CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Los agentes del Servicio Secreto hacen un trato con un recluso falsificador para que lo pongan en libertad condicional anticipada si lo ayuda a recuperar unas placas falsas que generan diner... Leer todoLos agentes del Servicio Secreto hacen un trato con un recluso falsificador para que lo pongan en libertad condicional anticipada si lo ayuda a recuperar unas placas falsas que generan dinero, pero planea traicionarlas.Los agentes del Servicio Secreto hacen un trato con un recluso falsificador para que lo pongan en libertad condicional anticipada si lo ayuda a recuperar unas placas falsas que generan dinero, pero planea traicionarlas.
Harry Antrim
- Warden
- (sin créditos)
Lucille Barkley
- Betty Mason
- (sin créditos)
George Barrows
- Federal Agent
- (sin créditos)
Ralph Brooks
- Federal Agent
- (sin créditos)
Lennie Burton
- Lawyer
- (sin créditos)
Steve Carruthers
- Agent in Pursuit Car
- (sin créditos)
Robert Carson
- Bill Mason
- (sin créditos)
Stephen Chase
- Secret Service Chief
- (sin créditos)
Ken Christy
- Deputy Marshal
- (sin créditos)
Bert Conway
- Mack Mantz
- (sin créditos)
Clancy Cooper
- Desk Sergeant
- (sin créditos)
Oliver Cross
- Nightclub Patron
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaPreserved and restored by the Film Noir Foundation and the UCLA Film and Television Archive, and premiered on Turner Classic Movies on 6 October 2019.
- Citas
John Downey: If you didn't have a gun on me, I'd beat your brains out. Cheap penny-ante grifter.
- ConexionesFeatured in Le Furet (2003)
Opinión destacada
Ordinarily you'd expect Lloyd Bridges to be tracking down perennial villain John Hoyt. But here the usual roles are reversed-- Hoyt's the government agent and Bridges the small time hood. The movie itself is pretty typical of the docu-dramas of the period. It's the Treasury Department's turn to get the Hollywood treatment with the usual glowing introduction and stentorian narration. Though, like the stellar docu-drama T-Men (1947), the docu part soon gives way to big city noir. However, this film lacks importantly the former's grotesque air of nerve-wracking suspense.
Director Fleischer and the writers manage a couple of nice twists, particularly at the beginning. Nonetheless, the script makes a basic error in switching the action from Stewart (Bridges) to Sylvester (James Todd) in the climactic part. (Was Bridges taken ill or otherwise made unavailable.) Unfortunately, Todd simply lacks the screen presence to intimidate an audience or make us loathe him, whereas Bridges can snarl and menace with the best of them. Thus the last third fails to generate the kind of mounting dread required of an A-grade suspenser. Then too, Hoyt's basically cold demeanor and cruel looks don't arouse much natural sympathy that would encourage you to identify with him. Thus, the suspense is further weakened by what should be an emotional interest in the treasury agent's fate. The casting here really is a departure from the expected and to the movie's detriment.
Note how the culminating shootout takes place at an industrial site-- the overnight barn for LA's late, lamented trolley system, where we get a look at what could have eased LA's horrendous traffic problem. Actually, industrial sites crop up in the climax of a number of crime dramas of the period-- White Heat (1949), 7-11 Ocean Drive (1950), Union Station (1950), et al. I guess producers of the time figured running around big machines and shooting at each other would make for colorful audience excitement. Of course, the movie's also notable for the presence of notorious Hollywood bad-girl Barbara Payton, who was involved in several tawdry Hollywood scrapes and apparently ended her brief life as something of a cut-rate call girl ("Hollywood Babylon"). Whatever the direction of her private life, she's quite good here as Bridges' shapely blonde moll.
Anyway, for its type, the movie's average at best.
Director Fleischer and the writers manage a couple of nice twists, particularly at the beginning. Nonetheless, the script makes a basic error in switching the action from Stewart (Bridges) to Sylvester (James Todd) in the climactic part. (Was Bridges taken ill or otherwise made unavailable.) Unfortunately, Todd simply lacks the screen presence to intimidate an audience or make us loathe him, whereas Bridges can snarl and menace with the best of them. Thus the last third fails to generate the kind of mounting dread required of an A-grade suspenser. Then too, Hoyt's basically cold demeanor and cruel looks don't arouse much natural sympathy that would encourage you to identify with him. Thus, the suspense is further weakened by what should be an emotional interest in the treasury agent's fate. The casting here really is a departure from the expected and to the movie's detriment.
Note how the culminating shootout takes place at an industrial site-- the overnight barn for LA's late, lamented trolley system, where we get a look at what could have eased LA's horrendous traffic problem. Actually, industrial sites crop up in the climax of a number of crime dramas of the period-- White Heat (1949), 7-11 Ocean Drive (1950), Union Station (1950), et al. I guess producers of the time figured running around big machines and shooting at each other would make for colorful audience excitement. Of course, the movie's also notable for the presence of notorious Hollywood bad-girl Barbara Payton, who was involved in several tawdry Hollywood scrapes and apparently ended her brief life as something of a cut-rate call girl ("Hollywood Babylon"). Whatever the direction of her private life, she's quite good here as Bridges' shapely blonde moll.
Anyway, for its type, the movie's average at best.
- dougdoepke
- 23 mar 2008
- Enlace permanente
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Trapped
- Locaciones de filmación
- Bank of America, 469 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, California, Estados Unidos(John Downey's bank, he meets Tris Stewart outside the bank after withdrawing money)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 18 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
What is the Spanish language plot outline for La última trampa (1949)?
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