CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.7/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA family vacationing on the coast of Mexico have to cope with multiple threats to their safety.A family vacationing on the coast of Mexico have to cope with multiple threats to their safety.A family vacationing on the coast of Mexico have to cope with multiple threats to their safety.
Rico Alaniz
- Officer at 1st Roadblock
- (sin créditos)
Salvador Baguez
- Officer at 1st Roadblock
- (sin créditos)
Bob Castro
- Police Machine Gunner
- (sin créditos)
Carlos Conde
- Tijuana Vendor
- (sin créditos)
George L. Derrick
- Gas Station Attendant
- (sin créditos)
Paul Fierro
- Mexican Lieutenant
- (sin créditos)
Sol Gorss
- Captain's Driver Talking to Helen
- (sin créditos)
Margarita Martín
- Mexican Mother
- (sin créditos)
Victor Milner
- Bit Part
- (sin créditos)
Alex Montoya
- Officer with Walkie-Talkie at 2nd Barricade
- (sin créditos)
George Navarro
- Tijuana Vendor
- (sin créditos)
Charles Stevens
- Mexican Father
- (sin créditos)
Ken Terrell
- Officer at 2nd Barricade
- (sin créditos)
Louis Tomei
- Officer at 2nd Barricade
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- Trivia"Lux Radio Theater" broadcast a 60 minute radio adaptation of the movie on March 15, 1954 with Barbara Stanwyck and Barry Sullivan reprising their film roles.
- ErroresWhen the incoming tide is washing against Helen, her hair is soaked and in the next shot her hair is styled then soaked again .
- Citas
Helen Stilwin: If he dies, I promise you one thing... I'll kill you.
Lawson, the Fugitive: That puts you in a class with 10,000 cops. They all got the same idea.
Helen Stilwin: It's a good idea.
Opinión destacada
JEOPARDY doesn't deserve the brickbats it's getting from other viewers who think of it as little more than a B-film, a quickie in the career of Barbara Stanwyck.
Nonsense. Stanwyck was still a terrific actress and uses all her skill to keep this a taut woman-in-peril kind of story that starts out innocently enough but then shifts into high gear the moment her husband is trapped under some rotten pilings from a pier.
Nor is the plot a foolish one. Clearly, it's the kind of incident that could easily have happened on an isolated beach in Mexico, with Stanwyck unable to find an English-speaking person to help her when she and her small son are unable to free Sullivan as the tide rises.
It just so happens the only person able to understand her predicament is an escaped convict running from a murder charge (Ralph Meeker). The moment Meeker appears he lifts the film into a new realm of suspense, so convincing is his portrayal of a Stanley Kowalski-type of character without anything but self-preservation (and sex) on his mind. Meeker never had a better showcase for his machismo appeal.
Because of production code rules, the film fails to make more of the sex angle including Stanwyck's decision to be more cooperative with the man who clearly might do her a favor if she does him one. By glossing over this angle and merely showing Meeker grab her in a couple of tight clinches, the film loses some of its impact when she returns with him to help her husband.
Nevertheless, it's a brisk, tightly constructed story around a simple theme and it works beautifully. John Sturges doesn't waste a moment of the film on any sub-plots but stays firmly fixed on the woman's dire predicament and all of the tension the viewer must feel watching Stanwyck's distress mount, knowing that her husband is in even more peril than she is.
It's a much better film than cited here--definitely worth a look.
Nonsense. Stanwyck was still a terrific actress and uses all her skill to keep this a taut woman-in-peril kind of story that starts out innocently enough but then shifts into high gear the moment her husband is trapped under some rotten pilings from a pier.
Nor is the plot a foolish one. Clearly, it's the kind of incident that could easily have happened on an isolated beach in Mexico, with Stanwyck unable to find an English-speaking person to help her when she and her small son are unable to free Sullivan as the tide rises.
It just so happens the only person able to understand her predicament is an escaped convict running from a murder charge (Ralph Meeker). The moment Meeker appears he lifts the film into a new realm of suspense, so convincing is his portrayal of a Stanley Kowalski-type of character without anything but self-preservation (and sex) on his mind. Meeker never had a better showcase for his machismo appeal.
Because of production code rules, the film fails to make more of the sex angle including Stanwyck's decision to be more cooperative with the man who clearly might do her a favor if she does him one. By glossing over this angle and merely showing Meeker grab her in a couple of tight clinches, the film loses some of its impact when she returns with him to help her husband.
Nevertheless, it's a brisk, tightly constructed story around a simple theme and it works beautifully. John Sturges doesn't waste a moment of the film on any sub-plots but stays firmly fixed on the woman's dire predicament and all of the tension the viewer must feel watching Stanwyck's distress mount, knowing that her husband is in even more peril than she is.
It's a much better film than cited here--definitely worth a look.
- Doylenf
- 20 nov 2011
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 589,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 9 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Devoción de mujer (1953) officially released in India in English?
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