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Trafic à La Havane

Original title: The Big Boodle
  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
592
YOUR RATING
Trafic à La Havane (1957)
CrimeDramaThriller

In pre-Castro Cuba, Ned Sherwood is caught between police and counterfeiters.In pre-Castro Cuba, Ned Sherwood is caught between police and counterfeiters.In pre-Castro Cuba, Ned Sherwood is caught between police and counterfeiters.

  • Director
    • Richard Wilson
  • Writers
    • Jo Eisinger
    • Robert Sylvester
  • Stars
    • Errol Flynn
    • Pedro Armendáriz
    • Rossana Rory
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    592
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Wilson
    • Writers
      • Jo Eisinger
      • Robert Sylvester
    • Stars
      • Errol Flynn
      • Pedro Armendáriz
      • Rossana Rory
    • 27User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Errol Flynn
    Errol Flynn
    • Ned Sherwood
    Pedro Armendáriz
    Pedro Armendáriz
    • Colonel Mastegui
    • (as Pedro Armendariz)
    Rossana Rory
    Rossana Rory
    • 'Fina' Ferrer
    Gia Scala
    Gia Scala
    • Anita Ferrer
    Jacques Aubuchon
    Jacques Aubuchon
    • Miguel Collada
    Sandro Giglio
    Sandro Giglio
    • Armando Ferrer
    Charles Todd
    • U.S. Treasury Agent Griswold
    Carlos Mas
    • Chuchu
    Guillermo Álvarez Guedes
    Guillermo Álvarez Guedes
    • Casino Manager
    • (as Guillermo Alvarez G.)
    Velia Martinez
    Velia Martinez
    • Salcito's Secretary
    Aurora Pita
    • Linen Shop Girl
    Rogelio Hernández
    • Miguel Salcito
    • (as Rogelio Hernandez)
    Francisco Canero
    • Police Doctor
    Louis Oquendo
    • Detective
    • (as Luis Oquendo)
    Enrique Cruz Álvarez
    • Police Lieutenant
    • (as Enrique Cruz Alvarez)
    Sonya
    • Dancer
    • (as Sonya and Rudy)
    Rudy
    • Dancer
    • (as Sonya and Rudy)
    Josefina Enríquez
    • Carmen
    • (as Josefina Enriquez)
    • Director
      • Richard Wilson
    • Writers
      • Jo Eisinger
      • Robert Sylvester
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    5.6592
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    Featured reviews

    7andy-83136

    Flynn not swashbuckling

    But actually acting ... several rungs higher than the last Roger Moore 007s. Get setting... high end Barista Havana.

    The women are not high end Hollywood, the character actors are unfamiliar but good... and the plot suitably twisted.
    6whpratt1

    Great Errol Flynn Classic

    It was great seeing Errol Flynn play the role as Ned Sherwood who gets himself involved in a counterfeit ring of gangsters in Havana, Cuba during the Pre-Castro Cuba days. This film is entirely filmed in Cuba and there is plenty of running around the famous Morro Castle and the Cuban Lighhouse. Rosanna Rory, (Fina Ferrer) plays a very sexy blonde gal who is fully stacked and simply loves Ned Sherwood. Gangster's beat up Ned quite often and he is hounded by the Cuban police and also has the attention from another gal who is Rory's sister. Rory's father is a banker in Cuba and is getting upset with all the counterfeiting going on, so his two daughter's manage to get the printing plates hidden in different locations and the gangster's are hot after Ned and Rory. This is a great black and white film and does cover up the features of Errol Flynn's face from all the booze and hard living he had done in his past. Entertaining film.
    rickrudge

    A good Errol Flynn movie in Cuba

    "The Big Boodle" (1957)

    I love movies about Cuba; "Godfather II", "Havana", "Our Man in Havana", and "Cuba". That must have been quite a big party place for North Americans to vacation to. Of course, if you were a resident, it must have been a totally different kind of place, and you could understand how Castro could get it's citizens to revolt from the powers-that-be.

    "The Big Boodle" takes place in Havana, Cuba before Castro came to power. It's a suspenseful mystery movie that showcases the tropical beauty of Cuba.

    Italian actress Rosanna Rory plays Fina Ferrer who passes some counterfeit (Boodle) money at the blackjack table to Ned Sherwood, played by Errol Flynn. Ned is a down-on-his-luck croupier, working at a Cuban casino. Normally a croupier is SOL if he gets bogus bills, and, as Ned says, they can only press it into their scrap book. Ned tries to give the money back to Fina without success.

    That night Ned gets mugged by a bunch of thugs outside of his apartment, and when the cops question him, they find the Boodle in his pocket. The police Colonel Mastegui, played by Pedro Armendáriz ("From Russia With Love" and "The Three Godfathers") thinks that he's the counterfeiter, or at least he can help them find the counterfeiters.

    Surprisingly, Ned is bailed out of jail by an anonymous benefactor. Now he finds that he's the target of the police, the counterfeiters (who think that he's got the printing plates) and other assorted characters. He feels that he needs to solve the mystery before he gets killed himself.

    At 48 years old, Errol Flynn looks kind of burnt out. You can obviously tell when they bring in the stunt double to do his fight scenes, but other than that, he still seems in good enough physical shape to do this movie. He is playing a down-trodden character in a film noir movie, so he's playing it like we see it.

