Intrigue (film)

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Intrigue
Intrigue.jpg
Directed by Edwin L. Marin
Produced by Samuel Bischoff
Written by George Slavin
Barry Trivers
Starring George Raft
June Havoc
Helena Carter
Music by Louis Forbes
Cinematography Lucien N. Andriot
Edited by George M. Arthur
Production
company
Star Films
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates
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  • August 1, 1947 (1947-08-01)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Intrigue is a 1947 film noir film directed by Edwin L. Marin and starring George Raft, June Havoc and Helena Carter. It was the first of two films Raft made for his own production company, Star Films, with producer Sam Bischoff.[1]

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Plot

In post-war China, court-martialed pilot Brad Dunham (George Raft) now flies smuggled goods into the country. He attempts to force his immediate superior, Ramon Perez (Marvin Miller), to pay him more, but Perez resists, so Brad steals the cargo back.

The boss of the black-market operation is Tamara Baranoff (June Havoc), who agrees to Brad's demand of a 50% cut of the operation and fires Ramon as a show of good faith. Meanwhile, an American newspaper reporter, Marc Andrews (Tom Tully), a friend of Brad's, shows up in Shanghai to investigate black-market crime.

Brad meets a social worker, Linda Arnold (Helena Carter]), and their friendship makes Tamara jealous. She insists that Brad do something about the prying reporter and steer clear of that other woman. Tamara's criminal rival tips off Marc that his pal Brad is involved with the crime ring.

Marc is knifed by Tamara's rival just as he is delivering a copy of his story exposing the black market. His dying wish is that Brad deliver the story for him, telling Brad that it was Tamara whose testimony led to Brad's unjust court-martial.

Brad distributes her black-market goods to needy citizens. Ramon turns up to ambush Brad, but his gun goes off, killing Tamara instead, and Ramon is placed under arrest. Brad and Linda contemplate a new life together.

Cast

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Production

The plot was originally meant to involve smuggling blood plasma, but this was changed to whisky and cigarettes at the request of Chinese-American organizations. Raft regretted this change.[1] Principal photography took place from April 28 to mid-June 1947.[2] Raft was hospitalised with illness during the shoot.[3]

Reception

In his review of Intrigue for The New York Times, Thomas M. Pryor considered the film a "conventional exercise in screen melodramatics " and George Raft's role as "... all so much wasted effort on his part for no one could possibly inject any semblance of verisimilitude into the hopeless botch of incident [sic] which Barry Trivers and George Slavin set to paper under the impression that they were writing a screen play."[4]

Radio adaptation

On May 10, 1948, George Raft and June Havoc reprised their film roles in a 60-minute radio adaptation of the film for a "Lux Radio Theater" broadcast.

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Aaker 2013, p. 129
  2. "Original print information: 'Intrigue' (1947)." Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved: November 27, 2015.
  3. https://archive.org/stream/variety166-1947-05#page/n80/mode/1up
  4. Pryor, Thomas M. (T.M.P.) "Movie review: 'Intrigue' (1947); Black market activities in Shanghai." The New York Times, April 24, 1948.

Bibliography

  • Aaker, Everett. George Raft: The Films. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2013. ISBN 978-0-7864-6646-7.

External links