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Quick Millions

  • 1931
  • 1h 12min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,3/10
440
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Spencer Tracy and Marguerite Churchill in Quick Millions (1931)
CrimeDrama

El conductor de camiones Bugs Raymond organiza a las asociaciones de camioneros y se hace con dinero a cambio de protección. Una vez enriquecido, decide casarse con la dama de la alta socied... Leer todoEl conductor de camiones Bugs Raymond organiza a las asociaciones de camioneros y se hace con dinero a cambio de protección. Una vez enriquecido, decide casarse con la dama de la alta sociedad Dorothy Stone.El conductor de camiones Bugs Raymond organiza a las asociaciones de camioneros y se hace con dinero a cambio de protección. Una vez enriquecido, decide casarse con la dama de la alta sociedad Dorothy Stone.

  • Dirección
    • Rowland Brown
  • Guión
    • Rowland Brown
    • Ben Hecht
    • Charles MacArthur
  • Reparto principal
    • Spencer Tracy
    • Marguerite Churchill
    • Sally Eilers
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,3/10
    440
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Rowland Brown
    • Guión
      • Rowland Brown
      • Ben Hecht
      • Charles MacArthur
    • Reparto principal
      • Spencer Tracy
      • Marguerite Churchill
      • Sally Eilers
    • 14Reseñas de usuarios
    • 7Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 premios en total

    Imágenes5

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    Reparto principal24

    Editar
    Spencer Tracy
    Spencer Tracy
    • Daniel J. 'Bugs' Raymond
    Marguerite Churchill
    Marguerite Churchill
    • Dorothy Stone
    Sally Eilers
    Sally Eilers
    • Daisy De Lisle
    Bob Burns
    Bob Burns
    • 'Arkansas' Smith
    • (as Robert Burns)
    John Wray
    John Wray
    • Kenneth Stone
    Warner Richmond
    Warner Richmond
    • 'Nails' Markey
    George Raft
    George Raft
    • Jimmy Kirk
    John Swor
    • Contractor
    Leon Ames
    Leon Ames
    • Hood
    • (as Leon Waycoff)
    Oscar Apfel
    Oscar Apfel
    • Police Detective Capp
    • (sin acreditar)
    Edwin Argus
    Edwin Argus
    • Testimonial Dinner Guest
    • (sin acreditar)
    Ward Bond
    Ward Bond
    • Cop in Montage
    • (sin acreditar)
    Dannie Mac Grant
    Dannie Mac Grant
    • Newsboy
    • (sin acreditar)
    Eddie Hart
    Eddie Hart
    • Henchman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Edgar Kennedy
    Edgar Kennedy
    • Cop
    • (sin acreditar)
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • District Attorney
    • (sin acreditar)
    Dixie Lee
    Dixie Lee
    • Stone's Secretary
    • (sin acreditar)
    Tom London
    Tom London
    • Atlas Newsreel Man
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Rowland Brown
    • Guión
      • Rowland Brown
      • Ben Hecht
      • Charles MacArthur
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios14

    6,3440
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    Reseñas destacadas

    5st-shot

    Quick Millions is quite mediocre.

    1931 was a bumper crop year featuring up and coming movie stars (Cagney, Robinson, Tracy) who would become legends doing gangster turns, followed in 32 by Paul Muni in Scarface. While Robinson and Cagney scored in in Little Caser and Public Enemy respectively, Spencer Tracy in Quick Millions proved he was more at home with virtue than vice.

    Truck driver with a sense of ambition, Bugs Raymond (Tracy) organizes drivers with some muscle and is soon running a sweet protection racket across the city. Working his way up the food chain he garners respectability and a desire to marry the upper crust daughter (Sarah Churchill) of his extorted, legitimate partner. When she rejects him he hatches an absurd plan to whisk her away, giving his former mob pals an opportunity to exploit his power.

    Tracy simply is not up to the iconic mobster performances delivered by the aforementioned actors getting their starts. Too measured in his rage he lacks the operatic pretense of Rico, the natural smart alecky ways of Cagney, the disturbing incestuous lunacy of Muni to be absorbing and put spark into the picture. Margurite Churchill as the love interest also does the picture no favors with a flat performance while Sally Eilers as Daisy and George Raft as a triggerman give plus performances.

