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Calle lateral

Título original: Side Street
  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 23min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,1/10
3,7 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
James Craig, Farley Granger, Jean Hagen, and Cathy O'Donnell in Calle lateral (1949)
A struggling young father-to-be gives in to temptation and impulsively steals money from the office of a shady lawyer - with catastrophic consequences.
Reproducir trailer2:24
1 vídeo
43 imágenes
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

Un pobre cartero cuya mujer está embarazada roba una importante suma a un par de abogados sin escrúpulos.Un pobre cartero cuya mujer está embarazada roba una importante suma a un par de abogados sin escrúpulos.Un pobre cartero cuya mujer está embarazada roba una importante suma a un par de abogados sin escrúpulos.

  • Dirección
    • Anthony Mann
  • Guión
    • Sydney Boehm
  • Reparto principal
    • Farley Granger
    • Cathy O'Donnell
    • James Craig
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,1/10
    3,7 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Anthony Mann
    • Guión
      • Sydney Boehm
    • Reparto principal
      • Farley Granger
      • Cathy O'Donnell
      • James Craig
    • 60Reseñas de usuarios
    • 32Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:24
    Trailer

    Imágenes43

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    + 37
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    Reparto principal70

    Editar
    Farley Granger
    Farley Granger
    • Joe Norson
    Cathy O'Donnell
    Cathy O'Donnell
    • Ellen Norson
    James Craig
    James Craig
    • Georgie Garsell
    Paul Kelly
    Paul Kelly
    • Captain Walter Anderson
    Jean Hagen
    Jean Hagen
    • Harriet Sinton
    Paul Harvey
    Paul Harvey
    • Emil Lorrison
    Edmon Ryan
    Edmon Ryan
    • Victor Backett
    Charles McGraw
    Charles McGraw
    • Stanley Simon
    Edwin Max
    Edwin Max
    • Nick Drumman
    • (as Ed Max)
    Adele Jergens
    Adele Jergens
    • Lucille 'Lucky' Colner
    Harry Bellaver
    Harry Bellaver
    • Larry Giff
    Whit Bissell
    Whit Bissell
    • Harold Simpsen
    John Gallaudet
    John Gallaudet
    • Gus Heldon
    Esther Somers
    • Mrs. Malby
    Harry Antrim
    Harry Antrim
    • Mr. Malby
    Richard Basehart
    Richard Basehart
    • Bank Teller
    • (sin acreditar)
    David Bauer
    David Bauer
    • Smitty
    • (sin acreditar)
    Bobo
    • Dog
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Anthony Mann
    • Guión
      • Sydney Boehm
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios60

    7,13.7K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7RobW

    Stylish film noir

    "Side Street" is a stylish, if convoluted murder mystery about a failed small-time business man (Joe Norson) who is tempted into committing a robbery. Unfortunately the money he takes belongs to a couple of ruthless blackmailers, who aren't impressed when Joe offers to return it - mainly because the "friend" he left it with for safe-keeping helped himself to it. From then on, everything Joe tries gets him deeper into trouble.

    Over-long and over-complicated, but competently made and in best film noir style makes good use of light and shade. Conveys well the general seediness and desperation of small-timers trying to make the big time in New York.

    Very watchable, not least for Jean Hagen as the vamp who sets the guys up.
    dougdoepke

    Hard Shell with a Soft Core

    So who does impulsive thief and part-time mail carrier Joe Norson (Granger) entrust with the $30,000 he's just stolen? Why that well-known paragon of virtue, the friendly neighborhood barkeep, of course. Then, when the latter disappears, a lot richer, guess what-- Joe is surprised! Let's hope the baby his wife just delivered got her genes instead of his. Now Joe gets to chase after the money before either the cops or the crooks get him first. Frankly, my money's on the crooks who certainly know how to surprise us with a broken-down lounge singer (Hagen). But then this is Production Code 1950 with the sweetfaced Granger, so better bet on the kid.

    This is Dore Schary's MGM playing catch-up with post-war noir, and they've hired the best— director Anthony Mann. That means the New York street scene never looked grittier, nor the great stone canyons more threatening. And that car chase down empty city corridors looks downright science-fiction eerie. Too bad they've saddled Mann with boring cops and a bad guy (Craig) about as scary as a TV salesman. And was there ever an actress whose sheer sweetness could melt the screen faster than O'Donnell. Together with the artless Granger, Mann's tough-guy cynicism never stood a chance. The visuals tell one story; the characters another. This is hard-shell noir with the softest of cores, but will still keep you stapled to the screen.
    8ccthemovieman-1

    Another Antony Mann-Directed Noir, Which Means Great Photography

    This is a pretty good film noir that, happily, was released recently on DVD, giving us fans of this genre another movie to enjoy. It had one of the best noir directors, too: Anthony Mann, who always makes sure we get some great visuals. This is no exception, with good angles, shadows and light and a great big-city feel of New York.

