Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA teacher writing a book about gambling meets a hotel/casino owner threatened by a gangster.A teacher writing a book about gambling meets a hotel/casino owner threatened by a gangster.A teacher writing a book about gambling meets a hotel/casino owner threatened by a gangster.
Mary Beth Hughes
- Mabel Dooley
- (as Mary Bethe Hughes)
Joe Downing
- Matty - Henchman
- (as Joseph Downing)
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Really nothing special about this - at all.
Dennis O'Keefe stars in "Las Vegas Shakedown" from 1955, also starring Coleen Gray, and featuring Tomas Gomez, Charles Winninger, Mary Beth Hughes, and Elizabeth Patterson.
O'Keefe plays Joe Barnes, the owner of a Vegas casino. He's tough but fair, and he seems to deal with situations very efficiently. Coleen Gray plays Julie Ray, a schoolteacher who comes to Vegas to write a book.
After their first kiss, Julie, an uptight woman, decides to leave the hotel. On the way out, she overhears that someone plans to kill Joe. She returns to the hotel; ultimately, she and Joe fall in love.
This is the main subplot that has Tomas Gomez out to force Joe to sign the casino over to him, and if Joe dies in the process, too bad.
Another plot involves a woman (Mary Beth Hughes) who has gambled the money her husband was going to use to buy a business; an elderly couple, the Raffs (Winninger and Patterson) on vacation. Winninger is a bank president, so they don't want anyone to know they're in Vegas, lest the town think he's an embezzler.
When there is a discrepancy at the bank, a minor one that Mr. Raff isn't concerned about, Mrs. Raff talks her husband into getting rid of the $15,000 he won by systems betting.
Solid if not exciting performance by O'Keefe, Gray is lovely, and the minor characters are all very well portrayed.
Dennis O'Keefe stars in "Las Vegas Shakedown" from 1955, also starring Coleen Gray, and featuring Tomas Gomez, Charles Winninger, Mary Beth Hughes, and Elizabeth Patterson.
O'Keefe plays Joe Barnes, the owner of a Vegas casino. He's tough but fair, and he seems to deal with situations very efficiently. Coleen Gray plays Julie Ray, a schoolteacher who comes to Vegas to write a book.
After their first kiss, Julie, an uptight woman, decides to leave the hotel. On the way out, she overhears that someone plans to kill Joe. She returns to the hotel; ultimately, she and Joe fall in love.
This is the main subplot that has Tomas Gomez out to force Joe to sign the casino over to him, and if Joe dies in the process, too bad.
Another plot involves a woman (Mary Beth Hughes) who has gambled the money her husband was going to use to buy a business; an elderly couple, the Raffs (Winninger and Patterson) on vacation. Winninger is a bank president, so they don't want anyone to know they're in Vegas, lest the town think he's an embezzler.
When there is a discrepancy at the bank, a minor one that Mr. Raff isn't concerned about, Mrs. Raff talks her husband into getting rid of the $15,000 he won by systems betting.
Solid if not exciting performance by O'Keefe, Gray is lovely, and the minor characters are all very well portrayed.
Going by its title, its year of release, and its cast - Dennis O'Keefe, Colleen Gray, Thomas Gomez, Mary Beth Hughes - you might think Las Vegas Shakedown was a late film noir, but you'd be wrong. It's a sort of Grand Motel set in the early days of the Nevada gambling oasis when it really was The Pastures - a glorified cowtown.
O'Keefe runs the Rancho Something-Or-Other casino, and we know he's on the up-and-up because he testified before the Kefauver Committee on organized crime and sent mobster Gomez to Alcatraz. Gomez, now deranged, is barreling back into town, a couple of aging torpedoes in tow, to kill O'Keefe. Also into O'Keefe's establishment drift Hughes, who gambles away the three grand her husband was planning to open a lunch wagon in Salt Lake City with (she pleads with O'Keefe to give it back to her, but no dice); a straight-laced elderly couple from Nebraska, bank president Charles Winninger and his wife Elizabeth Patterson (Mrs. Trumbull on I Love Lucy); James Millican and Dorothy Patrick, a couple on the cusp of divorce; and a schoolmarmish author (Gray) who wants to research an exposé of Vegas - her last book was called `The Psychology of Science' - but ends up falling for O'Keefe instead. She should have stuck to her writing.
Their various stories are told as stand-alone, unconnected vignettes, and the movie is directed in a flat, uninteresting style by Sidney Salkow. Maybe the most arresting thing about Las Vegas Shakedown is its musical score by Edward J. Kay, mainly because its Big Theme seems strangely familiar - it's the same one he wrote for Decoy, 10 years earlier.