    Directed by the supposedly talented but temperamental Rowland Brown and lensed by underrated Joe August, Millions displays some moments of fine mise en scene, but in total this is lack luster Spence, an actor more at home on the side of decency than immorality. More adept at hearing confessions than giving them.
    8gbill-74877

    Lots of entertaining moments

    "What difference does it make whether laws are made by a bunch of lawyers for other lawyers to break, or whether they're made by hoodlums for other hoodlums?"

    Your enjoyment of this weaker entry in the pre-Code gangster film space may depend on whether lots of little things when taken together add up to an enjoyable experience. For me, let me be clear, the scene with George Raft in his first credited role dancing at 41:15 was well worth the price of admission, and there were enough other moments in its 72 minute runtime that I came away happy.

    One of the things the film reflected, two years into the Depression, was the age's deep cynicism for American institutions, like the banking industry and justice system. Spencer Tracy plays the main gangster and is shown in a sympathetic light, voicing lines like the one I started this review with. We see the corruption in the powerful men of society, and hear a citizen express "Why last night at dinner by own daughter said to me, we have the best judges that money can buy. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the attitude of the younger generation..." There are also statements about millionaire racketeers avoiding income taxes by hiding their money, public money being wasted on putting people in jail, and a cynicism that extends even to the newsreels, with a producer in a truck remarking, "Gee Andy, the audiences certainly ought to be tickled to death they don't have to listen to all the baloney that I do," before literally giving the finger to what he hears about the completion of wealthy man's construction project.

    Tracy's character shakes down a big businessman by forcing him to pay a percentage on a building project, otherwise the trucks won't run and the mayhem he's causing won't stop. It seems to me he was standing in for the little guys during the Depression, those wishing they could stick it to the businessmen who played a part in cratering the economy, and were viewed as just as corrupt as these crooks.

    That aspect worked for me, but overall, Tracy's character is portrayed in too good a light. Let's just say, the "gangster with a heart of gold" should be considered as weak a trope as the one for hookers. Oh, there are scenes of his strong-arm tactics to rise in the world of organized crime, like him smashing up cars so their owners will start using the garage whose owner he's "protecting," and him blowing up a trucker who won't fall in line as he amasses a monopoly on trucking, but they're brief. Meanwhile he looks out for the kids in the neighborhood, and draws the line at keeping an incriminating letter from a judge's lover that comes his way, one he could use as blackmail. "It might get him in bad with his old lady," he says while tearing it up. What a guy, right? He's got a classy office, with modern art on the walls and a fancy phone, and despite a few tough words, generally acts the gentleman (and too much so for my taste). There was a fantastic moment when his ex-girlfriend (Sally Eilers) slapped him hard across the face, which is shown, but his reaction, which is to knock her to the floor, is not, softening the impact.

    Tracy's actions are also shown as having positive benefits, e.g. Intimidating the foremen of the workers to have the steel girders in place on the building before a critical date when he says they might not make it. He's also far better than what we see out of his old buddy Nails (Warner Richmond) when the latter tries to take over the mob. He's got all the bases covered, running his various schemes, and says with a smile to a woman he's trying to woo, "Racketeering is just getting what the other guy's got, in a nice way." Gosh, perhaps Trump et al will use this line of defense.

    George Raft as his right-hand man is also not menacing enough, though he has some nice moments aside from the stellar dancing bit, including the scene where he tries to pick up a secretary (Dixie Lee). "Say baby, what do you with your spare moments?" he asks. "I like to go to wrestling matches," she sarcastically replies, making 'wrestling' sound like 'wrassling.' After he commits a murder, he walks through a hotel lobby and looks like someone who's guilty but trying to be as casual as possible. You can certainly see why he got more parts, including of course Scarface the following year. It's pretty funny that the real-life gangster who may have played a role in getting Raft in this film, Owney Madden, is referenced in a horse racing tip (Owney M in the 5th race).

