Una ex reclusa, injustamente encarcelada, se une a su equipo para estafar a solteros ricos haciéndolos casar. Inicialmente motivada por venganza, al final encuentra redención y un propósito ... Leer todoUna ex reclusa, injustamente encarcelada, se une a su equipo para estafar a solteros ricos haciéndolos casar. Inicialmente motivada por venganza, al final encuentra redención y un propósito en la vida.Una ex reclusa, injustamente encarcelada, se une a su equipo para estafar a solteros ricos haciéndolos casar. Inicialmente motivada por venganza, al final encuentra redención y un propósito en la vida.
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados en total
Douglass Montgomery
- Bob Gilder
- (as Kent Douglass)
Purnell Pratt
- Edward Gilder
- (as Purnell B. Pratt)
Robert Emmett O'Connor
- Police Sergeant Cassidy
- (as Robert Emmet O'Connor)
Tyrell Davis
- Eddie Griggs
- (as Tyrrell Davis)
Isabel Withers
- Helen Morris
- (escenas eliminadas)
Louise Beavers
- Black Convict
- (sin créditos)
Edward Brophy
- Burglar
- (sin créditos)
Payne B. Johnson
- Baby
- (sin créditos)
Fred Kelsey
- Night Policeman
- (sin créditos)
Wilbur Mack
- Mr. Irwin
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis film was considered to be Joan Crawford's breakthrough role after years of playing empty-headed flappers in a series of profitable films. It was a coup for her as the original star, Norma Shearer, for whom the female lead had been commissioned had to decline the film due to pregnancy. Shearer was married to the studio brass, Irving Thalberg. "How can I compete with her," Crawford complained, "when she sleeps with the boss?"
The story was a perfect dramatic vehicle, allowing the leading lady to make the transition from wide-eyed innocent to hardened ex-convict to mature woman in love. With her other hits in 1930, Crawford now ranked as the nation's top box-office star. Studio head Louis B. Mayer was so happy he gave her a $10,000 bonus.
- ErroresAs Mary is led out of the courtroom, a moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall to the left of the door.
- Citas
Mary Turner: Gee, you're white, Joe.
Joe Garson: Save the flowers for my funeral.
- ConexionesEdited into Within the Law (1939)
Opinión destacada
As MGMs Depression era every-woman Joan Crawford plays another hard luck story against an unsympathetic system but in this one she is out for revenge.
Mary Turner is sent up the river for three years for a crime she did not commit. Her boss, Mr. Gilder has it within his power to reduce sentence but he smugly declines. In the big house Mary hardens and makes connections. She hooks up with former inmate Agnes Lynch ( scene stealer Marie Prevost) and a small time crook Joe Garson (Robert Armstrong) and together they begin to make a lucrative business out of bilking wealthy old fools. Mary snags a young one though; the son of Mr. Gilder, making her revenge complete. When Joe gets duped into an art heist the cushy racket begins to come unglued.
Paid opens fast with Mary at her sentencing followed by a montage of degrading prison life. A broken woman she seeks out Agnes (already working a scam)and rises like a Phoenix with a hard as nails attitude and her self taught education in prison. In addition to the vivid prison scenes there are also some strong moments between Crawford and Armstrong as he feels her out. Once in the groove though Mary clearly takes charge especially the moment she announces to Gilder the elder she's hitched to her son.
When Mary goes soft so does the picture unfortunately and scenes go limp when the tough talk gets mawkish. There is a well edited and suspenseful heist scene and a superb in your face death scene where a mug takes his omerta oath to the grave as well as some lines of raw bias that contribute to the film's pre-code hard edge but when Crawford abandons her cynical self assured side and returns to the tremulous voice of the first reel Paid ends up shortchanging you.
Mary Turner is sent up the river for three years for a crime she did not commit. Her boss, Mr. Gilder has it within his power to reduce sentence but he smugly declines. In the big house Mary hardens and makes connections. She hooks up with former inmate Agnes Lynch ( scene stealer Marie Prevost) and a small time crook Joe Garson (Robert Armstrong) and together they begin to make a lucrative business out of bilking wealthy old fools. Mary snags a young one though; the son of Mr. Gilder, making her revenge complete. When Joe gets duped into an art heist the cushy racket begins to come unglued.
Paid opens fast with Mary at her sentencing followed by a montage of degrading prison life. A broken woman she seeks out Agnes (already working a scam)and rises like a Phoenix with a hard as nails attitude and her self taught education in prison. In addition to the vivid prison scenes there are also some strong moments between Crawford and Armstrong as he feels her out. Once in the groove though Mary clearly takes charge especially the moment she announces to Gilder the elder she's hitched to her son.
When Mary goes soft so does the picture unfortunately and scenes go limp when the tough talk gets mawkish. There is a well edited and suspenseful heist scene and a superb in your face death scene where a mug takes his omerta oath to the grave as well as some lines of raw bias that contribute to the film's pre-code hard edge but when Crawford abandons her cynical self assured side and returns to the tremulous voice of the first reel Paid ends up shortchanging you.
- st-shot
- 19 ene 2014
- Enlace permanente
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 355,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 26 minutos
- Color
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Paid (1930) officially released in India in English?
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