O'Keefe runs the Rancho Something-Or-Other casino, and we know he's on the up-and-up because he testified before the Kefauver Committee on organized crime and sent mobster Gomez to Alcatraz. Gomez, now deranged, is barreling back into town, a couple of aging torpedoes in tow, to kill O'Keefe. Also into O'Keefe's establishment drift Hughes, who gambles away the three grand her husband was planning to open a lunch wagon in Salt Lake City with (she pleads with O'Keefe to give it back to her, but no dice); a straight-laced elderly couple from Nebraska, bank president Charles Winninger and his wife Elizabeth Patterson (Mrs. Trumbull on I Love Lucy); James Millican and Dorothy Patrick, a couple on the cusp of divorce; and a schoolmarmish author (Gray) who wants to research an exposé of Vegas - her last book was called `The Psychology of Science' - but ends up falling for O'Keefe instead. She should have stuck to her writing.
Their various stories are told as stand-alone, unconnected vignettes, and the movie is directed in a flat, uninteresting style by Sidney Salkow. Maybe the most arresting thing about Las Vegas Shakedown is its musical score by Edward J. Kay, mainly because its Big Theme seems strangely familiar - it's the same one he wrote for Decoy, 10 years earlier.
Dennis O" Keefe, Looking a Bit Long in the Tooth from His Hey-Day of Top Tier Film-Noir Outings in the 1940's.
He of the Perpetual Dangling Cigarette, seems to have Ditched the Habit,
for a Habitat Better Fitting a more 50's Nod to the "Clean-Cut" Eisenhower Era Persona.
It Probably made Him More Appealing to the Squeaky-Clean, Bespectacled Coleen Grey.
Fresh-Faced from Her Small-Town.
A Woman-Girl and a School-Teacher-Author.
The Two Immediately Match Pheromones and Play Footsie before Getting Serious.
That Helps the Already Too-Good-To-Be-True Casino Owner become the "Jackpot" that the Repressed, Lonesome, Woman can Cash-In.
But the Silliness Really Kicks-In with 3 Sub-Plots about "Gambling Addiction" that All Have a Message and then a Happy-Ending.
The Thing that Most Folks came to See,
the Crime and Underworld Element.
Arrives in the Form of a Growling Mobster with a Limp, Thomas Gomez...
Nicknamed...the UN-PC..."The Gimp".
He was Recently Released from "The Rock",
and is Hell-Bent on Shaking Down/Murdering O'Keefe.
The Confrontation has some "Oomph" with Knives, Guns, and Fisticuffs.
The Taut Finale in the Train Yard Showing some Grit.
However the "Cinderella" Sub-Plots Hollow Out the Movie and Leave an Ultra-Clean Sheen on the Thing.
It Bogs the Movie Down,
to Laughable Status at Times.
Still, for the Best of it and the Better Scenes, it is...
Worth a Watch.
He of the Perpetual Dangling Cigarette, seems to have Ditched the Habit,
for a Habitat Better Fitting a more 50's Nod to the "Clean-Cut" Eisenhower Era Persona.
It Probably made Him More Appealing to the Squeaky-Clean, Bespectacled Coleen Grey.
Fresh-Faced from Her Small-Town.
A Woman-Girl and a School-Teacher-Author.
The Two Immediately Match Pheromones and Play Footsie before Getting Serious.
That Helps the Already Too-Good-To-Be-True Casino Owner become the "Jackpot" that the Repressed, Lonesome, Woman can Cash-In.
But the Silliness Really Kicks-In with 3 Sub-Plots about "Gambling Addiction" that All Have a Message and then a Happy-Ending.
The Thing that Most Folks came to See,
the Crime and Underworld Element.
Arrives in the Form of a Growling Mobster with a Limp, Thomas Gomez...
Nicknamed...the UN-PC..."The Gimp".
He was Recently Released from "The Rock",
and is Hell-Bent on Shaking Down/Murdering O'Keefe.
The Confrontation has some "Oomph" with Knives, Guns, and Fisticuffs.
The Taut Finale in the Train Yard Showing some Grit.
However the "Cinderella" Sub-Plots Hollow Out the Movie and Leave an Ultra-Clean Sheen on the Thing.
It Bogs the Movie Down,
to Laughable Status at Times.
Still, for the Best of it and the Better Scenes, it is...
