Gli investigatori cercano di risolvere il caso di un avvocato difensore di Los Angeles assassinato.Gli investigatori cercano di risolvere il caso di un avvocato difensore di Los Angeles assassinato.Gli investigatori cercano di risolvere il caso di un avvocato difensore di Los Angeles assassinato.
Foto
Larry J. Blake
- Det. Lt. Jerry McMullen
- (as Larry Blake)
Wong Artarne
- Chinese Waiter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Stanley Blystone
- Fire Warden at Car Wreck
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
John Canady
- X-Ray Technician
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Michael Chapin
- Mike
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Angela Clarke
- Mrs. O'Neill
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eddie Coke
- Williams
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe seductive Italian dialogue Sgt. Carey uses to sweet talk the blonde secretary at approximately the 35 minute mark roughly translates to "I think it would be great to make a nice dish of pasta and meatballs"
- BlooperNight time scenes were filmed using a filter to darken scenes. But this technique merely only slightly darkened the scene and left the sky lighted. Further, detail (distant, even close) is evident, when in fact it would, should fade, disappear, into the shadows and darkness of the background. This was exhibited when Catherine enters a room after having failed to have turned the light on in a room. She then enters what is supposedly a dark room, YET moves easily about it, never bumping into any furniture, and even readily spots the dead corpse that it contains! And all courtesy of the script.
- Citazioni
John Morland: Murder, my friend, is like a game of solitaire. To be sure of winning it, it should be played alone.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe version airing on the Fox Movie Channel has credits in a modern, video-generated font, suggesting that the original main and end titles are lost and were quickly and cheaply re-created.
- Versioni alternativeAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnessioniSpoofed in Hare Do (1949)
Recensione in evidenza
Backlash is a pretty decrepit programmer built upon a nifty premise: A jealous husband so hates his wife that he frames her for his own murder. He's a successful lawyer, middle-aged, grey and sporting a Thomas E. Dewey mustache, and, as such, indistinguishable from just about every other adult male in the cast (which may be among the most anonymous in the history of movies; the collective Q-rating of Backlash would be in the negative numbers).
When a burned-out car with a body in it turns up in a ravine, the police potter around trying to find out first who was killed and then who killed him. There was a cop-killer the lawyer saved from a murder charge; his law partner who owned him big money; the district attorney who may have been seeing his restless younger wife; another temptress connected to both the partner and the cop-killer; and so on. In fact there are a few too many red herrings squeezed into this compact (66-minute) can.
Surprisingly, Backlash boasts one fine scene which looks as though it was cut from a much better movie and spliced in by mistake. In a railroad yard at night, one of the principals meets up with a drifter who offers to share his bottle and some philosophical musings. It's filmed as an extended, highly shadowed two-shot that grows tighter and more oppressive as the talk turns to the murder case that dominates the headlines - and then to more urgent concerns. It's a sequence that makes Backlash almost worth a look.
When a burned-out car with a body in it turns up in a ravine, the police potter around trying to find out first who was killed and then who killed him. There was a cop-killer the lawyer saved from a murder charge; his law partner who owned him big money; the district attorney who may have been seeing his restless younger wife; another temptress connected to both the partner and the cop-killer; and so on. In fact there are a few too many red herrings squeezed into this compact (66-minute) can.
Surprisingly, Backlash boasts one fine scene which looks as though it was cut from a much better movie and spliced in by mistake. In a railroad yard at night, one of the principals meets up with a drifter who offers to share his bottle and some philosophical musings. It's filmed as an extended, highly shadowed two-shot that grows tighter and more oppressive as the talk turns to the murder case that dominates the headlines - and then to more urgent concerns. It's a sequence that makes Backlash almost worth a look.
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- How long is Backlash?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 6 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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