When half-a-million dollars disappears from a doctor office's safe, the cops assigned to the burglary case, Joe and Pete, decide to find the money and keep it for themselves.When half-a-million dollars disappears from a doctor office's safe, the cops assigned to the burglary case, Joe and Pete, decide to find the money and keep it for themselves.When half-a-million dollars disappears from a doctor office's safe, the cops assigned to the burglary case, Joe and Pete, decide to find the money and keep it for themselves.
Parley Baer
- Banker
- (scenes deleted)
Stacy Harris
- Drunken Man
- (scenes deleted)
Bill McLean
- Delivery Man
- (scenes deleted)
Don Anderson
- Waiter at Party
- (uncredited)
Robert Anderson
- Police Inspector
- (uncredited)
Herman Boden
- Parking Lot Attendant
- (uncredited)
William Campbell
- Jack Archer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Few Hollywoodian stars made an opposite couple so longevous as the stunning beauty Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford in LADY IN QUESTION, GILDA, CARMEN, AFFAIR IN TRINIDAD and THE MONEY TRAP was the final act on spending a night together, a sort of farewell for good, this late Noir has an auspicious premise whereby the veteran LA cop Ford gets involved with a wealthy heiress the platinum blonde Elke Sommer living at a flamboyant house in Bunker Hill area.
Often sponsoring expensive night party which his meager salary can't afford, meanwhile investigating a safe's robbery of half million dollar at Mansion of a high-class doctor Joseph Cotten, therefore it came in handy due the worried Ford in dire straits with his splurger wife he oversees became a corrupt cop also scorned by his crook partner Montalban.
For unknown reasons it has hardly beaten by the critics and IMDB's members neither, in other hand I found it rather interesting upon my humble knowledges of Noir American cinema, mainly by the heavenly vision of paradise of the Nordic eye-candy in sexy outfits, even an already aged Rita has still a flaming sexy-appeal worthwhile a look anyhow, in time finally it will be release officially in ultimate restored version.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2005 / How many: 3 / Source: Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 7.5.
Often sponsoring expensive night party which his meager salary can't afford, meanwhile investigating a safe's robbery of half million dollar at Mansion of a high-class doctor Joseph Cotten, therefore it came in handy due the worried Ford in dire straits with his splurger wife he oversees became a corrupt cop also scorned by his crook partner Montalban.
For unknown reasons it has hardly beaten by the critics and IMDB's members neither, in other hand I found it rather interesting upon my humble knowledges of Noir American cinema, mainly by the heavenly vision of paradise of the Nordic eye-candy in sexy outfits, even an already aged Rita has still a flaming sexy-appeal worthwhile a look anyhow, in time finally it will be release officially in ultimate restored version.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2005 / How many: 3 / Source: Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 7.5.
Was the world ever really like this?
Pure 1965 black and white, this time machine of a crime drama takes you back to when Elkie Sommer was young, and Joseph Cotten was'nt dead. No profanity, blood or sex on the screen, but everywhere in the painlessly stereotypical screenplay. Predictable to a fault, you seem not to care it's all one big cleche. The jazzy, pre-groovy background music, a totally orignal score by Hal Schaffer, makes this crime-like thing a nostalgic romp of flat-foot flick.
Pure 1965 black and white, this time machine of a crime drama takes you back to when Elkie Sommer was young, and Joseph Cotten was'nt dead. No profanity, blood or sex on the screen, but everywhere in the painlessly stereotypical screenplay. Predictable to a fault, you seem not to care it's all one big cleche. The jazzy, pre-groovy background music, a totally orignal score by Hal Schaffer, makes this crime-like thing a nostalgic romp of flat-foot flick.
Lionel White's novel becomes an adequate time-filler from rote director Burt Kennedy. Big city cop Glenn Ford, anxious to hold on to luscious wife Elke Sommer, turns to crime; his partner of six years, Ricardo Montalban, wants in on the action. Familiar swindling and safe-cracking yarn goosed by Hal Schaefer's beatnik music, Paul Vogel's gorgeously bleak black-and-white cinematography, and interesting performances from an agreeable cast. Glenn Ford doesn't try hard to flesh out this complicated character, yet his smaller moments (like stroking Sommer's forearm in bed) go a long way to making a connection with the audience; Rita Hayworth (despite a corny send-off) is excellent as an alcoholic, and Montalban simmers with cat-like heat and paranoia. The dialogue is amusingly gritty ("I'm worried!" ... "Then worry with your mouth shut!") and the locales are vividly captured, however the M-G-M studio streets and back alleys look as phony as ever. **1/2 from ****
Glenn Ford and Ricardo Montalban are good policemen gone bad who fall into "The Money Trap," a 1965 noir directed by Burt Kennedy. Ford plays Joe Baron, married to beautiful Lisa (Elke Sommer) who is no longer getting dividends from her father's company. Downsizing and some yard sales would seem to be in order, but instead, Joe has his eye on a mob doctor's (Joseph Cotten) safe that's filled with money. Montalban, as his partner Pete, wants in. One man has already been killed cracking the safe, and there are some surprises in store.
This film is just okay, kind of depressing, but it's notable for the performance of Rita Hayworth as the widow of the dead burglar. She looks pretty used up as her character should, but she's still a stunning woman with true star charisma and great chemistry with Ford, her old co-star. And, as someone else mentioned, how many 50-year-old women playing character roles get to shack up with the lead in a movie? Well, if anyone could, it's Rita.
Ford was an appealing star without a huge range; this character could have been mined for more depth, but he's fine in the role. Montalban is very good as his money-obsessed partner.
Worth it for Rita.
This film is just okay, kind of depressing, but it's notable for the performance of Rita Hayworth as the widow of the dead burglar. She looks pretty used up as her character should, but she's still a stunning woman with true star charisma and great chemistry with Ford, her old co-star. And, as someone else mentioned, how many 50-year-old women playing character roles get to shack up with the lead in a movie? Well, if anyone could, it's Rita.
Ford was an appealing star without a huge range; this character could have been mined for more depth, but he's fine in the role. Montalban is very good as his money-obsessed partner.
Worth it for Rita.
Great cast. Might be interesting. Hmmmm.... Well, it starts with a brassy, obnoxious jazz theme, followed oddly by bongo music. Our first scene is Ford as a detective at the scene of a crime wherein a woman was hung in a whore house by her husband. Next scene we have Elke Sommer undressing to go to bed with husband Ford. This film wastes no time! But then it goes on and on with crummy characters played by William Campbell, Ricardo Montalban, Hayworth and Cotten. Dreary all the way to the bitter conclusion. The post-'Gilda' reteaming of Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford is a sad spectacle. Ford's haircut is so bad his ears look bat-like. Hayworth, admittedly is not playing a glamour part, but her degradation is not pleasant to watch. Together they appear dissipated, like their careers at this point. Ford really seems bored and uncomfortable throughout. And Cotten is as dull as usual. But Montalban does show some energy as fellow cop, and Elke Sommer has never looked better and plays the most likable (maybe only likable) character in the film. If that valium is making you feel too good, bring yourself down with this movie.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was the last of five films which Glenn Ford and Rita Hayworth made together. It was a sign of the times that, whereas Hayworth had always been top-billed over Ford in their earlier films, for this film she was third-billed behind Ford and relative newcomer Elke Sommer.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Big Sleep (1946)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Goldfalle
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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