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Du sang sur le tapis vert

Original title: Backfire
  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Gordon MacRae and Virginia Mayo in Du sang sur le tapis vert (1950)
While recuperating from wartime back injuries at a hospital, veteran Bob Corey is visited on Christmas Eve by a beautiful stranger with an even stranger message.
Play trailer3:59
1 Video
17 Photos
Film NoirHoliday RomanceCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

While recuperating from wartime back injuries at a hospital, veteran Bob Corey is visited on Christmas Eve by a beautiful stranger with an even stranger message.While recuperating from wartime back injuries at a hospital, veteran Bob Corey is visited on Christmas Eve by a beautiful stranger with an even stranger message.While recuperating from wartime back injuries at a hospital, veteran Bob Corey is visited on Christmas Eve by a beautiful stranger with an even stranger message.

  • Director
    • Vincent Sherman
  • Writers
    • Lawrence B. Marcus
    • Ivan Goff
    • Ben Roberts
  • Stars
    • Viveca Lindfors
    • Dane Clark
    • Virginia Mayo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Writers
      • Lawrence B. Marcus
      • Ivan Goff
      • Ben Roberts
    • Stars
      • Viveca Lindfors
      • Dane Clark
      • Virginia Mayo
    • 49User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Wanted for Murder
    Trailer 3:59
    Wanted for Murder

    Photos17

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Viveca Lindfors
    Viveca Lindfors
    • Lysa Radoff
    Dane Clark
    Dane Clark
    • Ben Arno
    Virginia Mayo
    Virginia Mayo
    • Nurse Julie Benson
    Edmond O'Brien
    Edmond O'Brien
    • Steve Connelly
    Gordon MacRae
    Gordon MacRae
    • Bob Corey
    Ed Begley
    Ed Begley
    • Police Capt. Garcia
    Frances Robinson
    • Mrs. Blayne
    Richard Rober
    Richard Rober
    • Solly Blayne
    Sheila MacRae
    Sheila MacRae
    • Bonnie Willis
    • (as Sheila Stephens)
    David Hoffman
    David Hoffman
    • Burns
    Ernest Anderson
    Ernest Anderson
    • James - Party Servant
    • (uncredited)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Fight Fan
    • (uncredited)
    Monte Blue
    Monte Blue
    • Detective Sgt. Pluther
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Bradley
    Paul Bradley
    • Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Russ Conway
    Russ Conway
    • Police Broadcaster
    • (uncredited)
    John Daheim
    John Daheim
    • Bingo - Prizefighter
    • (uncredited)
    John Dehner
    John Dehner
    • Blake - Plainclothes Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Gilbert
    • Fight Fan
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Writers
      • Lawrence B. Marcus
      • Ivan Goff
      • Ben Roberts
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.51.9K
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    Featured reviews

    youroldpaljim

    An interesting film noir.

    Bob Corey, a war veteran recovering in a V.A. hospital for a spinal injury, becomes alarmed when his war buddy Steve Connolly vanishes. One night while under sedation his visited by mysterious woman who informs him that Steve has been seriously injured and is in trouble with the law. Bobs nurse convinces him its all a dream. But when Bob is released from the hospital, he is questioned by police who want to know if he knows where he thinks Steve can be found. The police inform Bob that Steve is suspected of killing a gambler. Bob then sets out to find Steve and find the real killer. Along the way bodies pile up and Bobs search for leads him into the clutches of mysterious mobster named Walsh.

    BACKFIRE! is a well directed, photographed and acted noir mystery which holds one interest throughout. The ending comes as quite a surprise when the identity of Walsh is revealed. The cast is excellent, including many of the minor players. It was nice to see Virginia Mayo playing a good girl for a change in a film like this. The writers of this film must have had an obsession with spinal chord injuries, since both male leads suffer such injuries during the film.
    6evanston_dad

    Male Bonding, Film Noir Style

    A common cultural theme providing subtext for many a film noir was the alienation felt by servicemen returning from WWII to a world that had adapted itself to their absence. But that theme usually remained just that -- subtext. Rarely was it dealt with as overtly as in "Backfire," a modest entry in the genre from 1950, and this fact alone makes this otherwise forgettable film notable.

    Bob Corey (Gordon MacRae) and Steve Connolly (Edmond O'Brien) are war buddies, Corey layed up in a veterans' hospital recovering from a spinal injury, Connolly sticking close and providing him moral support. The night before Corey's release, while in a drugged haze, Corey receives a visit from a strange, exotic woman (Viveca Lindfors), telling him that Connolly has been injured himself and is asking for Corey. The next day, as he leaves the hospital, Corey is pulled into the police station, where the head of the homicide bureau (Ed Begley) tells him of the murder of crime boss Solly Blayne and evidence incriminating Connolly as the chief suspect. Corey sets out to find his friend in an attempt to clear his name, aided by his girl Friday, nurse Julie from the veterans' hospital, played fetchingly by Virginia Mayo.

    What's most interesting about "Backfire" is that though the film gives both men nominal love interests, they're much more interested in each other than either is about anyone else. It would be easy to read homosexual subtext into this film, as it is in many films noir, but it's not really played that way in the movie. The relationship between Corey and Connolly is that of two men who have had to rely on one another in literal life-and-death situations and who now do not know how to rely on anyone else.

    It was refreshing to see MacRae in a film like this -- I only really knew him from his string of 1950s musicals, and he equips himself well. O'Brien, a frequent presence in films of this sort, is right at home. And Mayo is a doll, looking for all the world like a 1940s version of Laura Linney. The climax of the film is a rote shoot-em-up, but as always with movies like "Backfire," the journey is a lot more fun than the destination.

