Un subgerente de un banco de Los Ángeles diseña un plan para robar dinero de la bóveda del banco y huir a Brasil con su desprevenida esposa.Un subgerente de un banco de Los Ángeles diseña un plan para robar dinero de la bóveda del banco y huir a Brasil con su desprevenida esposa.Un subgerente de un banco de Los Ángeles diseña un plan para robar dinero de la bóveda del banco y huir a Brasil con su desprevenida esposa.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Raglin - Bank Teller #2
- (as Bill Hudson)
- Cleaning Woman
- (sin acreditar)
- Man in Barber Chair
- (sin acreditar)
- Bank Teller
- (sin acreditar)
- Bank Teller
- (sin acreditar)
- Airplane Passenger
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
'The Steel Trap' didn't disappoint at all. Completely agree with all of the users that have written of the film favourably and don't have an awful lot to add to their very well expressed reasoning. It may not quite be a classic and it is not quite on the same level as, briefly comparing, 'Shadow of a Doubt', but 'Steel Trap' is a fine example of a very good film with many brilliant elements. One of the better films seen for the first time this week on the whole in a mixed bunch quality-wise.
By all means the film isn't perfect. To me, it was too dimly lit in spots.
While unexpected the ending was a bit too abrupt and didn't quite gel with the rest of the film. It is true that there are some ridiculous spots, but to me it was not near as improbable as has been made out by some.
Any of those not so convincing spots are more than compensated and outweighed the literally non-stop high level of suspense, with the heisting being especially well staged and suitably panic inducing. The story is a very clever one and never felt too obvious or too convoluted with plenty of diverting and surprising turns. The script is tautly structured and has plenty of intriguing and entertaining lines. The direction is always efficient and stops the film from becoming dull or routine.
Despite the lighting being on the dim side, the photography is suitably stylish and has atmosphere. Dmitri Tiomkin's score is a mix of cheerful (in spots) and ominous with typically lush orchestration. Both Cotten and Wright are excellent. Especially Cotten, who balances fraught intensity and easy going likeability adeptly, one oddly roots for him but is freaked out by him at the same time. Wright's role is less interesting but she is appealing in it, the two scintillate together. The supporting cast are all fine but not quite on par with the leads.
Concluding, very good. 8/10
So why hasn't this little sleeper been repeated more often on TV. It sure as heck merits an audience, even among today's digital addicts. It's an expertly observed, tightly written, fluidly paced little thriller. Director Stone was known for insisting on ___location staging. His insistence here pays off with an everyday realism that heightens the petty annoyances threatening to undo Osborne's daring scheme.
So the banker's got a million in cash in that suitcase to get out of the country. But then life's minor delays and hang-ups intrude, becoming major headaches for both him and us. Just listen to the airline stewardess cackle while we wait and wait to take off, or watch the booking agent fumble around while we squirm and squirm. The filming is like a microscope held up to everyday irritants that suddenly assume gigantic proportions, while a routine escape path turns into a nail-biting obstacle course. Poor Osborne, he'll be in fat city if he doesn't have a nervous breakdown first.
Cotten's fine as the regular Joe looking for a way out of his workday routine. Ditto Wright, as Osborne's compliant wife, the light slowly coming on that this isn't just an ordinary business trip. Also, director Stone managed a number of compact thrillers during this period, including The Night Holds Terror (1955) and Blueprint for Murder (1953). Too bad his skills aren't more widely recognized. Note here how neatly his screenplay completes Osborne's journey with that routine walk home— cast now in a reaffirming light.
I expect I'll catch the film again even though I know how it turns out. But for darn sure, I'll still keep my sweat bucket handy.
Despite the innate implausibilty of the plot, the editing by Otto Ludwig maintains the momentum throughout whilst Dimitri Tiomkin's instantly recognisable chords and orchestration underline the tension.
An earlier reviewer has expressed the view that some might find it awkward watching Cotten and Wright playing husband and wife having previously seen them in 'Shadow of a Doubt' as uncle and niece, to which I would respond: It's called ACTING!
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis is the second movie that Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright appeared in together. They were previously in Alfred Hitchcock's La sombra de una duda (1943) as uncle and niece.
- PifiasSeveral times it is noted by airline personnel that the suitcase with the cash weighs 115 pounds, and yet neither Cotton nor others who handle it have any trouble picking it up, as if it weighed no more than 30 or 40. Picking up 100 pounds with one hand, without straining, is not easy, and cannot be done without showing effort.
- Citas
[first lines]
[as the film begins, a family of three can be seen exiting a house, a man, a woman, and their daughter. This is Jim Osborne, his wife Laurie, and their daughter, Susan. They can be seen approaching a car and entering it. As this is going on, Osborne can be heard narrating]
Jim Osborne: I left the same house at approximately the same hour every working day for over eleven years...
[the camera then fades to a scene of Jim arriving at a train station, where he can be seen walking up to a train]
Jim Osborne: I caught the same car...
[the camera fades to show Jim exiting a station in the city]
Jim Osborne: I emerged from the same terminal and dodged the same traffic...
[the camera then fades to show Jim rounding a street corner]
Jim Osborne: Rounded the same corner...
[the camera than shows Jim walking up to a bank and entering]
Jim Osborne: Entered the same bank...
- ConexionesReferenced in Antología: The Final Tribute (1955)
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Steel Trap?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- The Steel Trap
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Bourbon Street and Bienville Street, New orleans, Luisiana, Estados Unidos(In front of The Old Absinthe)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 25 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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