Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaEd Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.Ed Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.Ed Beaumont, a close friend and bodyguard to political boss Paul Madvig, faces a murder case, risking his life and reputation to uncover the killer.
Rosalind Keith
- Opal Madvig
- (as Rosalind Culli)
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
- Jeff
- (as Guinn Williams)
Ernie Adams
- Bettor
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Irving Bacon
- Waiter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCarole Lombard was mentioned for the role eventually played by Claire Dodd.
- BlooperAt the 9-minute mark George Raft is shown sitting on a desk, in a close and long shot, then getting up and walking into next room. He is then shown sitting as before in two close shots but in the next long shot he is not seen where he was supposed to be sitting.
- Citazioni
Shad O'Rory: I'm too big to take the boot from you.
Paul Madvig: Maybe you're too big to take it lying down, but you'll take it. You are taking it!
- ConnessioniVersion of La chiave di vetro (1942)
Recensione in evidenza
Dashiell Hammett's 1931 novel, 'The Glass Key,' has been compared favorably to his earlier 1930 detective thriller, 'The Maltese Falcon." Paramount Pictures, buying the rights to the book as soon as it was hot off the presses, was the first Hollywood studio to bring the yarn to the screen in June 1935's "The Glass Key." George Raft plays the lead character Ed Beaumont, an assistant to crime boss and politician Paul Madvig (Edward Arnold).
A number critics cite Raft's performance as one of his best. "Raft is letter-perfect as the fast-talking, faster-thinking gambler who plays his cards close to his chest, speaking only with his mouth while his face says nothing, just his flashing eyes giving evidence of the wheels turning behind his outwardly calm visage," describes blogger Educated Guesswork.
Beaumont is the strong-arm enforcer to political big-wig Madvig, who also runs the city's crime syndicate. Directed by veteran Frank Tuttle, "The Glass Key" has been categorized by film historians as one of the first 'film noirs' brought to the screen. One scene especially qualifies its membership to the world of noirs' expressionistic lighting. Critic Dan Stumpf notes, "There's a particularly fine moment where he (Beaumont) watches a brutal murder without a flicker of emotion. Tuttle keeps the camera on Raft, his face lit by a wildly swinging overhead light that slows as a life slowly ebbs away." While directing "The Glass Key," Tuttle joined the American Communist Party, seeing it as a force to tamp down the rising power of Adolf Hitler. His membership ultimately hurt his career after World War Two, and was listed as one of 36 names linked by the Congressional House Committee in the late 1940s to be blacklisted in Hollywood.
Young actress Ann Sheridan, who claimed she was genealogically linked to Civil War Union general Philip Sheridan (her father was his grandnephew), showed an interest in acting at Denton Texas High School before earning a bit part in the 1934 movie 'Search for Beauty.' After twenty small uncredited roles, the 20-year-old actress appeared in "The Glass Key," playing the nurse overseeing the beaten up Ed in the hospital. Sheridan was one of Hollywood's more prominent screen actresses, whose career was cut short at 51 from cancer in 1967.
Gary Cooper was originally scheduled to play the George Raft role, but he was in the middle of a contract dispute with Paramount. "The Glass Key" was remade in 1942 with Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake, while the Coen Brothers made a more stark version of the Hammett story in their 1990 "Miller's Crossing" with Albert Finney.
A number critics cite Raft's performance as one of his best. "Raft is letter-perfect as the fast-talking, faster-thinking gambler who plays his cards close to his chest, speaking only with his mouth while his face says nothing, just his flashing eyes giving evidence of the wheels turning behind his outwardly calm visage," describes blogger Educated Guesswork.
Beaumont is the strong-arm enforcer to political big-wig Madvig, who also runs the city's crime syndicate. Directed by veteran Frank Tuttle, "The Glass Key" has been categorized by film historians as one of the first 'film noirs' brought to the screen. One scene especially qualifies its membership to the world of noirs' expressionistic lighting. Critic Dan Stumpf notes, "There's a particularly fine moment where he (Beaumont) watches a brutal murder without a flicker of emotion. Tuttle keeps the camera on Raft, his face lit by a wildly swinging overhead light that slows as a life slowly ebbs away." While directing "The Glass Key," Tuttle joined the American Communist Party, seeing it as a force to tamp down the rising power of Adolf Hitler. His membership ultimately hurt his career after World War Two, and was listed as one of 36 names linked by the Congressional House Committee in the late 1940s to be blacklisted in Hollywood.
Young actress Ann Sheridan, who claimed she was genealogically linked to Civil War Union general Philip Sheridan (her father was his grandnephew), showed an interest in acting at Denton Texas High School before earning a bit part in the 1934 movie 'Search for Beauty.' After twenty small uncredited roles, the 20-year-old actress appeared in "The Glass Key," playing the nurse overseeing the beaten up Ed in the hospital. Sheridan was one of Hollywood's more prominent screen actresses, whose career was cut short at 51 from cancer in 1967.
Gary Cooper was originally scheduled to play the George Raft role, but he was in the middle of a contract dispute with Paramount. "The Glass Key" was remade in 1942 with Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake, while the Coen Brothers made a more stark version of the Hammett story in their 1990 "Miller's Crossing" with Albert Finney.
- springfieldrental
- 22 mag 2023
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- La llave de cristal
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 20 minuti
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- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Glass Key (1935) officially released in India in English?
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