    Grade: B
    7AlsExGal

    MacRae is unlikely star of a noir

    This was an interesting film featuring Edmund O'Brien as a man who seemingly disappears while being investigated for murder. Virginia Mayo plays the nurse of O'Brien's friend, Gordon MacRae who is laid up in the hospital after having multiple spine surgeries. MacRae was wounded in battle during WWII. It is not exactly said how long MacRae was in the hospital, but it was seemingly a long time--long enough for O'Brien to disappear, MacRae and Mayo to fall in love, and the very involved storyline to have taken place. I was also interested in seeing MacRae in a noir. Prior to this, I'd only seen the films he made with Doris Day. MacRae and Mayo are the stars of Backfire.

    In this film, they team up to locate O'Brien and determine if he really committed the crimes he's been accused of and to see if he still has MacRae's money. MacRae and O'Brien had planned to pool their funds and build and operate a ranch in Arizona after MacRae's out of the hospital. Most of the film's narrative is told via flashback as MacRae and Mayo meet and talk with people who saw O'Brien. When the characters are introduced, they tell a flashback as to how they knew O'Brien. Each of these stories provide clues as to the reason behind O'Brien's disappearance and also provide clues behind who could have possibly committed the murder(s) O'Brien is accused of. The narrative bounces back and forth between flashback and current time as MacRae and Mayo investigate O'Brien's disappearance.

    I thought this was a pretty decent noir and I especially liked the ending. Dane Clark (in a very surprising role), Ed Begley, Viveca Lindfors, and MacRae's wife, Sheila, round out the cast.
    dougdoepke

    Passable

    No need to recap the plot. Those first few scenes in the hospital are charming, when not also spooky. The chemistry between Mayo and McRae is so infectious, I expected them to burst into song at any moment. But then there's that spectral visitation at the foot of McRae's bed. It's expertly staged, surpassing in impact anything else in the film.

    However, both the screenplay and the direction go downhill following this promising start. It's a complicated narrative whose alternating threads between flashback and real time are clumsily woven. At the same time, focal shifts between McRae and O'Brien further dislocate the viewer, (and why is Dane Clark given top billing with such limited screen time ).

    At the same time, director Sherman doesn't appear to have a feel for the material, filming in flat impersonal style despite noirish touches from cinematographer Guthrie. Good thing that fine actor Eddie O'Brien is on hand to carry the acting department. McRae is handsome and likable, but without the needed gravitas of crime drama, while the ravishing Lindfors's best scene is as the apparition.

    I like reviewer Brocksilvey's comments on the male-bonding aspects that I overlooked. In my experience, it's a very real part of military life and need have nothing to do with same sex attraction. Rather it has to do, I think, with the sharing of grueling experiences and the bonds thereby established, ones which can go deeper than more conventional types. Happily, the movie suggests the very sort of bonding Brocksilvey expresses.

    Anyway, in my view, the movie's a passable crime drama, but nothing more.
    7bmacv

    Returning vets drawn into cesspool of postwar Los Angeles

    The dislocation felt by returning servicemen was one of the chief topical themes of the film noir cycle. After being primed to take risks but no prisoners in the anarchic and violent theaters of World War, many found it hard to ratchet back down upon their return to an often jarringly altered society. Amnesia was the primary noir metaphor -- having to reconstruct an entire past life from scratch. Others faced having to cope with disabilities; still others, having spent the "best years of their lives" in hellholes abroad, weren't about to wait for the high life on the installment plan.

    Backfire forgoes amnesia for the latter two categories. Gordon MacRae recuperates from spinal-cord injuries in a veterans' hospital until he can get out and buy a ranch with army buddy Edmond O'Brien, who abruptly vanishes. Upon release, MacRae sets out to track him down through the labyrinthine underbelly of postwar Los Angeles. It looks like O'Brien got mixed up with heavy gamblers, and is in fact wanted for apparently murdering a syndicate kingpin. MacRae is aided in his quest by his nurse (Virginia Mayo, good as a good gal for once) but thrown off the trail by a mysterious foreigner (Viveca Lindfors, as a discount-chain Ingrid Bergman). But, as always in the noir scheme, things are rarely what they at first seem....

    No masterpiece, Backfire nevertheless keeps up the pace and the suspense, drawing (like Somewhere in the Night) on themes and formats that were central concerns of the cycle.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Completed in October 1948, and bears a 1948 copyright statement on the opening credits, but not released until 1950.
    • Goofs
      Every time one of the principals takes a cab, it's always the same 1936 De Soto that had been part of the WB studio inventory since the mid-1930s. It still was being used in films, though by the time this one was made, post-WWII 1946, 1947, and 1948 De Sotos had become the norm on most city streets. A real 1936 cab would have been worn out and scrapped because no cars were made for such use during the war. Likewise, the police chief of Los Angeles is still running around in another long-time pre-WWII WB veteran vehicle, a 1940 Buick 4-door sedan.
    • Quotes

      Bob Corey: [after Quong closes his eyes] Can't you help us, doc? Can't you do something?

      Quong's Doctor: [after opening Quong's eyelid] I'm afraid the next time he talks it'll be to his ancestors.

    • Connections
      Referenced in I Love Lucy: The Fashion Show (1955)
    • Soundtracks
      Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
      (1739) (uncredited)

      Written by Charles Wesley and Felix Mendelssohn (uncredited)

      Sung during the Christmas scene at the beginning

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 11, 1950 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pasión desenfrenada
    • Filming locations
      • Fremont Hotel - 401 South Olive Street, Los Angeles, California, USA(hotel where Corey and Connolly stayed - demolished 1955)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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