IMDb RATING
7.1/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.
Philip Carey
- Rick McAllister
- (as Phil Carey)
James Anderson
- Beery
- (uncredited)
Joe Bailey
- Hobbs
- (uncredited)
Tony Barrett
- Pickup Artist in Bar
- (uncredited)
Walter Beaver
- Detective Schaeffer
- (uncredited)
Richard Bryan
- Detective Harris
- (uncredited)
Robert Carson
- First Bartender
- (uncredited)
Phil Chambers
- Detective Briggs
- (uncredited)
Dick Crockett
- Mr. Crockett
- (uncredited)
John De Simone
- Assistant Bank Manager
- (uncredited)
Alan Dexter
- Detective Fine
- (uncredited)
Don C. Harvey
- Detective Peters
- (uncredited)
Anne Loos
- Bank Teller
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the sources for the film was the novel "The Night Watch" by Thomas Walsh, which was serialized under the title "The Killer Wore a Badge", in the Saturday Evening Post from November 10 to December 15, 1951. The other is the novel "Rafferty" by Bill S. Ballinger.
- GoofsAs in Bồi Thường Gấp Đôi (1944), although Fred MacMurray's character is not married, he wears a wedding ring throughout the film.
- Quotes
Lona McLane: Well, it's been weird knowing you.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood and the Stars: In Search of Kim Novak (1964)
- SoundtracksThere Goes That Song Again
(uncredited)
Music by Jule Styne
[Played by duo pianists at the cocktail lounge]
Featured review
This film is especially notable as being the first film of Kim Novak. She is already a sizzler, from her very first scenes. The camera loves her, and her career from this point on was inevitable. It was only the next year that she set all the men of America afire by her sensuous role in Bill Inge's 'Picnic', opposite William Holden. High cheekbones never hurt a gal in films, and as Kim Novak must be of Czech descent judging from her name, we have here the classic Slav look. It wasn't long before 'Vertigo' and by then, Kim Novak had become an icon, which she remains to this day. Fred MacMurray is the leading man in this film, excellent as usual but really too old for someone like Novak to fall in love with at first sight as called for in this story. Oh well, that's casting for you. Dorothy Malone appears in this as a sweetie. The film is gripping, at the tail end of noir, a mixture of crime, cops, and mystery. The post-War mood of sombre brooding is ending, things are lightening up a bit, and crime and corruption are no longer seen as an intrusive Dark Hand of Doom but as eruptions into daily life of natural human impulses of greed, lust, and evil, which are as spontaneous as barbecues are in summer in Texas. These things 'just happen', and an end of the world scenario of being engulfed by wickedness is now seen more prosaically as 'oh no, not another crook and another crime!' As crime keeps on happening, you kind of get used to it, and films like this take on an air of 'here we go again'. So it is no longer brooding atmosphere but gripping intrigue which makes the movies work by the mid-1950s.
- robert-temple-1
- Jul 14, 2008
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $400,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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