PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
370
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA prison break is attempted the same night an execution occurs on death row.A prison break is attempted the same night an execution occurs on death row.A prison break is attempted the same night an execution occurs on death row.
Johnny Seven
- Tom D'Amoro
- (as John Seven)
Don 'Red' Barry
- Drake
- (as Donald Barry)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFilm debut of Milton Selzer.
- Citas
Narrator: Sometimes you have to put your faith in what you can't see. In what you wish.
- ConexionesReferenced in Toast of the Town: Episodio #12.1 (1958)
Reseña destacada
The movie may be a cheap-jack production, but it also has a number of graphic touches including Rooney's absolutely riveting performance. With its single set, ugly b&w photography, and no-name cast (except for Rooney), I can't imagine the film played more than a few remote drive-in's farthest from town. Nonetheless, the 80-minutes pushes the bounds of 50's movie-making in several notable ways.
For example, catch how much emotional fear the doomed men—whether guards or cons— show when facing death. It's really unusual for that period to risk agitating audiences with realistic fears of death. But this one does. Also, the ricocheting bullets had me ducking under my chair— a really well done special effect. Actually, this cheapo comes closer to Sam Peckinpah's raw depiction of violence than about any film I've seen from that time—bullets actually raise blood, and despite their pleading people do get shot point blank. I'm guessing the producers got away with this because Hollywood didn't much care what a few necking teenagers might use for background.
It's an ugly movie in more ways than one—not a single woman in sight!-- just a bunch of ugly guys. At the same time, the first half too often drags before picking up with the slam-bang second half. Then too, have you ever seen a more barren or squeakier clean cell block, likely a reflection of the story's stage origins. Anyway, it's Rooney at his most intense. And despite the movie's really brutal nature, there are more moments of genuine honesty than in most A-productions of the period. But it's not one you want to see if you're feeling down.
For example, catch how much emotional fear the doomed men—whether guards or cons— show when facing death. It's really unusual for that period to risk agitating audiences with realistic fears of death. But this one does. Also, the ricocheting bullets had me ducking under my chair— a really well done special effect. Actually, this cheapo comes closer to Sam Peckinpah's raw depiction of violence than about any film I've seen from that time—bullets actually raise blood, and despite their pleading people do get shot point blank. I'm guessing the producers got away with this because Hollywood didn't much care what a few necking teenagers might use for background.
It's an ugly movie in more ways than one—not a single woman in sight!-- just a bunch of ugly guys. At the same time, the first half too often drags before picking up with the slam-bang second half. Then too, have you ever seen a more barren or squeakier clean cell block, likely a reflection of the story's stage origins. Anyway, it's Rooney at his most intense. And despite the movie's really brutal nature, there are more moments of genuine honesty than in most A-productions of the period. But it's not one you want to see if you're feeling down.
- dougdoepke
- 11 ene 2011
- Enlace permanente
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Detalles
- Duración1 hora 19 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Silla eléctrica para ocho hombres (1959) officially released in Canada in English?
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