Trapped | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Fleischer |
Written by | Earl Felton George Zuckerman |
Produced by | Bryan Foy |
Starring | Lloyd Bridges Barbara Payton John Hoyt |
Narrated by | William Woodson |
Cinematography | Guy Roe |
Edited by | Alfred DeGaetano |
Music by | Sol Kaplan |
Color process | Black and white |
Production companies | Bryan Foy Productions Contemporary Productions |
Distributed by | Eagle-Lion Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 79 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Trapped is a 1949 American film noir crime film directed by Richard Fleischer and starring Lloyd Bridges, Barbara Payton, and John Hoyt. It was written by George Zuckerman and Earl Felton. [1]
Like many semidocumentaries, the film begins with a voice over footage of the treasury department, telling the story of what the department does. Then it quickly begins the story once a woman tries to deposit a $20 bill at the bank that turns out to be phony.
The U.S. Treasury Department needs to locate the source of a high-grade counterfeit operation. A counterfeiter in prison, Tris Stewart, agrees to be released on early parole in a pretend jail break, remaining under supervision, in order that he may assist in locating the persons currently doing the forging and the plates which years ago belonged to him.
Although soon Stewart betrays and escapes from the supervising agent, the secret service, anticipating his moves, has located Stewart's girlfriend Laurie Fredericks in Los Angeles and bugged her apartment. In addition, undercover agent John Downey alias Johnny Hackett has become a regular in the restaurant where Fredericks works, pretending to be a moderately wealthy shady character romantically pursuing her.
Stewart arrives to move in with Fredericks and soon learns that his counterfeiting plates had been sold by his old partner, now a bankrupt drunk, to Jack Sylvester. Stewart visits Sylvester and asks to buy $250,000 worth of counterfeit $20 bills, which he figures would go a long way in Mexico. He needs to come up with $25,000 cash in exchange. Stewart plans to rob the restaurant where Fredericks works. The feds, informed by overhearing, want to prevent their valuable 'agent' from being lost in the caper. A police car appears, Stewart is arrested and Hackett makes sure that he is released. This enables him to approach the thankful Fredericks. Stewart turns to Hackett, offering to make him very rich if he will stake the money.
After Sylvester meeting Hackett and a "trial run" exchange involving a box of plain paper, Stewart and Hackett wait for Sylvester to arrange the real transaction. But then Hackett's cover is blown when, in the restaurant, an old acquaintance recognizes his identity and Fredericks overhears the man discussing Hackett's résumé.
Upon finding out Hackett is a "cop", Stewart attempts to kill him but fails and lands back in custody. Given this, Hackett decides to push through the sale transaction quickly. He picks up Sylvester and the two set out for Sylvester's printing press location. Sylvester notices they are being tailed, and Hackett is forced to lose his backup agents who were tailing their car. At the location, a large box of bills is handed to Hackett and he must stall, waiting for his backup to locate them. But then Fredericks arrives with Sylvester's employee and Hackett's cover is blown again.
Meanwhile, outside, a motorcycle officer identifies Hackett's car, and his call allows the agents to locate the warehouse. Inside, Sylvester shoots Fredericks, remarking that if her boyfriend Stewart co-operated with the authorities, however briefly, so might she. He then turns his gun on Hackett, who quickly flips a table towards him and makes a run for it. Police and agents swarm in, upon which Sylvester flees. A chase ensues within a nearby streetcar barn, where Sylvester meets his end by electrocution. The case is marked "closed".
The film was restored by the Film Noir Foundation, UCLA Film and Television Archives with additional funding from Hollywood Foreign Press Association. A Blu-ray and DVD of the restored film was released in December 2019.
Has been shown on the Turner Classic Movies show 'Noir Alley' with Eddie Muller.
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