A badly injured fugitive explains to a priest how he came to be in his present predicament.A badly injured fugitive explains to a priest how he came to be in his present predicament.A badly injured fugitive explains to a priest how he came to be in his present predicament.
Rico Alaniz
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
George Brand
- Clark
- (uncredited)
Bob Burrows
- Mexican Police Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Bob Castro
- Sentry
- (uncredited)
Edward Coch
- Captain
- (uncredited)
Paul Fierro
- Captain
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilm debut of Rico Alaniz.
Featured review
This is an interesting drama that features a good leading performance by Lew Ayres and a story that combines action and a little psychology. The pace is uneven, particularly in the middle of the movie, and this keeps it from being better. But both the early sequences and the climactic chain of events work pretty well.
Ayres plays a former oil man who once captured a suspected criminal, and then felt responsible when the man died in custody. He starts to get involved with the dead man's widow, even as he is haunted by uncertainty over whether he had done the right thing. It sets up a number of possibilities, and it is given an added air of fateful inevitability by the technique of having Ayres's character tell most of the story, in flashback style, to a priest.
After a solid start, things bog down for a while in the middle, although Ayres and Teresa Wright do their best to keep it watchable. Eventually, though, it gets back on track, and the last few scenes tie things together and bring the story to a tense conclusion.
Ayres plays a former oil man who once captured a suspected criminal, and then felt responsible when the man died in custody. He starts to get involved with the dead man's widow, even as he is haunted by uncertainty over whether he had done the right thing. It sets up a number of possibilities, and it is given an added air of fateful inevitability by the technique of having Ayres's character tell most of the story, in flashback style, to a priest.
After a solid start, things bog down for a while in the middle, although Ayres and Teresa Wright do their best to keep it watchable. Eventually, though, it gets back on track, and the last few scenes tie things together and bring the story to a tense conclusion.
- Snow Leopard
- Feb 27, 2006
- Permalink
- How long is The Capture?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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