CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaMany interested parties are after the loot from a factory payroll heist but the mobster who hid it has amnesia after undergoing experimental brain surgery in the prison hospital.Many interested parties are after the loot from a factory payroll heist but the mobster who hid it has amnesia after undergoing experimental brain surgery in the prison hospital.Many interested parties are after the loot from a factory payroll heist but the mobster who hid it has amnesia after undergoing experimental brain surgery in the prison hospital.
Chris Alcaide
- Pursuing Detective
- (sin créditos)
Fred Aldrich
- Cop
- (sin créditos)
Leonard Bremen
- Guard at Clinic
- (sin créditos)
Paul Bryar
- Freddie - Bartender
- (sin créditos)
Sayre Dearing
- Patient in Wheelchair at Clinic
- (sin créditos)
Frank Fenton
- Detective Driver
- (sin créditos)
John Harmon
- Herman
- (sin créditos)
Mary Alan Hokanson
- Nurse
- (sin créditos)
Shepard Menken
- Interne
- (sin créditos)
Howard Negley
- Detective
- (sin créditos)
Frank O'Connor
- Gate Guard
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe first 3-D feature ever released by a major American studio. Los crímenes del museo de cera (1953) went into production first, but Columbia rushed "Man in the Dark" - shooting it in a mere 11 days - to get it into theaters just days before "Wax" opened. (El diablo bwana (1952) preceded both of them, but United Artists was not considered a major studio in the early 1950s.)
- ErroresDuring the chase when Steve is abducted, one of the crooks leans out of the car and fires nine shots at the cops from a six-shot revolver.
- Versiones alternativasOriginally released in 3D, in prints that were sepia-toned.
- ConexionesFeatured in TJ and the All Night Theatre: The Man Who Lived Twice (1979)
Opinión destacada
Edmond O'Brien has a severe case of retrograde amnesia, but he didn't contract it in the Pacific. He's a robber who got away with $130,000 in a Christmas Eve heist, was convicted and served his time. But he'll get a second chance if he submits to an operation to excise the criminal portion of his brain. Understandably, he's conflicted, and when they move it up from the scheduled day he balks: `I was born on a Monday. I may as well go on one like dirty laundry.' But the operation proves a stunning success, so delicate that it erases all memories of his past life but leaves him with a perfect command of American slang.
But the placid life he leads at the sanitarium pruning hedges and daubing canvases comes to an abrupt halt when he's kidnaped by his old gang, now led by Ted De Corsia. They want the money, which was never recovered; so does an implacable Javert of an insurance investigator. Even his old girlfriend (Audrey Totter) sees him only as a ticket to the high life, until she falls for the new, improved O'Brien and renounces her grasping ways. (The often ill-used Totter shines here, especially on a martini bender when she asks the bartender, `Oh, Fred, what do you do when you hate yourself?')
Odd clues begin to surface from O'Brien's troubled nightmares, however, leading him and Totter (with the rest of the cast plus the police in pursuit) to claim a parcel left at an amusement park. And this is the big set-piece of the movie, originally released in 3-D. Cars come whooshing around the curves and down the dips of a roller coaster while pitched battles are being fought on the tracks. Watching these 3-D movies now is like drinking soda that's gone flat: All the ingredients are there but the sparkle's gone. But in their endearingly gimmicky way, they evoke their era, as do the flats equipped with party lines and furnished with lampshades bearing reproductions of paintings. Man in the Dark's too short, and needs an extra layer of complexity. But there's still a bit of fizz left in it.
But the placid life he leads at the sanitarium pruning hedges and daubing canvases comes to an abrupt halt when he's kidnaped by his old gang, now led by Ted De Corsia. They want the money, which was never recovered; so does an implacable Javert of an insurance investigator. Even his old girlfriend (Audrey Totter) sees him only as a ticket to the high life, until she falls for the new, improved O'Brien and renounces her grasping ways. (The often ill-used Totter shines here, especially on a martini bender when she asks the bartender, `Oh, Fred, what do you do when you hate yourself?')
Odd clues begin to surface from O'Brien's troubled nightmares, however, leading him and Totter (with the rest of the cast plus the police in pursuit) to claim a parcel left at an amusement park. And this is the big set-piece of the movie, originally released in 3-D. Cars come whooshing around the curves and down the dips of a roller coaster while pitched battles are being fought on the tracks. Watching these 3-D movies now is like drinking soda that's gone flat: All the ingredients are there but the sparkle's gone. But in their endearingly gimmicky way, they evoke their era, as do the flats equipped with party lines and furnished with lampshades bearing reproductions of paintings. Man in the Dark's too short, and needs an extra layer of complexity. But there's still a bit of fizz left in it.
- bmacv
- 11 abr 2003
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 10 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was El hombre en las tinieblas (1953) officially released in India in English?
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