ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,0/10
1,5 k
MA NOTE
Frank Sinatra incarne Joe E. Lewis, un célèbre comédien des années 30-50. À l'ouverture du film, Lewis est un jeune chanteur talentueux qui se produit dans des speakeasies.Frank Sinatra incarne Joe E. Lewis, un célèbre comédien des années 30-50. À l'ouverture du film, Lewis est un jeune chanteur talentueux qui se produit dans des speakeasies.Frank Sinatra incarne Joe E. Lewis, un célèbre comédien des années 30-50. À l'ouverture du film, Lewis est un jeune chanteur talentueux qui se produit dans des speakeasies.
- A remporté 1 oscar
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Eric Alden
- Doorman at the Copacabana
- (uncredited)
Jerry Antes
- Vegas Speciality Dancer
- (uncredited)
Robert Asquith
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
Bill Baldwin
- Radio Announcer on Loudspeaker
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Bobby Barber
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn real life, Danny Cohen owned the club in which Joe E. Lewis first worked. After Lewis defected for more money, Cohen gave mobster Jack "Machine Gun" McGurn (real name: Vincenzo Antonio Gebhardi), a lieutenant in Al Capone's mob, a 25% share in the club in return for his persuading Lewis to stay. McGurn's method of persuasion was the beating which Lewis received.
- GaffesWhen Joe is looking at the building directory, the close-up shows "MORRIS WILLIAM". Yet in the next shot as Joe turns to go to the elevator, it says "MORRIS Wm"
- Citations
Joe E. Lewis: You know I wish I had a camera right now, because I could get the perfect picture of a guy with his two feet in his mouth.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Sinatra Featuring Don Costa and His Orchestra (1969)
Commentaire en vedette
Comedian Joe E. Lewis is best remembered as a precursor of comedians like Rodney Dangerfield and Foster Brooks as well as a pal of Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra. The common thread was creating one-liners that had something to do with drunks. He is sometimes confused with Joe E. Brown because of his name, though the two had little in common except being in the show business at about the same time. This film starring Frank Sinatra is therefore a kind of personal homage to a friend, one that would hold little interest as a story unless the viewer knew of the connection in advance. In starts sort of nowhere and goes sort of nowhere, relying for its interest on an unusually literate script and some really good direction and camera work. The best scene is one toward the beginning where Sinatra and a radiant Jeanne Crain meet behind a cyclorama in a theater and flirt with each other as the shadowy figures on the other side of the screen are partying. Twenty-first century viewers will find the dialogue, the sets, and the constant smoking and drinking very curious -- sometimes offensive to modern sensibilities. But that is a characteristic common to many films made between the beginning of "talkies" in about 1930 and the introduction of blockbuster mega-films in the late 1950's and early 1960's. The social diameters and definitions of acceptable behavior for women, black people, drunks, so-called burlesque shows, and "cafe society" and the like were either narrower or broader during that time than they are today. This is definitely not a film made from a play or novel requiring attention to literary unities. Still, it hangs together pretty well for anyone patient enough to concentrate on its more dramatic moments. Look for it on Turner Classic Movies.
- B24
- 10 févr. 2006
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Durée2 heures 6 minutes
- Couleur
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