailed for stealing the ransom money! It's not surprising that these headlines eventually worked their way into the movies. And a good little kidnapping and prison film this is.

    Big House USA benefits greatly from on-location photography in the scenic foothills of south-central Colorado, near the state penitentiary in Canon City where the prison scenes were filmed. The producers had the good sense to make the most of this unusual backdrop to a story line that is in many ways exciting but unexceptional. ( The only real drawback-- the underwater scenes of the prison escape, which appear to have been shot in a neighbor's backyard pool. The phony plants even bounce off the bottom as swimmers go by! Where was quality control on this one.)

    The producers also hired an outstanding cast of has-beens (Crawford and Chaney), up & comers (Bronson, Meeker, and Farr), along with the stentorian voiced Reed Hadley as the long arm of the law, and Peter Votrian, an appropriately sickly looking kid whose whiney demeanor could make you think twice about becoming a parent. The result, all in all, is a very watchable 90 minutes of cops vs. robbers and cons vs. screws. Then too, no movie from this period that features the bug-eyed William Talman should be passed up.
    6bkoganbing

    Per the Lindbergh Law

    Big House USA sounds like a prison picture, but only in part of the film is the setting a maximum security prison. There is the part how Ralph Meeker got there and the last part about his escape with several other solid citizens, residents of Big House USA.

    A young boy with one rich father is kidnapped by Meeker and dies while in his custody. Not that he killed him, but kidnapping alone as per the Lindbergh law gets him the gas chamber. Father Willis Bouchey pays the ransom, but gets no child back.

    Meeker is arrested, but all he's charged with is extortion, without a body dead or alive, the authorities can do no more. But with the reputation as a child killer, Meeker's not going to be a popular guy even in the maximum security federal penitentiary he's sent.

    But cell-mate Broderick Crawford has other ideas about the ransom money never recovered and buried in a national park. He and confederates Lon Chaney, Jr., William Talman, and Charles Bronson escape with Meeker. They had an escape plan in the works already, a quite ingenious one which costs another prisoner his life during a dry run.

    A chance to see all these guys in a film is never to be passed up. Crawford we're told is a smart guy. Personally if he were that smart he'd have realized that the authorities would know full well he was heading for the park and go anywhere else. But greed overtakes intelligence.

    There's also a nice role here for Felicia Farr as Meeker's accomplice. FBI man Reed Hadley and chief forest ranger Roy Roberts represent the law.

    Big House USA spends more time in the wide open spaces than in a maximum security prison. Still it's a tight little noir film with a fine cast of players.
    8kevinolzak

    Episodic but mostly gripping

    1955's "Big House, U. S. A." sounds like it might be spoofing the old prison pictures from prior decades, but don't let such a sadly generic title put you off from a bleak noir that deserves more than its ongoing obscurity. On location shooting at Royal Gorge Park in Colorado adds authenticity to a documentary-style account of an asthmatic boy reported lost in the wilderness, and the successful attempt by kidnapper Jerry Barker (Ralph Meeker) to blackmail $200,000 from his distraught father (Willis B. Bouchey), only to see the lad fall to an accidental death, Barker callously tossing the corpse into the gorge, never to be found by the authorities. Once caught, the unrepentant villain's unshakable demeanor earns him the moniker 'The Iceman,' an extortion conviction putting him in a prison cell next to a real wild bunch: Broderick Crawford top billed as ringleader Rollo Lamar, expertly planning a breakout; Lon Chaney as dope smuggler Alamo Smith; William Talman as small time murder for hire Machine Gun Mason; and a buff Charles Bronson as Benny Kelly, taking potshots at the newcomer as a cowardly baby snatcher. Rollo intends to 'kidnap the kidnapper' to force him to deliver the money secretly stashed away at the gorge, leaving behind a trail of dead bodies in his wake, scalded, shot, drowned, or just plain mutilated. It's truly grim stuff, surprisingly brutal for its time though curiously forgotten since Meeker's next role was that of Mike Hammer in Kubrick's 1956 classic "Kiss Me Deadly." Amidst these nefarious tough guys, leave it to reliable Lon Chaney to portray the lone character to earn any sympathy, he may also be a killer but in his carvings of beautiful women appears to have been a ladies man, still pining for the good old days much to Rollo's amusement. This was his 4th and final teaming with drinking buddy Brod Crawford, who was apparently less capable than Chaney of concealing his affliction off camera, while up and coming Charles Bronson shows he already had the physical stature to become an action star to be reckoned with.
    6Doylenf

    Grim documentary style prison drama is gritty and realistic...

    The story begins with a lost boy, a kidnapping, a ransom as extortionist RALPH MEEKER takes advantage of a situation which led to the death of the boy. The F.B.I. is soon on the case when the boy's father reports his disappearance. Meeker is sent to an island prison to serve a sentence as an extortionist who has $200,000 hidden somewhere.

    He's thrown in with some hardened criminal types--CHARLES BRONSON, BRODERICK CRAWFORD, LON CHANEY, JR.--labeled "the Iceman" because of his cool demeanor and icy gaze. Crawford has one of the film's best lines: "Well, the iceman cometh." Since no prison drama would be complete without an escape plan being hatched, BIG HOUSE U.S.A. is no exception. The suspense lies mainly in the survival of Meeker who is known as the most hated man in prison because he harmed a boy. Crawford devises an escape plan that includes Meeker, "the goose that laid the golden egg", so he can share the hidden loot with them. Of course, it's a crime doesn't pay melodrama, so in the end all their best laid plans go awry.

    Nice outdoor photography in Royal Gorge Park, Colorado, for the rugged scenes in the finale.

    Summing up: Well worth your time--interesting and gritty.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      There are two actors who played Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer (and both share a scene together): Robert Bray in My Gun Is Quick (1957), and the most famous, that came out the same year as this movie, Ralph Meeker in En quatrième vitesse (1955).
    • Goofs
      When they're fishing, the fish Rollo has on his line when he pulls it out of the water is obviously already dead.
    • Quotes

      Rollo Lamar: Any of you geniuses know what "apparently" means?

      Alamo Smith: "Apparently?"

      Rollo Lamar: Yeah.

      Benny Kelly: Yeah, it means that something that ain't, looks like it is.

    • Connections
      Featured in Kain's Quest: The Stone Killer (2015)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 18, 1955 (Belgium)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • MGM
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Big House, U.S.A.
    • Filming locations
      • Canon City, Colorado, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bel-Air Productions
      • Camden Productions Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.75 : 1

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    Charles Bronson, Lon Chaney Jr., Broderick Crawford, Felicia Farr, and Reed Hadley in Le Pacte des tueurs (1955)
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