CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
8.5 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un exconvicto tratando de mantener una vida recta es inculpado en un robo a un coche blindado y debe dirigirse a México para atrapar a los verdaderos culpables.Un exconvicto tratando de mantener una vida recta es inculpado en un robo a un coche blindado y debe dirigirse a México para atrapar a los verdaderos culpables.Un exconvicto tratando de mantener una vida recta es inculpado en un robo a un coche blindado y debe dirigirse a México para atrapar a los verdaderos culpables.
Orlando Beltran
- Porter
- (sin créditos)
Ray Bennett
- Prisoner
- (sin créditos)
Chet Brandenburg
- Robbery Spectator
- (sin créditos)
Barry Brooks
- Player
- (sin créditos)
Charles Cane
- Detective Barney
- (sin créditos)
Edward Coch
- Airline Clerk
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJohn Payne broke some of Jack Elam's ribs in a fight scene.
- ErroresWhen approaching the bank for the heist, a mountain is clearly seen in the background. Kansas City is in the plains and has no mountains.
- Citas
Scott Andrews: [Speaking about Rolfe] ... left school to enlist with the engineers. Pretty good soldier too! Bronze Star, Purple Heart!
Joe Rolfe: Try and buy a cup of coffee with them!
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: "In the police annals of Kansas City are written lurid chapters concerning the exploits of criminals apprehended and brought to punishment."
"But it is the purpose of this picture to expose the amazing operations of a man who conceived and executed a 'perfect crime,' the true solution of which is NOT entered in ANY case history, and could well be entitled 'Kansas City Confidential.'"
- ConexionesEdited into Tep No & KT Tunstall: Heartbeat Bangs (2021)
- Bandas sonorasLa Cucaracha
(uncredited)
Spanish Traditional
Sung by Tomaso as he delivers the mail
Opinión destacada
What a burst of casting inspiration-- three premier baddies, Elam, Brand, and Van Cleef all together in the same film, menacing the heck out of a vengeful John Payne. Elam should have gotten extra pay since everybody and his brother knocks the skinny wild-eyed guy around. Actually, for awhile I thought the movie was one long cigarette commercial or at least a chain-smokers' revival meeting. Speaking of casting, Preston Foster really delivers in a sly role that runs the gamut from tough-talking mastermind to nice-guy fisherman, all in convincing fashion.
"Kansas City" is, I believe, the first and clearly the best of a number of "Confidential" films made during the mid-fifties. For example, note the unusually brutal cop interrogation of fall-guy Payne. Keep in mind, this was during a Cold War time when the TV mega-hit "Dragnet" was professionalizing law enforcement's image nation-wide. Here, however, we get quite a different picture that certainly goes beyond the norm of the day. In fact, director Karlson, like noir filmmaker Anthony Mann, built a reputation for emphasizing the raw nature of thuggish violence, at least as much as the censors would allow. And this is certainly one of the more graphically brutal films of the era.
All in all, it's a fine imaginative script, with a number of unconventional surprises. The robbery is cleverly plotted along with the get-away. I like the way the screenplay parcels out needed information instead of laying it all out at the beginning. That way, viewer interest is kept up since a new wrinkle might pop up at any moment. Even pretty girl Colleen Gray's part is nicely woven in at the end, after I thought she was just a romantic interest. I guess Dona Drake's role was a touch of local color or a favor to somebody since she adds nothing to the plot, but apparently her Mexican girl does sell more than just souvenirs.
There are echoes from this movie in such later caper films as The Killing, Plunder Road, and Mark Steven's underrated Timetable. Some might consider this a noir film since Payne is trapped by unseen forces through no fault of his own. Nonetheless, other traditional noir elements are noticeably absent, such as the angular shadows of expressionist lighting and the lack of a customary spider woman. But it doesn't really matter how the movie's categorized because it remains something of a sleeper with a number of genuine surprises.
"Kansas City" is, I believe, the first and clearly the best of a number of "Confidential" films made during the mid-fifties. For example, note the unusually brutal cop interrogation of fall-guy Payne. Keep in mind, this was during a Cold War time when the TV mega-hit "Dragnet" was professionalizing law enforcement's image nation-wide. Here, however, we get quite a different picture that certainly goes beyond the norm of the day. In fact, director Karlson, like noir filmmaker Anthony Mann, built a reputation for emphasizing the raw nature of thuggish violence, at least as much as the censors would allow. And this is certainly one of the more graphically brutal films of the era.
All in all, it's a fine imaginative script, with a number of unconventional surprises. The robbery is cleverly plotted along with the get-away. I like the way the screenplay parcels out needed information instead of laying it all out at the beginning. That way, viewer interest is kept up since a new wrinkle might pop up at any moment. Even pretty girl Colleen Gray's part is nicely woven in at the end, after I thought she was just a romantic interest. I guess Dona Drake's role was a touch of local color or a favor to somebody since she adds nothing to the plot, but apparently her Mexican girl does sell more than just souvenirs.
There are echoes from this movie in such later caper films as The Killing, Plunder Road, and Mark Steven's underrated Timetable. Some might consider this a noir film since Payne is trapped by unseen forces through no fault of his own. Nonetheless, other traditional noir elements are noticeably absent, such as the angular shadows of expressionist lighting and the lack of a customary spider woman. But it doesn't really matter how the movie's categorized because it remains something of a sleeper with a number of genuine surprises.
- dougdoepke
- 16 jun 2008
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- How long is Kansas City Confidential?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Kansas City 117
- Locaciones de filmación
- Two Harbors, Santa Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California, Estados Unidos(scenes in "Borados")
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 39 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Kansas City Confidential (1952) officially released in India in English?
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