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IMDbPro

Sangre en la luna

Título original: Blood on the Moon
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 28min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,9/10
3,8 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Robert Mitchum and Barbara Bel Geddes in Sangre en la luna (1948)
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Reproducir trailer1:53
1 vídeo
25 imágenes
DramaOccidental

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaUnemployed cowhand Jim Garry is hired by his dishonest friend Tate Riling as muscle in a dispute between homesteaders and cattleman John Lufton.Unemployed cowhand Jim Garry is hired by his dishonest friend Tate Riling as muscle in a dispute between homesteaders and cattleman John Lufton.Unemployed cowhand Jim Garry is hired by his dishonest friend Tate Riling as muscle in a dispute between homesteaders and cattleman John Lufton.

  • Dirección
    • Robert Wise
  • Guión
    • Lillie Hayward
    • Harold Shumate
    • Luke Short
  • Reparto principal
    • Robert Mitchum
    • Barbara Bel Geddes
    • Robert Preston
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,9/10
    3,8 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Robert Wise
    • Guión
      • Lillie Hayward
      • Harold Shumate
      • Luke Short
    • Reparto principal
      • Robert Mitchum
      • Barbara Bel Geddes
      • Robert Preston
    • 57Reseñas de usuarios
    • 30Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:53
    Trailer

    Imágenes25

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    Reparto principal29

    Editar
    Robert Mitchum
    Robert Mitchum
    • Jim Garry
    Barbara Bel Geddes
    Barbara Bel Geddes
    • Amy Lufton
    Robert Preston
    Robert Preston
    • Tate Riling
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Kris Barden
    Phyllis Thaxter
    Phyllis Thaxter
    • Carol Lufton
    Frank Faylen
    Frank Faylen
    • Jake Pindalest
    Tom Tully
    Tom Tully
    • John Lufton
    Charles McGraw
    Charles McGraw
    • Milo Sweet
    Clifton Young
    Clifton Young
    • Joe Shotten
    Tom Tyler
    Tom Tyler
    • Frank Reardon
    George Cooper
    George Cooper
    • Fred Barden
    Tom Keene
    Tom Keene
    • Ted Elser
    • (as Richard Powers)
    Bud Osborne
    Bud Osborne
    • Cap Willis
    Zon Murray
    Zon Murray
    • Nels Titterton
    Robert Bray
    Robert Bray
    • Bart Daniels
    Erville Alderson
    Erville Alderson
    • Sethmier - the Liveryman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Carl Andre
    • Cowboy
    • (sin acreditar)
    Ruth Brennan
    • Townswoman
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Robert Wise
    • Guión
      • Lillie Hayward
      • Harold Shumate
      • Luke Short
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios57

    6,93.7K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8NewEnglandPat

    One of the best westerns ever made

    This film is a dark, brooding affair that has plenty of action and suspense and unfolds like an urban thriller. The story is lean and straightforward in its plot development of a range war, a staple of many westerns. Robert Mitchum is excellent as a drifting cowboy who gets caught in the middle of a feud between cattle ranchers and Barbara Bel Geddes matches him with her portrayal of a tough, feisty ranch girl. Robert Preston is also good as a rancher at odds with Tom Tully in their range war and there's a romantic angle that further complicates matters between the ranchers. The picture has crisp black and white camera work with noir shadings here and there and the music is also good. Of note in the film is a savage saloon brawl notable for its intensity, a brutal confrontation that ranks among the best in any western.
    7bsmith5552

    Film Noire Goes West

    "Blood On the Moon" is one of those psychological westerns that emerged in the late 40s. Director Robert Wise and cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca were both graduates of the Val Lewton film noire school of film making. Photographed in the shadowy dark black and white common to film noire, this picture turned out to be a better than average western.

    The story has drifter Jim Garry (Robert Mitchum) riding into the middle of a dispute between cattleman Lufton (Tom Tully) and a group of homesteaders led by Tate Riling (Robert Preston). Riling has hatched a scheme unbeknownst to all together with Indian agent Pindalist (Frank Faylyn) to cheat Lufton out of his cattle and sell them to the army at a huge profit.