    Along the way, we get a not-untypical noirish tale of an basically-good guy who makes a dumb move and pays for his sins even after his conscience gets the best of him and he tries to atone. This winds up to be a story of a man chasing the real crooks, while the crooks and the police chase him! They still make films with these kind of plots and they are almost always interesting.

    Farley Granger does a fine job in the lead as the dupe, "Joe Norson," who is too weak to pass up easy money and pays for it. Cathy O'Donnell is his wife and gets second billing but she really doesn't have that big a role. A bunch of other actors really share "supporting cast" status as Granger rules the roost here, lines-wise. For me, it was strange seeing James Craig as the "heavy." I mainly know him from totally opposite, All-American characters in films like "The Human Comedy" and "Our Vines Have Tender Grapes." Here, he's a viscous thug.

    The city of New York might be the real second star of this film. There are many shots of it and its skyscrapers, from above and street level looking up. I love those old cars, too!
    8bmacv

    Granger as flawed Everyman caught up in an urban vortex

    A dazzling aerial shot taken high above the Empire State Building opens Anthony Mann's Side Street, and, throughout the movie, glimpses of that New York obelisk recur – sometimes dark and menacing, sometimes caught at the vanishing point of an urban canyon. It's a subtle image of the wide gulf on a narrow island between the pride and power of the haves and the borderline, hand-to-mouth lives of the have-nots for whom it's a distant and alien totem.

    War veteran Farley Granger tries to make ends meet by shouldering a mail bag part-time; he and his pregnant wife Cathy O'Donnell (the pair reunited from the previous year's They Live By Night) live in a bedroom of his folks' railroad flat. Delivering one day to a shyster lawyer (Edmon Ryan), he spots a few big bills strewn carelessly about; the next, when he finds the office empty, he succumbs to temptation, only to find that the couple of hundred he thought he copped is really about $30-grand. Out of his depth, he wraps up the cash and gives it to a bartender to keep, while he checks into a fleabag hotel to think things out.

    The money's a payoff in Ryan's blackmail racket, whose chief lure is Adele Jergens (misnamed `Lucky,' as she's soon fished out of the river). When Granger decides to come clean and return the money, Ryan denies all knowledge of it (it could link him to Jergen's murder). But he sets his loose cannon of a goon (James Craig) to retrieve the cash any way he can. Granger finds that his trusty barkeep has absconded with his package; when he tracks him down, he finds him dead, too.

    A cadre of police assigned to the murder (Charles McGraw and Paul Stewart among them) thinks Granger's the prime suspect, so he has to turn sleuth to clear himself. His trail leads him to a Village dive where one of the numbers in Craig's little black book (Jean Hagen) croons `Easy to Love....'

    Side Street hews to the classic noir narrative of the average guy caught up in dark forces he can neither understand nor control, and Granger gives it one of his finer performances, perplexed and terrified at what he's unleashed. And while O'Donnell's role is conventional and secondary, Hagen gives her brief sequence as a boozy moth drawn to a fatal flame a poignant spark (Jergens, platinumed and sequined, does her even briefer sequence proud).

    To the extent that Mann indulges in social comment, he leaves it to be inferred (the same year, Granger appeared in the far more explicitly leftist Edge of Doom). At the end, the shots of the opening are rhymed with an eagle-eyed view of a police chase through the deserted streets of lower Manhattan early on a Sunday morning. It's a Bullitt-like ending for a movie that, while gripping, shows far more texture and nuance than Bullitt.
    7sol-kay

    Side-Swiped

    **SPOILERS** Film that shows that even the most honest of us can get a little crazy when financial conditions warrant.

    Part-time letter carrier Joe Norson, Farley Granger, has dreams about him and his wife living the life of luxury and traveling the world over in style. In reality Joe is down on his luck barely able to support himself with his job, as a part-time flexible, in the Post office much less his wife Ellen, Cathy O'Donnell, and a little one on the way. Delivering mail to attorney Victor Backett, Edmon Ryan, one morning Joe notices two $100.00 bills fall out of a folder from Backett's filing cabinet; all of a sudden a bell rang in Joe's head.

