Gambling House | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ted Tetzlaff |
Produced by | Warren B. Duff |
Screenplay by | Marvin Borowsky Allen Rivkin |
Story by | Erwin S. Gelsey (as Ervin Gelsey) |
Starring | Victor Mature Terry Moore William Bendix |
Music by | Roy Webb |
Cinematography | Harry J. Wild |
Edited by | Roland Gross |
Production company | |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date | |
Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Gambling House (1950) 'Here comes Mature!' Not Yet Rated 1 hr 20 min Dec 27th, 1950 Crime. A gambler faces deportation when he gets mixed up with murder. A night club owner becomes infatuated with a torch singer and frames his best friend/manager for embezzlement when the chanteuse falls in love with him. Mature faces off with Bendix (over 50,000 dollars) all the while trying to fend off the government trying to deport him. Terry Moore is the young do gooder who falls in love with Mature but he is 'no good' for her. A great memorable quote from the Gambling House movie on Quotes.net - Marc Fury: You know all about me don't you?Lynn Warren: I majored in psychology as you guessed - abnormal psychology.
Gambling House is a 1951 American film noircrime film directed by Ted Tetzlaff and starring Victor Mature, Terry Moore and William Bendix.[2]
A gangster, Joe Farrow, kills a man after a game of craps. He then offers gambler, Marc Fury, a payment of $50,000 if he will take the rap and stand trial. Farrow tries to renege on the money, so Fury steals a ledger with information that could put Farrow behind bars.
Fury manages to be acquitted in court, but immigration officers arrest him and take to Ellis Island and threaten to deport him, proving that neither he nor his parents never become naturalized citizens. Fury slips the ledger into the possession of an immigration social worker, Lynn Warren, then later tracks her down, retrieves the book and tries to begin a romance.
Farrow's gunman comes looking for Fury, but ultimately double-crosses his boss. Lynn still isn't sure how she feels about him, but when Fury offers the $50,000 to a family that needs it to remain in America, she finally admires and trusts him.
The story was originally called Mr Whiskas. It was purchased by RKO in 1947 and scheduled in 1948 as a vehicle for Victor Mature, who had a contract with RKO to make one film a year. However the project was postponed to enable Mature to make Easy Living. In July 1949 it was announced he would make Mr Whiskas next. Warren Duff was to write and produce.[3]
In late 1949 the project was renamed Alias Mike Fury.[4] Mature refused to make the movie and was put on suspension by Fox.[5] The script was rewritten and Mature ended up making the film, which was retitled Gambling House.[6] Filming started February 1950.[7]
When first released, critic Bosley Crowther panned the film. He wrote, 'Don't look for very rich pickings in R. K. O.'s Gambling House, a run-of-the-mill melodrama that came to the Mayfair on Saturday. Your chances for solid satisfaction from this tale of a crook who goes straight after meeting a decent young lady are about as good as they would be from a fixed wheel ... Put it down as claptrap and the performance of Mr. Mature as another demonstration of an actor doing the best he can with a bad role. Miss Moore is entirely incidental and William Bendix is mulishly mean as the tough and deceitful rascal who crosses up Mr. Mature. To say any more about it might tend to incriminate somebody.'[8]