    Garry is initially hired by Riling but soon sees how Riling is fooling the homesteaders and changes sides. Helping him make this decision is Lufton's daughter Amy (Barbara Bel Geddes) with whom he falls in love. Lufton's other daughter Carol (Phyllis Thaxter) meanwhile, is in love with Riling and betrays her father in the process. This all leads to the inevitable showdown at the end.

    The photography is at times spectacular. The outdoor panoramas are breathtaking. However, it is somewhat marred by the cheap looking back projection shots (especially during the stampede sequence) and several "studio exteriors". There also is an excellent graphic fight scene involving Mitchum and Preston.

    Mitchum is excellent as the brooding drifter with a conscience. Preston makes a despicable villain using all around him to attain his goals. Bel Geddes is good as the heroine but Thaxter takes the female honors as the gullible sister.

    The rest of the cast is comprised of many familiar faces to western fans. Walter Brennan, Charles McGraw and Zon Murray play various homesteaders, Bud Osborne is Tully's trail foreman, Clifton Young and Tom Tyler play Preston's gunslingers and Richard Powers (aka Tom Keene) plays Tully's ranch foreman. If you watch closely you'll also see Harry Carey Jr., Iron Eyes Cody, Chris Pin-Martin and Hal Talliaferro (aka Wally Wales) in various smaller roles.

    An good western; a good example of film noire.
    9KingCoody

    A Western for Adults before Anthony Mann

    Class A western with a great Robert Mitchum performance. Unlike other tall men riding in the films of that time, Mitchum's character is not a snow white hero coming to save the day,but a darkened figure just two steps from being an outlaw. Robert Preston is the charming,jovial wolf in a manner similar to Arthur Kennedy in Bend In the River and Robert Ryan's performance in The Naked Spur. Their epic brawl in an out of the way dingy saloon is one of the best movie fights ranking with John Wayne's and Randolph Scott's The Spoilers duel. Proves that RKO was for a time home to some true innovations in movie story telling. Mitchum's character will only go so far and thanks to Barbara Bel Geddes non Cathy turn as a frontier woman who gradually replaces her Calamity Jane-ish dress to become, seemingly, more domesticated in the manners of both typical western heroines and the mainstream movie going publics view of women after WWII ( Rosie the Riveter transforming into June Cleaver). The fact is though she isn't a screamer nor a corner huddler but equally as strong as Moody Bob. Great Western.
    8bkoganbing

    A Range Feud To Cover A Cattle Theft

    The novels of Luke Short paint a dark picture of the old west and Hollywood has made good use of them in making some really good westerns. Blood On The Moon is one of the best screen adaptations of one of his stories.

    A quick cursory glance of the films made from his stories, Ramrod, Ambush, Station West, Vengeance Valley, Coroner Creek all of them are pretty dark, almost noir like stories set in the old west. Blood On The Moon has Robert Mitchum as a cowboy sent for by his friend Robert Preston to be part of scheme to grab the herd of cattle baron Tom Tully.

    Not that Preston wants to do a little honest rustling, no his is a complicated plan involving getting the small ranchers and homesteaders riled up against Tully and getting a small range war started. He's even seduced one of Tully's daughters, Phyllis Thaxter, into betraying her father with promises of love and undying affection.

    All of this is a bit too much for Mitchum for whom it is alluded was quite the hellraiser in earlier times, but now is just sick of it all. Tully's other daughter Barbara Bel Geddes is checking him out if he would only break with Preston.

    When discussing this film in his book about Robert Mitchum, Lee Server makes the point that this film was far from what RKO planned for its star. Originally Mitchum was to be the white hat cowboy hero and successor as its B picture western star when Tim Holt went off to World War II. Little did they dream at RKO back in 1944 when Mitchum made his first with top billing, Nevada that he would be in this kind of western and do it so successfully.

    Preston had finished with his contract at Paramount and was now freelancing. We now know him primarily for The Music Man, but in his early film days he played many a villain and this one is a study in malevolence. His superficial charm even carries menace with it.

    Blood On The Moon enters that list of really top notch westerns that were originally authored by Luke Short. Try not to miss it when broadcast.
    8Steffi_P

    "No law says a man has to go by the wagon road"

    Although RKO was a major studio, in the 1940s an unusually large proportion of its output was low-budget B-movies. And not just any B-movies – psychological urban horrors from the Val Lewton unit, and plenty of gritty thrillers of the type that would come to be known as film noir. There was also a brisk trade in Westerns at all the studios, and RKO was no exception, but perhaps no picture better demonstrates that the studio was practically stuck in "noir" mode than the literally dark Western Blood on the Moon.