Worth a Watch.
Dennis O'Keefe is the manager and co-owner of a Las Vegas casino. It's another ordnary day. A woman has gambled away most of her and her husband's savings, and she wants him to return the losses. A small-town banker and his wife are vacationing, and he decides that he can afford to lose $3,000, but wins instead. Gangster Thomas Gomez, newly released from Alcatraz, wants revenge and the casino. And schoolteacher Coleen Grey is researching a book on how you can't win against the house, so she and O'Keefe fall in love.
O'Keefe offers a world-weary performance that is telling, but the principal interest is old-time actors in small roles: Robert Armstrong as one of Gomez' henchmen, Charles Winninger and Elizabeth Patterson as the banker and his wife, Mary Beth Hughes as a losing gambler.... it's the downside of the ending of the studio system: all these talented actors in small roles that brighten this definite B movie for a few seconds.
O'Keefe offers a world-weary performance that is telling, but the principal interest is old-time actors in small roles: Robert Armstrong as one of Gomez' henchmen, Charles Winninger and Elizabeth Patterson as the banker and his wife, Mary Beth Hughes as a losing gambler.... it's the downside of the ending of the studio system: all these talented actors in small roles that brighten this definite B movie for a few seconds.
"Las Vegas Shakedown" is a wildly uneven film...with writing that is occasionally brilliant...and also occasionally terrible. It also is a strange sort of film...with lots of stories that look like they come from "The Love Boat" combined with gritty film noir!!
The story is set in a Las Vegas resort owned by Joe Barnes (Dennis O'Keefe). He is a tough sort and his bottom line seems to be making money...which is odd since later in the film he's a benevolent benefactor! But no matter for now. The normally unflappable Barnes is worried as he's received word that someone is coming to get him...but who? In the midst of all this suspense, oddly enough, he meets and falls in love with a woman (Coleen Gray), fixes a couple marriages AND manages to take on and beat the baddies coming for him!!
On the plus side, Thomas Gomez generally plays a wonderfully vicious criminal. I loved how he was so heartless...especially towards the end. But the film ALSO makes him utterly ridiculous, such as when the very rotund guy (he looks like he weighs close to 300 pounds) climbs out a window with more grace than Douglas Fairbanks! It's obviously a stuntman and the director was, frankly, an idiot for allowing this scene to be made in the first place!! What also never should have been in the film was making Barnes so very hard and money-hungry....yet also benevolent and quick to give away the casino's winnings...which simply made no sense. What also didn't make sense was the nice old banker and his wife...they were cute...but the ending portion with him and his wife (Charles Winninger and Elizabeth Patterson) was nonsensical. Overall, a tough film that also tries to be heart-warming and sweet...and only ends up being frustrating as a result. I really wanted to like this film.
The story is set in a Las Vegas resort owned by Joe Barnes (Dennis O'Keefe). He is a tough sort and his bottom line seems to be making money...which is odd since later in the film he's a benevolent benefactor! But no matter for now. The normally unflappable Barnes is worried as he's received word that someone is coming to get him...but who? In the midst of all this suspense, oddly enough, he meets and falls in love with a woman (Coleen Gray), fixes a couple marriages AND manages to take on and beat the baddies coming for him!!
On the plus side, Thomas Gomez generally plays a wonderfully vicious criminal. I loved how he was so heartless...especially towards the end. But the film ALSO makes him utterly ridiculous, such as when the very rotund guy (he looks like he weighs close to 300 pounds) climbs out a window with more grace than Douglas Fairbanks! It's obviously a stuntman and the director was, frankly, an idiot for allowing this scene to be made in the first place!! What also never should have been in the film was making Barnes so very hard and money-hungry....yet also benevolent and quick to give away the casino's winnings...which simply made no sense. What also didn't make sense was the nice old banker and his wife...they were cute...but the ending portion with him and his wife (Charles Winninger and Elizabeth Patterson) was nonsensical. Overall, a tough film that also tries to be heart-warming and sweet...and only ends up being frustrating as a result. I really wanted to like this film.
Le saviez-vous
- Citations
Joe Barnes: Get out of El Rancho and stay out.
Bob: Why?
Joe Barnes: I don't like the way you comb your hair.
- ConnexionsEdited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 10 (2007)
- Bandes originalesMiss You So
Written by Marty Malneck
Performed by the Marty Malneck Trio
(Marty Malneck, Eve Marley and Beverly Richards)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 19 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Las Vegas Shakedown (1955) officially released in Canada in English?
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