Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo members of a crew of "sandhogs", men who work on an underwater tunnel project, battle each other over the same woman and a rival team of sandhogs to see who will finish their half of the... Tout lireTwo members of a crew of "sandhogs", men who work on an underwater tunnel project, battle each other over the same woman and a rival team of sandhogs to see who will finish their half of the tunnel first, with the winning team getting more money and guaranteed future work.Two members of a crew of "sandhogs", men who work on an underwater tunnel project, battle each other over the same woman and a rival team of sandhogs to see who will finish their half of the tunnel first, with the winning team getting more money and guaranteed future work.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Iron Man
- (non crédité)
- Minor Role
- (non crédité)
- Minor Role
- (non crédité)
- Blonde Brooklyn Girl
- (non crédité)
- Man Lock Tender's Helper
- (non crédité)
- Miner
- (non crédité)
- Prize Fighter
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
"Under Pressure" is nimbly directed by Raoul Walsh, the best director this team ever had. McLaglen is the foreman of a team of sandhogs who are digging an underwater tunnel from Brooklyn to Manhattan, although McLaglen's leadership seems to consist mostly of snarling things like "Get yer backs into it, you mugs!" while his men are already at the brink of exhaustion. Meanwhile, another team of sandhogs (led by Charles Bickford, very hissable), are digging the other end of the tunnel from Manhattan to Brooklyn. We might expect the teams to meet amicably in the middle, but this is an action movie full of macho he-men ... so the two teams are rivals. Whichever set of sandhogs covers a greater share of the distance underwater will get more money and more work assignments in future. Basically, McLaglen and Bickford are having a contest to see which man has the bigger, erm, shaft.
Lowe is caught in the middle, with less to do than usual in his team-ups with McLaglen. Lowe's character is attracted to a girl, so McLaglen has to be attracted to her too. The love interest is played by Florence Rice, a very beautiful but bland actress who was the daughter of sports columnist Grantland Rice.
Bickford's chief goon, a thug named Tug with an ugly mug, is well-played by George Walsh, the director's burly brother. George Walsh had a promising career in silent films until he landed the title role in "Ben Hur", which proved to be his downfall. The chariot epic was filmed on location in Italy, where it encountered all sorts of production problems until the studio decided to scrap all the footage and start all over on the Hollywood backlot with an entirely new cast. George Walsh's career had lost its momentum in the meantime, and never recovered. Walsh gives a good performance here as Tug, but there's a ludicrous scene in which he, McLaglen, Bickford and Lowe all take turns snarling "I'll see you later" at each other, with no discernible purpose and no real punchline.
Marjorie Rambeau, a character actress who was always under-rated (until her brilliant final performance in "Man of a Thousand Faces") is very good in a small role here. I recommend "Under Pressure" as a good B-level Raoul Walsh film. Second-level Raoul Walsh is better than first-level work by almost any other director.
The first fifteen minutes of this movie is reserved for lots of explication about why these men work under several atmospheres of air pressure, and the threats that poses. Fortunately, newspaperwoman Florence Rice is on hand to explain it to, and for Lowe to romance. Marjorie Rambeau plays the McLaglen's woman; she runs the beer hall the Brooklyn crew drinks in, and into which Bickford stalks occasionally to rile everyone up.
Hal Mohr and L. W. O'Connell are the cameramen who shoot the working men down under with some dramatic lighting, and director Raoul Walsh (with some uncredited help from Irving Cummings) brings out the very real chemistry between the frequent co-stars, as well as some highly dramatic sequences. Fox was coming out of a period when they seemed to have no writing department, but this muscular tale of tough men is a solid and entertaining movie.
The formula seldom varied. Two buddies have a falling out and become rivals, sometimes over a woman, here over a misunderstanding during a cave-in. "Under Pressure" is about men who dig tunnels, called 'sand hogs'. In this instance they are digging a tunnel under the East River (not the Hudson) in NYC, between The Battery and Brooklyn. That would make it the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel, not the Holland Tunnel, despite the view of the Geo. Washington Bridge shown in the rear-projection. The movie illustrates the hazards inherent in such an occupation, such as cave-ins, depressurization, flooding, etc. Additionally, there is fierce competition between their crew and the crew headed by Charles Bickford, which is digging from the opposite direction so they will meet in the (approximate) middle.
This picture is only 70 minutes long but director Raoul Walsh crams a lot of plot and action into it. We see the guys at work and afterwards, which is a visit to a beer joint run by Marjorie Rambeau. Of course, in an attempt to don an air of refinement, they take the time to switch from work gear to suits and ties, which is one of the reasons I find 30's movies so enjoyable - for the joint in question, they could have come in their work duds! This picture has energy, heart and excitement, and you could do a lot worse with 70 minutes.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIrving Cummings shot retakes after Raoul Walsh left the picture.
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 12 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1