    Much of Blood on the Moon's bleak look is down to director of photography Nicholas Musuraca, who did the job on many of the Lewton horrors, including the seminal Cat People. Musuraca was quite capable of doing regular (and still very accomplished) cinematography – take a look at I Remember Mama, for which he received his only Oscar nomination – but his speciality was cloaking the screen in vast swathes of black. You would think this would be difficult in a Western, which ought to be full of vast empty plains and sunny skies. But Musuraca uses lighting techniques that can turn anything into a silhouette, or edges and corners into indistinct patches of darkness. He even makes clouds and buttes into foreboding black blobs. But he does not simply dim everything darker – his craft is very precise, and he is capable of throwing sharp white light where it is needed, or creating layers of grey amidst the gloom. Incidentally, while this adds immensely to the atmosphere, it is also probably part of RKO's general trend of hiding the lack of lavishness on a cheap production. After all, who needs a big town set when all you can make out is a door frame and a hitching post? Musuraca's partner in crime is director Robert Wise, another graduate of the Lewton unit. Wise adds to the atmosphere by composing tightly framed shots with bits of scenery and foreground clutter obscuring chunks of the screen. And look at how much of the movement is in depth rather than across the screen. Often characters are moving straight towards us, virtually staring into the lens, and this adds to the aura of menace. Just like in a well-made film noir (as well as those Val Lewton horrors) the overall impression is of a surreal nightmare world from which there is no escape. That is quite an achievement in a Western.

    Wise was also an expert at handling the pacing of his pictures, here shooting intense and nasty action sequences, spaced out by moody and measured dialogue scenes. This latter actually gives room for some nice acting performances. Robert Mitchum – a man who made an art form out of laconic moodiness – is perfect for those quieter moments. Like Humphrey Bogart, he was at first mistaken for a supporting player, but film noir gave him a niche as a leading man. Barbara Bel Geddes seems really cut out as Mitchum's tomboyish love interest. Active and assertive parts like the one she has here did not come up often for women in this era, and she gives it her all. Best of the bunch though is Walter Brennan, who looks and sounds like the typical crusty old man, and as such played a part in dozens of Westerns in his time. But under his character actor exterior he could emote beautifully, and in Blood on the Moon you really believe his mourning for his son.

    What we have here isn't simply a case of Wise and Musurasca giving a mischievous murky makeover to a good ol' cowboy flick. It seems the project was in noir territory right from the outset. Lillie Hayward, who I don't recall seeing credited anywhere else, but seems to have done a top job, has really just given us a gritty PI thriller out West. Mitchum is not so much the iconic drifter and more a grudgingly moral gun for hire. There is little distinction between the cowpunchers and the homesteaders (although in any case these two groups tended to be fairly interchangeable as villains and heroes from one Western to another – a bit like the North and South in Civil War movies). And interestingly this is one of the few pictures of this time to feature bona fide cowgirls, who shoot, talk and ride like the men. Parasols and petticoats are out of the question in this Western.

    Leaving aside all social context and genre subversion, the most important question is surely, is it actually any good? The answer is yes. Blood on the Moon does what any decently made B-flick ought to do – it is neither deep, moving or intelligent, but it gives a quick and reliable round of entertainment.

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    Balas vengadoras
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    El gran robo
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    Las fronteras del crimen
    7,0
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    Venganza
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    6,5
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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Walter Brennan, an Old West aficionado and historian, saw Robert Mitchum walk onto the set in costume and said, "That is the god-damnedest realest cowboy I've ever seen!"
    • Citas

      Jim Garry: I've seen dogs that wouldn't claim you for a son, Tate.

    • Versiones alternativas
      Exists in computer-colored version.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in 100 Years of the Hollywood Western (1994)

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    Preguntas frecuentes16

    • How long is Blood on the Moon?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de noviembre de 1948 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Sang a la lluna
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Sedona, Arizona, Estados Unidos(Exterior)
    • Empresa productora
      • RKO Radio Pictures
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    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 1.500.000 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 28min(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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