High Sierra
Category: Crime
All Genres: Crime, Drama, Film-Noir, Romance, Thriller
Release Year: 1941
Country: USA
Runtime: 100
Rating: 5.5 (0)
Languages: English
Director: Raoul Walsh Sound: Mono
Taglines: The Blazing Mountain Manhunt for Killer Mad-Dog Earle!Towering Thrills with this Years Academy Award Star!HUMPHREY BOGART in one of is most powerful portrayalsHe killed... and there on the crest of Sierras highest crag... he must be killed!The blazing mountain manhunt for Killer Mad-Dog Earle!A new peak for screen excitement! Writing by: John Huston - (screenplay) and
W.R. Burnett - (screenplay)
W.R. Burnett - (novel)
Produced by: Mark Hellinger - associate producer
Hal B. Wallis - executive producer
Cast: Ida Lupino - Marie
Humphrey Bogart - Roy Earle
Alan Curtis - Babe
Arthur Kennedy - Red
Joan Leslie - Velma
Henry Hull - Doc Banton
Henry Travers - Pa
Jerome Cowan - Healy
Minna Gombell - Mrs. Baughmam
Barton MacLane - Jake Kranmer
Elisabeth Risdon - Ma (as Elizabeth Risdon)
Music: Adolph Deutsch Official Website: Visit WebsitePlot Outline: Roy Mad Dog Earle is broken out of prison by an old associate who wants him to help with an upcoming robbery...
Plot: Roy Mad Dog Earle is broken out of prison by an old associate who wants him to help with an upcoming robbery. When the robbery goes wrong and a man is shot and killed Earle is forced to go on the run, and with the police and an angry press hot on his tail he eventually takes refuge among the peaks of the Sierra Nevadas, where a tense siege ensues. But will the Police make him regret the attachments he formed with two women during the brief planning of the robbery.
Crazy Credits: We know about 1 Crazy Credits. One of them reads:
"May u live 2 see the dawn"
Goofs: We know about 4 goofs. Here comes one of them:
Continuity: When Roy Earle first meets Pa Goodhue at the gas station in the desert, he only introduces himself as "Mr. Collins". However, when they meet for the second time after the car accident in Tropic Springs, Pa immediately refers to him as "Roy," even though Bogart never offered his first name.
Trivia: There are 4 entries in the trivia list - like these:
- Humphrey Bogartss part in this movie was originally intended for Paul Muni. Muni did not like the first draft of the screenplay which was authored solely by John Huston and given to him by Hal B. Wallis, so Wallis got the books author W.R. Burnett to assist John Huston in a second rewrite. This rewrite was presented to Paul Muni who still disliked it and turned the movie and the role down completely. In the meantime, On May 4th, 1940, Humphrey Bogart sent a telegram to Hal B. Wallis reiterating his continuing desire, which he had mentioned several months earlier, to play the part of Roy Earle. After Muni turned down the script the next person on the list for Warner Brothers was George Raft. Bogart, knowing that Raft was trying to change his image and move away from gangster roles, found out about this and mentioned to Raft when he saw him next that the studio was trying to get him do another gangster movie where the gangster gets shot at the end. Raft marched into Hal B. Wallis office and flatly refused to do the movie. Bogart finally ended up with the role he wanted all along by default.
- This was the last movie Humphrey Bogart made where he did not receive top billing. The studio thought that Ida Lupino should have top billing given the fact that she had been such a big hit in They Drive by Night (1940) and so her name ended up above Bogarts on the title card. Bogart was reportedly unhappy about receiving second billing but never complained.
- "Pard" played by "Zero the Dog" was Humphrey Bogart’s dog in real life.
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