Lorsque Fred Staples est embauché au conseil d'administration d'une puissante entreprise new-yorkaise, son éthique et son ambition s'affrontent.Lorsque Fred Staples est embauché au conseil d'administration d'une puissante entreprise new-yorkaise, son éthique et son ambition s'affrontent.Lorsque Fred Staples est embauché au conseil d'administration d'une puissante entreprise new-yorkaise, son éthique et son ambition s'affrontent.
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination au total
- D.J. Vandeventer
- (as Jack Livesy)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesA rare film for the era in that it does not have a musical score.
- GaffesThe dialog in the final scenes, starting with Staples' conversation with his wife in a coffee shop near his office, indicate the events take place well into the evening. However, the exterior shot linking this scene with Staples' confrontation with Ramsey in the Ramsey & Company building, as well as the exterior shot that follows the confrontation, were both taken in broad daylight.
- Citations
Bill Briggs: On our level you don't get fired, you know that. After thirty years of productive work, they can't say to a man like me, "Alright, now get out!" They just can't do that. So what do they do? They create a situation. A situation you can't work in and finally that you can't live in with this tension, abuse. Small humiliations. It all starts out on a scale so subtle, so microscopic that at first you can't really believe it's happening at all. But gradually the thing begins to take shape. The pieces fit together - all the little bits. And it becomes unmistakable. They chip away at your pride, your security until you begin to have doubts, and then fears.
- ConnexionsReferenced in American Masters: Rod Serling: Submitted for Your Approval (1995)
Heflin plays a young man named Fred Staples, a small-town manager who is brought into a large firm by the President, Ramsey (Sloane). It's apparent to the viewer (and everyone but Staples) that he's been hired to replace one of the vice presidents, Bill Briggs (Begley). Staples admires Briggs and the humanity that he brings to his job, but he's the last of the old firm back when it was run by Ramsey's father, a compassionate man who cared about the workers. This Ramsey only cares about dollars and cents and efficiency. He's determined to force Briggs out.
Back in the '50s, big business movies were all the range, with films like "Women's World" and "Executive Suite" tackling the subject. The interest in the subject was possibly due to all of the postwar expansion in this country. "Patterns" is the best of the lot, realistic in its tone and with tremendous acting. The women are mere accompaniment - wives and secretaries - and certainly reflect the times.
Richard Kiley brought a naivete to the role of Staples that Van Heflin, because he's older, doesn't have, but he's still very effective as an honest, smart and decent man who's ambitious but doesn't like Ramsey's tactics. Ed Begley is sympathetic as a man past his prime who can't let go but whose job and daily battles are killing him. Everett Sloane does a great job as the ruthless Ramsey, who won't allow emotion into his business sense. We get a hint that he's not as unfeeling as he appears, but he's never going to let anyone else see it.
A really strong film, highly recommended.
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- How long is Patterns?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Patterns
- Lieux de tournage
- Pine Street and Nassau Street, Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(Nancy drops off Fred on his first day at work)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage