Well Deserved Praise
... View Moreeverything you have heard about this movie is true.
... View MoreThere's a good chance the film will make you laugh out loud, but if it doesn't, there's an even better chance it will make you openly sob.
... View MoreThere's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.
... View MoreWhat a nothing-burger of a movie. By 1950 George Raft, who had never been much of an actor to begin with, was running out of steam and, in the fashion of the times, went to Britain and took a 'starring' role in a piece of cheese in an effort to prolong his career. When Martin Benson gets prominent billing you know you're in trouble and so it is here. Coleen Gray does what she can to inject a touch of class and manages to spread some charm over the proceedings but it's an uphill fight to extract anything at all - tension, thrills, plot - from a dull, stodgy meller that even Arthur Mullard, Alfie Bass, Victor Maddern and co would have turned their noses up at.
... View MoreJames Hadley Chase was a British writer who surrounded himself with American maps, reference books and dictionaries of popular slang before he sat down to write American style pulp fiction. With titles like "You Find Him, I'll Fix Him", "You're Lonely When You're Dead" and "Lady, Here's Your Wreath" and always with lurid covers, he managed to fool most of the paperback buying public into thinking he was a Yank!!! But with expressions like "jolly good" and "let's go to the cinema" some readers may have been scratching their heads. By 1950 George Raft had lost a lot of his popularity because of a series of less than prestigious films. Movies like this one didn't help, although it probably looked good on the drawing board.It started off great - professional gambler "Lucky" Nick Cain (Raft) has the red carpet rolled out for him when he visits Sao Paolo - and he's suspicious!!! When he sits down to play baccarat his notoriety brings patrons to his table, including Kay (Coleen Gray) who quickly finds herself in debt to the casino. As a way of repaying them, they suggest Kay be "nice" to Nick in order to keep him at the casino. Back at his apartment, Nick is drugged and awakes to find himself accused of murdering a U.S. Treasury Agent (who had desperately tried to see him earlier in the evening). So begins a cat and mouse adventure involving counterfeit plates from the Third Reich. Colour would have enhanced the beautiful Italian countryside but considering the action was mostly set in the early evening and at night, there was not a lot to see. All in all a very dreary, run of the mill movie.One actress I thought I might see more of was Greta Gynt, probably Britain's first sex symbol (even though she was Norwegian), but unfortunately she had one scene which took place in a darkened room!! George Raft bought class and professionalism to a role he could have performed in his sleep. Coleen Gray was always good - she is remembered as the carnival girl in "Nightmare Alley" and Sterling Hayden's decent girlfriend in "The Killing". Peter Bull had a small scene as Hans. He was usually the villain and was Britain's answer to Sidney Greenstreet. The brightest scene is at the beginning of the movie and one that made the movie look more promising than it really was. It involved Enzo Staiola, the little boy from "The Bicycle Thieves" - he played Toni, a little street urchin and someone who proves invaluable to Nick during the movie.
... View MoreGambler George Raft on a leisurely holiday on the Italian Riviera arrives at a hotel/casino where the management is really pulling out all the hospitality stops for him. The casino manager Martin Benson has even forgiven the losses of fellow American tourist Coleen Gray at the gaming tables if she'll just be friendly to Raft. Gray's friendly enough all right, but when a Mickey Finn is slipped in both their drinks, Raft and Gray wake up to find themselves wanted for the murder of a third American at the resort. That particular American Donald Stewart as it turns out was a secret service agent on the trail of some gangsters who have grabbed some nearly perfect counterfeit plates developed by the Nazis and never put in use during the war to destroy the value of American currency.I'll Get You For This also entitled Lucky Nick Cain is concerned with just how Raft and Gray get out of this jackpot. The only one they can trust for a while until they sort out the good guys from the bad guys is shoeshine boy Enzo Staiola who was prominently featured in Vittorio DeSica's The Bicycle Thief a few years earlier. By the way when you see Staiola meet Raft at the beginning of the film and offer him a shine, Raft's elevator shoes are plainly visible.The film is a British production with American stars and an Italian setting and a cast of all three countries. Maybe color would have helped as it always does in Mediterranean settings, but the film never really takes off in the action department. Raft was clearly in the B film phase of his career and this one didn't help him get out of it.
... View MoreJames Hadley Chase,among other writers, was well renowned for his ability to capture the readers attention from the beginning to end in all of his crime-thriller novels. That is where the difficulty sets in, can the director and crew capture the same in the movie? The story starts off with the arrival of an American gambler (Nick-George Raft) at a Mediterranean town of San Paola. Soon he gets acquainted with Kay (Coleen Gray) and finds himself framed for a murder, forcing him to go on the run with her. So far so good yet this is the turning point of the movie. Instead of going the edge of your seat 'why and who?' it turned into mediocrity. Overall, had the potential to be a great movie and could have rivaled movies like The Fugitive (1993) had a bit more suspense/tension been pumped into the screenplay and other movie making aspects.
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