Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThree financially down-and-out buddies plot to pull a bank robbery to cure their financial woes.Three financially down-and-out buddies plot to pull a bank robbery to cure their financial woes.Three financially down-and-out buddies plot to pull a bank robbery to cure their financial woes.
Fotos
George N. Neise
- Frank Presnell
- (as George Neise)
Danica D'Hondt
- Doreen
- (sin créditos)
Russ Hodges
- Announcer
- (sin créditos)
Bill Riddle
- Trolley Car Passenger
- (sin créditos)
Leonard Stone
- Dr. Finnerman
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn one of the last scenes, Peter Falk's character wears the same kind of clothes, very similar, to the kind he wears for his Columbo's character in the series.
Opinión destacada
I'm surprised that no one has commented on this one (although TV movies that came along before the "docu-drama" craze are often neglected, even the best ones). This was more like a regular drama, disguised as a suspense film. In a superficial way, this movie resembles "Ocean's Eleven" - the characters are war veterans (though in this story, that really has nothing to do with carrying out the robbery), and it has one of the same actors, Peter Lawford. It took me a long while to realize this, but Peter Falk does some of the same things to be dramatic that he does to be funny, and it works either way, like the repetition he uses when trying to talk Vic Morrow into the burglary (one of the same things that makes Columbo such a funny pest, makes this character deadly serious). And Vic Morrow was great also. As was Jo Ann Pflug, in a much smaller part. But as much as I've always liked the actor himself, I think John Randolph's "embittered cop" character was a little overdone (some of his lines, I mean, not his acting). One of the few even slightly comical lines was one of Lawford's. When he hears the amount of money they can expect, he gives a long, "appreciative" look and says, "Man, that's a lotta bread." Many people might think that EVERYONE went around saying things like that in 1971, but actually it would've sounded as "forced" THEN as NOW, coming from countless people. But a Peter Lawford can carry off a line like that, and make it sound perfectly natural! But for the most part, he's as serious as the other two. Anyway, they were all three very good in it.
- Skragg
- 4 ago 2005
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