    Despite the film being pre-Code, the moral forces of the community rise up, but this felt very much unforced, and like a natural reaction. It was refreshing that the daughter of the businessman (Marguerite Churchill) was a strong character, and stood up to the gangster, despite his overture of a $12,000 square-cut diamond ($241,000 in 2023 dollars). Still, the scenes they have together, like Tracy making a five-cushion finesse carom in billiards, or hitting a nice golf shot by pitching out of a sand trap while she looks on in her fetching golfing outfit, were enjoyable. I also loved that little folk song we get from one of Nails' gang near the end (I wish I knew who this was, or where the song came from):

    "When I was a boy / I was the pride and joy / Of my folks way down in Arkansas / I left my old hometown / Bad company I found / I done some things that was against the law / There's one thing I've been taught / You're right until you're caught / As long as I'm free I'm gonna do just what I choose."
    searchanddestroy-1

    Quick Brown

    Roland Brown the director was a hell of a guy. He had ties with the underworld, was a boxing sparring partner for Jack Dempsey, he knocked down a producer.... So, he was not the common bland film maker. This one is his first film, the first of a short list of features. It is a light hearted crime drama, but not a comedy. Not a pure gangster film either. However I was so surprised to see Spencer Tracy co starring George Raft, one year before SCARFACE. Spencer Tracy in a role not so far from Sylvester Stallone in F. I. S. T, a bleak character. But I would have prefered a grittier movie. I expected a bit more from Rowland Brown, maybe because of his reputation, hard boiled reputation.
    7bkoganbing

    A harbinger of Jimmy Hoffa

    In his second film Spencer Tracy could have been typecast the rest of his career on the strength of his performance in Quick Millions. Fortunately for him he wasn't, but he's pretty nigh unforgettable here.

    Long before Jimmy Hoffa came around, Spencer Tracy got the idea in this film that if truck drivers could be organized there was a lot of money to be made for the one who did it. With the support of girl Sally Eilers who wants a taste of the good life too in those Depression years, Tracy gets a whole lot of people under his thumb. As he shows what can one do without material being delivered. One can't sell produce or build buildings without the material at hand. Jimmy Hoffa would have liked the way Tracy's character Bugs Raymond thinks.

    But Hoffa sure would not have liked the way Tracy obsesses over society girl Marguerite Churchill. She's the sister of John Wray from whom he extorted a partnership in the building trades via his truck union. That obsession is what leads to his downfall.

    Quick Millions was also the second film for George Raft who plays Tracy's bodyguard and trigger man. Raft also does an occasional freelance job and that is what does him in as well. Raft would have to wait another year for his breakout role in support of Paul Muni in Scarface in a similar role as in Quick Millions.

    One of the few gangster films of the era that specifically does not deal with Prohibition, Quick Millions is an early example of labor racketeering shown on film. And it's a great early work for Spencer Tracy.
    kartrabo

    Quickly established Tracy as a screen presence.

    Joining the other major studios during the early thirties in producing hardhitting gangster melodramas, Fox rushed their newest contract star into his second film. In Quick Millions Spencer Tracy plays a truckdriver who is just a bit more clever than his comrades and desires the easy life.In short order he sets about organizing the other city truckers and eventually eases out the racketeers until he, himself, becomes the labor boss to be reckoned with. Along the way to success Tracy's character begins to undergo changes and his desires ever grander.Sally Eilers, his faithful girl is shunted aside for the favors of society beauty Marguerite Churchill; fellow racketeers and pals begin to suspect his ability to lead and of course numerous enemies are plotting his downfall.

    The action of the film does not rely so much upon shocking rub-outs (the way Little Caesar and Scarface had the same year) but the gradual degeneration of Tracy's morality and relationships. The picture was successful enough to quickly establish Tracy as a strong screen presence and won plaudits for first-time director Rowland Brown. Warner Richmond is great as Tracy's nemesis as are George Raft and Bob Burns(not so lovable in this one). Watch for Ward Bond and Edgar Kennedy.

    See this wonderful gem when you can but, remember like so many early Fox films before 1935, it's tough to find.

    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      When Bugs Raymond asks a bookie for a tip on a horse race he is told, "Owney M. - put plenty on him". This was an in-joke allusion to New York racketeer Owney Madden, who was sponsoring George Raft's budding Hollywood career at the time.
    • Citas

      Daniel J. 'Bugs' Raymond: I'll bet we'll be the best-dressed people there. That's all anybody goes to the opera for.

      Jimmy Kirk: I thought they only went to hear the music.

      Daniel J. 'Bugs' Raymond: Sure, but those people sit up in the balcony.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Hollywood and the Stars: How to Succeed as a Gangster (1963)
    • Banda sonora
      St. Louis Blues
      Written by W.C. Handy

      Played by pianist at party.

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    Preguntas frecuentes12

    • How long is Quick Millions?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 3 de mayo de 1931 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Szybko zarobione miliony
    • Empresa productora
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 12 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White

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