    The next day Joe again delivering mail to Backett notices the office door opened and the place empty. Joe sees his chance to take the two hundred dollars in Backetts file cabinet and use it to pay for his wife and soon to be born child's medical expenses. Finding the cabinet locked Joe goes outside and see an ax, for the use if there's a fire, in the hallway and uses it to break into it and take the folder that he saw the money in the day before.

    On an empty roof-top Joe, to his utter surprise, sees that the folder doesn't contain just the $200.00 that he thought was in it but $30,000.00 in cold hard cash. What Joe is soon to find out is that the money is a blackmail payment from Emil Lorrison, Paul Harvey, that Backett and his co-blackmailer "Big George" Garsell, James Craig, took from the other blackmailer working with them party girl "Lucky" Lucille Colner, Adele Jergens. It was "Lucky" Lucille who's body was found floating in the East River that morning.

    Joe guilt-ridden at what he did tries to return the stolen cash but doesn't know quite just how without ending up behind bars for grand larceny. It's then that Joe gives the secretly wrapped-up cash to bar owner Gus Heldon, John Gallaudet, for safe keeping telling him that it's a gift for is wife Ellen. Joe later goes to see Backett to somehow get him to take his money back but Backett tells Joe he has no idea what he's talking about! The 30 grand is hot and unknowing to Joe can lead whoever has it straight to the electric chair for the murder of "Lucky" Lucille.

    The move "Side Street" then takes on the form of a man on the run from both the hoods after him to not only get their money back but rub Joe out to keep him from talking to the police with the cop also looking for Joe as a suspect in the murder of barkeeper Gus who "Big George" tracked down and strangled in order to get the blackmail money back.

    Joe needing proof that he had nothing to do with Gus' murder finds a photo of "Big George's" former girlfriend Harriette Sinton, Jean Hagen, in the stolen folder. Tracking Hrriette down to the Les Artisets nightclub, where she's working as a singer, Joe does his best to get her to open up about the "Big" man telling Harriette that he's a old friend of "Big George" and would like to know where he lives. Noticing Joe going through her purse as she went backstage to change Harriett, smelling a rat, calls "Big George" thus setting Joe up to be ambushed.

    Exciting final as Joe is knocked out kidnapped and about to be deep-sixth in the East River by "Big George" and his partner taxi driver Larry Giff, Harry Belaver. There's a hair-raising ride through the Wall Street as well as the Washington Park section, that was later demolished to make way for the tragic World Trade Center complex, in downtown Manhattan with the cops hot on "Big George" and Larry's tail.

    Joe who's sense of honesty almost cost him his life, and his young wife Ellen the loss of a sweet and caring husband and breadwinner, in the end not only becomes a father and future role model to his new born son but also a hero in the eyes of the people of New York City as well.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      (at around 44 mins) Joe enters a bar under the Third Avenue El. The building number is 915, and the writing on the front window is "Clarke's Cafe". That's none other than P.J. Clarke's at 915 Third Ave., which is still there and barely changed.
    • Pifias
      When Joe is looking for Harriet, he is seen leaving the front of Marie's Crisis Cafe. In the next shot, he appears to be inside the same place, indicated by the pattern of the iron grating on the double windows and their location in each shot.
    • Citas

      [first lines]

      Captain Walter Anderson: [voice-over] New York City: an architectural jungle where fabulous wealth and the deepest squalor live side by side. New York: the busiest, the loneliest, the kindest, and the cruelest of cities. I live here and work here. My name is Walter Anderson. I'm one of an army of twenty thousand whose job is to protect the citizens in this city of eight million. So, twenty-four hours a day you'll find our men on Park Avenue... Times Square... Central Park... Fulton Market... the subway. Three hundred and eighty new citizens are being born today in the city of New York. One hundred and sixty-four couples are being married. One hundred and ninety-two persons will die. Twelve persons will die violent deaths. And at least one of them will be a victim of murder. A murder a day, every day of the year, and each murder will wind up on my desk.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Side Street: Where Temptation Lurks (2007)
    • Banda sonora
      Easy to Love
      (uncredited)

      Written by Cole Porter (1936)

      Performed by Jean Hagen (dubbed)

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    Preguntas frecuentes18

    • How long is Side Street?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 22 de abril de 1950 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Turco
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • La calle de la muerte
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Marie's Crisis Cafe - 59 Grove Street, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(exterior and interior when Joe searches for Harriet)
    • Empresa productora
      • Loew's
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    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 935.000 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 23 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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