My favorite Bogart movie. Nobody, and I mean NOBODY could walk the line between sanity and insanity like Bogart. What an INCREDIBLE talent. Nicholas Ray put his wife (Gloria Grahame) under ridiculous binds during this film. Two greats-Ray and Bogie, at the top of their game. Probably Gloria Grahame's greatest film. She really stepped it up, to match Bogie emotion for emotion.
GREAT movie; Bogart and Grahame are dynamite together! This may be the best of all the Film Noirs, but it was NOT directed by Hitchcock; it was directed by the one and only Nicholas Ray!
In fact, while shooting this film Ray walked in on his wife in bed with his 13 year old son from a previous marriage. Ray immediately moved out of their home and lived on-set for the rest of the shoot.
@@justinafrika7860 I can't imagine having to direct Gloria Grahame after that! And the whole thing had to be kept quiet,. Otherwise, Gloria would've gone to jail, the film would've been shelved, Santana Films would have lost money, and the kid would've been exposed to horrible publicity. When they eventually got married, Tony Ray was 26 and Gloria was 39.
Bemerkungswerter Film, der es Wert ist auch in deutscher Sprache entdeckt zu werden. Gleiches gilt für die Autorin, Dorothy B. Hughes, des gleichnamigen Romans. PS Regie führte Nicholas Ray. Irgendein Zusammenhang mit Hitchcock ist frei erfunden.
What an fantastic movie! I'd heard Julia Sweeney rave about this picture, and I didn't know where I'd find it. I searched everywhere. Then something told me to search TH-cam! Lo & behold. Thanks for sharing this!
I did a triple take, thinking that I had somehow overlooked a Hitchcock film all these years. No biggee, but we should give proper credit where credit is due.
Hate to be repetitive, but you gotta give credit where credit is due, and this is Nicholas Ray's masterpiece, not Hitchcock's (as if Hitch needed another one!). It's just not fair to overlook such a master who was Nicholas Ray.
Porque aparece ALFRED HITCHCOCK como director , en los créditos de la derecha , donde lo inventaron , el director es Nicholas Ray , favor corregir , gracias.
DON'T READ THIS COMMENT IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THE MOVIE My problem with this film is that I don't understand why she lingers. After that incident at the road when Bogart is more than half-way through killing a guy? What's the difference if he killed someone in the past?
At 2:51 there's a slight lag, which happens to ruin my favorite part of the movie. When Bogart says: "And what do you call an epic?" in this very droll way and his expression is just classic. Why does it have to be that second??
No apparant lag on my system. Try to reboot your system and try again. Most likely the lay is your system (Cluttered with temporary files) lagging. Not the film.
Similar in style to hichcock,it was made during the freudian obsessed 40's...note its a santana production...santana was the name of Bogarts boat, so i presume its his production company......
@DrHowbeit You'd be surprised by how some women behave. Sometimes it's not understandable or logical, but then again I've learned not to question the undying fickleness of women.
Similar in style to hichcock,it was made during the freudian obsessed 40's...note its a santana production...santana was the name of Bogarts boat, so i presume it was his production company......
My favorite Bogart movie.
Nobody, and I mean NOBODY could walk the line between sanity and insanity like Bogart. What an INCREDIBLE talent. Nicholas Ray put his wife (Gloria Grahame) under ridiculous binds during this film. Two greats-Ray and Bogie, at the top of their game. Probably Gloria Grahame's greatest film. She really stepped it up, to match Bogie emotion for emotion.
Gloria Grahame's entrance gets me every time. She was just so so friggin' gorgeous.
LOL those lines always cracked me up :
- There's no sacrifice too great for a chance in immortality.
- .Yes sir.
thank god for you tube .great actors ,and movies ..thank you posting .
GREAT movie; Bogart and Grahame are dynamite together! This may be the best of all the Film Noirs, but it was NOT directed by Hitchcock; it was directed by the one and only Nicholas Ray!
Thanks so much for posting (Nicholas Ray directed this by the way not Hitchcock)
You really should change this from Alfred Hitchcock to Nicholas Ray.
Directed by Nicholas ray, gloria’s husband at the time. A bit of trivia- 10 years later she married his son, Anthony Ray.
In fact, while shooting this film Ray walked in on his wife in bed with his 13 year old son from a previous marriage. Ray immediately moved out of their home and lived on-set for the rest of the shoot.
@@justinafrika7860 I can't imagine having to direct Gloria Grahame after that! And the whole thing had to be kept quiet,. Otherwise, Gloria would've gone to jail, the film would've been shelved, Santana Films would have lost money, and the kid would've been exposed to horrible publicity. When they eventually got married, Tony Ray was 26 and Gloria was 39.
Bemerkungswerter Film, der es Wert ist auch in deutscher Sprache entdeckt zu werden. Gleiches gilt für die Autorin, Dorothy B. Hughes, des gleichnamigen Romans.
PS Regie führte Nicholas Ray. Irgendein Zusammenhang mit Hitchcock ist frei erfunden.
2:00 The autograph kid is Billy Gray aka Bud in Father Knows Best.
Excellent film, thanks for uploading.
Popcorn salesman --- I love it
"Pull over to the curb!"
