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Manhandled
Manhandled

Manhandled

19491h 37m★ 4.9犯罪ドラマ

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

予告・トレイラー

作品考察・見どころ

AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Lewis R. Foster

脚本: L.S. Goldsmith / Lewis R. Foster / Whitman Chambers

音楽: Darrell Calker

制作: William C. Thomas / William H. Pine

撮影監督: Ernest Laszlo

制作会社: Paramount Pictures

口コミ

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キャスト

Dorothy Lamour
Dorothy Lamour
Merl Kramer
Sterling Hayden
Sterling Hayden
Joe Cooper
Dan Duryea
Dan Duryea
Karl Benson
Irene Hervey
Irene Hervey
Ruth / Mrs. Alton Bennet
Phillip Reed
Phillip Reed
Guy Bayard
ハロルド・ヴァーミリア
ハロルド・ヴァーミリア
Dr. Redman
Alan Napier
Alan Napier
Alton Bennet
Art Smith
Art Smith
Detective Lt. Bill Dawson
Irving Bacon
Irving Bacon
Sgt. Fayle
George Humbert
George Humbert
Italian Restaurant Owner (uncredited)

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

John Chard
John Chard
★ 6

Kitten and Chaos. Manhandled is directed by Lewis R. Foster and adapted to screenplay by Foster and Whitman Chambers from the novel "The Man Who Stole A Dream" written by L. S. Goldsmith. It stars Dorothy Lamour, Dan Duryea, Sterling Hayden, Irene Hervey and Art Smith. Music is by Darrell Calker and cinematography by Ernest Laszlo. I'm going to kill you, Ruth. I have to. Manhandled is one of those late 40s crime mysteries that feature film noir legends and film noir narrative tints, thus why it finds itself under the film noir banner. This is more a curse than a blessing. For it's not a particularly great film, where the presence of Hayden and Duryea - and Laszlo on photography - just about keeps things bubbling away to make it watchable till the end. It has been said that the narrative is too tricksy for its own good, yet that isn't apparent since the story is very easy to follow. The twists come and go at regular intervals, but always with narrative clarity. The main thrust of the plot finds Lamour being set up as the killer of Mrs. Alton Bennet (Hervey), with Bennet's jewels the reason for the crime. But there are a few other candidates in the frame, all of which are written to be believable suspects. The cops investigating are waspish of tongue, with Smith as dry as the Sahara, and Hayden is playing an insurance investigator who is along for the ride doing exactly the same job that the coppers are doing! Duryea is the star attraction, playing a homme fatale type who chews gum a lot, calls his girlfriend Kitten and clearly is as untrustworthy as it gets (classic Duryea portrayal really!). Hayden doesn't show up until half an hour in, but he's a welcome arrival even if he isn't given much to get his teeth into. While Lamour pouts and ponders whilst gaining sympathy, which ultimately makes us wish she had of done more film noir type films. There's some nice metaphorical touches, such as Duryea encamped in his apartment watching a vermin species consistently running on its wheel, and Laszlo's photography goes up a notch in the latter half of film - Lamour's apartment becomes foreboding and all the hall staircase sequences take on a greater oppressive meaning. A dream sequence is chilling, and there's one particular violent scene that is unforgettable. Unfortunately some of the comedy, whilst funny at times (drugs scenes are chucklesome), takes the pic out of its dramatic comfort zone. Hayden and Duryea fans are safe in the knowledge that this is one to see, but it still winds up as a wasted opportunity to be something far more tougher and poignant. 6/10

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

Dorothy Lamour is good in this otherwise rather drab crime noir. The plot is overly complex, bordering on the convoluted - you could almost get dizzy trying to follow the plot. Which is (briefly): Lamour plays "Merle"; the PA to a psychiatrist. She casually discusses his private cases with her on/off amour (Dan Duryea) and one such story involved a client's (Alan Napier) dreams that he kills his wealthy wife. Well, yep - you've guessed - the wife is duly murdered and an investigation ensues. Duryea, as the oily, smart-mouthed PI and Sterling Hayden as the investigating insurance man do fine, and Art Smith makes for quite a decent cop, but Lewis Foster let's this ramble on and no amount of tense violin music can compensate for what is just a lacklustre murder thriller.

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