    Of course one of the biggest stars of this movie is Havana itself. The beautiful palms, buildings and scenery are wonderfully photographed. The sound wasn't the best on the movie that I watched on Turner Classic Movies, but the music was great. Errol Flynn's character does a little bar-hopping, and you get to hear some of the old Cuban Jazz, Mambo, Conga, ChaChaCha; the salsa/reggaeton of the 50s. That was great!

    Over all, it's a nice little film. It wasn't a real fast-paced actioner, but a nice little noir movie that showcases a paradise that we might be able to see again some day. It's well worth you taping, or if it ever comes out on DVD, owning.
    6ArtVandelayImporterExporter

    Flynn shines in noir

    Errol Flynn - a casino dealer- gets handed fake pesos by a myserious blonde gambler. After he confronts her outside the casino, a trio of thugs jump him. Not only are the police not sympathetic about the mugging, they arrest him for possessing counterfeit money.

    And we're on our way. Like Cary Grant in North by Northwest, Flynn is a shmoe stuck in the middle of something. The movie has him trying to unravel that mess.

    Everybody is shady on some level. The dames are gorgeous. The location work is top-notch. The photography is beautiful.

    Flynn, despite the high mileage, still looks quite dashing. I mean, geezus, if I still looked that good at 48 and had female companionship half as old, I'd be on top of the world.

    And, as always, he's convincing in his role. He doesn't get the acclaim Hollywood's famous hambones get - Cagney, Muni, Kirk Douglas, Brando, et al. And compared to limited-range actors like Cooper, Wayne, Gable, Bogart, et al, he's a thespian.

    It's really too bad semi-literate Americans had such limited expectations of their movie stars that guys like Flynn were rarely allowed to stretch. And when they did their movies bombed. Historical perspective is a different matter. I enjoy his darker movies and this was no exception.
    6secondtake

    An unexciting story held afloat by a soild Flynn and excellent Garmes with the camera

    The Big Boodle (1957)

    Errol Flynn is most known for his swashbuckling pizazz in the 1930s, of course, but as his career dwindled he became embroiled in all kinds of controversies, including sleeping with underage girls, sympathizing with the Nazis, and becoming drinking buddies with Fidel Castro.

    The last of these matters here, for "The Big Boodle" might be the first film made entirely in Cuba by a US film company, and Flynn is clearly at home. Two years later he would make a now famous odd film, "Cuban Rebel Girls," where he befriends the rebels in their uprising. So this is an important precursor, and it's truly interesting in many ways. It's a crime film with shades of a late film noir infecting most of it. Flynn plays an American who gets in trouble, and has to go it alone with a couple of dangerous women around him. Classic noir stuff. But of course it's late in the cycle, just before "Touch of Evil" which is the symbolic end to the classic noir era.

    So there are lots of scenes outside in Havana (great architecture and American cars), some cuban music (nothing totally memorable), and a general mood of that amazing pre-Castro era where Americans and Cubans mixed like oil, water, and rum. For that alone it's worth seeing. But it's worth saying the Flynn is actually terrific in his role as a tired but determined American out to clear his name and save his life.

    The other key player in this whole enterprise (a low budget movie with big budget looks) is the cinematographer Lee Garmes, a true veteran and the man who shot "Detective Story" and "Caught" which are both cinematically brilliant. Garmes and Flynn make an unlikely collaboration (and I have no idea whether they were friends) but they make this movie actually rather workable. Is it

    "When you want something done right, you do it yourself." IN a way that's what these filmmakers did. The story is the biggest hurdle--there isn't much to worry about or get involved in as it goes. Even the final climax at a famous old fort above town is more about the photography and movement of characters than any sense of who might shoot who.

    A curiosity and not a waste of time, but nothing remarkable.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      As an intellectual of notably liberal opinions, director Richard Wilson must have been embarrassed by the screenplay's careful avoidance of any depiction of the reality of Cuban life in the last days of Fulgencio Batista's dictatorship. A line of dialogue even speaks of the the island having a government which is, at last, "not corrupt". In fact, the island had, at the time, one of the most blatantly corrupt governments on earth (largely controlled by American organized crime) and was on the verge of revolution. Presumably, Wilson and his cast and crew had to go along with the pretense that everything was fine in order to get permission to film on Cuban locations. Leading man Errol Flynn was, only a few months after making this film, an outspoken admirer of Fidel Castro's revolutionary forces, which seized control of the island on January 1, 1959.
    • Goofs
      When Ned finds the small semi-automatic pistol in the purse, he removes the magazine, but does not rack the slide to make sure there is not a round in the chamber - and returns the gun to the purse.
    • Quotes

      Armando Ferrer: Of course, in order to understand any of this, you must first understand Mastegui. His life, dedicated only to one end: the pursuit and destruction of criminals. I have no personal fondness for him, but...

      Ned Sherwood: Well, that's one thing we share in common: we both despise Mastegui.

      Armando Ferrer: Ahhh, but you are wrong, Senor. I do not despise him. I respect him. He is the only completely incorruptible man I have ever met. He trusts no one, he suspects everyone. He suspects *me.*

      Ned Sherwood: That's a suspicious cop.

    • Crazy credits
      Prior to any film information is the message, "We wish to express our sincere gratitude to the Cuban government and its agencies for their help in making this picture in Havana."
    • Connections
      Referenced in Errol Flynn, le diable de Tasmanie (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      HAVANA
      Written by Raúl Lavista (as Raul Lavista)

      Performed by uncredited singing group

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The Big Boodle?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 14, 1957 (Finland)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Big Boodle
    • Filming locations
      • Morro Castle, Cuba
    • Production company
      • Monteflor Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $600,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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