"WHAT'S WRONG WITH RIGHT HERE?"
lol, kick some ass, Bogie!
@AMT He was only on the screen a few seconds.
He actually calls the man a pig!
What an fantastic movie! I'd heard Julia Sweeney rave about this picture, and I didn't know where I'd find it. I searched everywhere. Then something told me to search TH-cam! Lo & behold. Thanks for sharing this!
I am greek, Sparta is in Greece.. And this is MASTERPIECE, THIS IS RAYYYY!!!
nicholas ray is one of the greatest ever!
Bogie did not have to act for this film, that is the real Bogart!
For those wondering why it is Hitchcock instead of Ray it is a simple misdirection to keep the copyright at bay.
"There's no sacrifice too great for a chance at immortality".
Not Hitchcock. It's a Nicholas Ray film.
there is no one,and I mean no one like Bogie ever!!!
it's starting quite well
I did a triple take, thinking that I had somehow overlooked a Hitchcock film all these years. No biggee, but we should give proper credit where credit is due.
it's not a Hitchcock film. the uploader is mistaken.
This is a Nicholas Ray film.
@RubyTuesday717 And thank YOU too. How could someone think Hitchcock? I'm beginning to think Ray is forgotten.
The writer in the show Californication is based on Bogey's character in this movie.
Really? You are right Hank Moody is quite similar to Dix Steel
ottimi bogart e la grahame ben diretti da ray ......
well done Hitch another masterpiece, I recognise all teh hallmark of this great film-maker, thumbs up for the Hitch!
chrish12345 Hitchcock had exactly nothing to do with it.
Nicholas Ray directed this film.
"I'm a stranger here, myself." -Nicholas Ray
How apt :)
One of the greatest movies ever made IMO.
7:55 The waiters face though...xD
It is not an Alfred Hitchcock movie! The director is NICHOLAS RAY!
Hitchcock is da best! Two thumbs up!!!
I lived 4 a few weeks
BRILL
Hate to be repetitive, but you gotta give credit where credit is due, and this is Nicholas Ray's masterpiece, not Hitchcock's (as if Hitch needed another one!).
It's just not fair to overlook such a master who was Nicholas Ray.
Based on an excellent novel by Dorothy Hughes - haunting and well written! I highly recommend it.
Please TAKE HITCHCOCK'S NAME OFF THIS MASTERPIECE FROM NICK RAY,,,
johnny guitar is a great ray film as well.
Porque aparece ALFRED HITCHCOCK como director , en los créditos de la derecha , donde lo inventaron , el director es Nicholas Ray , favor corregir , gracias.
Nicholas Ray directed this Bogart classic not Alfred Hitchcock. How could this person posting these be so wrong?
DON'T READ THIS COMMENT IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THE MOVIE
My problem with this film is that I don't understand why she lingers. After that incident at the road when Bogart is more than half-way through killing a guy? What's the difference if he killed someone in the past?
You mean Nicholas Ray, don't you? Great film though.
I think that was Hitchcock's daughter as the wife of the detective. Not the director.
Dana Sutton Not even Patricia. That was Jeff Donnell. No Hitchcocks anywhere.
Having read the book (excellent ) , the only similarity to the film is the characters names.
Girl: He is nobody.
Dix: she is right.
Oh god
Why is Hitchcock in the description and title? This as directed by Nicholas Ray, not HItchcock
Directed by Nicholas Ray (NOT A. Hitchcock) !!
Why don't you come over? I've got a whole case of tonic water.
this is the name of a Hitchcock Presents episode. maybe that's why he got confused.
I thought Rebel Without a Cause was Nicholas Ray's masterpiece.
Nicholas Ray was the director, not Hitchcock.
bogey and nick ray,,still kool,!!
Should not of done it no matter how lonely you were , I've done nothing and shouldn't of done what .
This was a Nicholas Ray film not influenced by hitch
NOT Hitchcock! Director of thIs great classic is NICHOLAS RAY.
"Made all his money before the income tax"
LOL
At 2:51 there's a slight lag, which happens to ruin my favorite part of the movie. When Bogart says: "And what do you call an epic?" in this very droll way and his expression is just classic. Why does it have to be that second??
No apparant lag on my system. Try to reboot your system and try again. Most likely the lay is your system (Cluttered with temporary files) lagging. Not the film.
Similar in style to hichcock,it was made during the freudian obsessed 40's...note its a santana production...santana was the name of Bogarts boat, so i presume its his production company......
MrCrispian Not really. Hitch would have been much more visually precise.
Bogey at his best
Nicholas Ray Director ...NOT Hitchcock
Hitchcock is the master!
7beers Agreed but he had nothing to do with this movie.
"remember how i use to read to you?" "since then i've learned to read by myself" subtle masturbation metaphor?
Similar in style to hichcock,it was made during the freudian obsessed 40's
@DrHowbeit You'd be surprised by how some women behave. Sometimes it's not understandable or logical, but then again I've learned not to question the undying fickleness of women.
@MrAndersoncouncil I was born when she kissed me. I died when she farted.
Similar in style to hichcock,it was made during the freudian obsessed 40's...note its a santana production...santana was the name of Bogarts boat, so i presume it was his production company......