Ride the Pink Horse

Ride the Pink Horse

1947 "THE EXCITEMENT OF DESPERATE ADVENTURE! THE SUSPENSE OF RELENTLESS MAN-HUNT!"
Ride the Pink Horse
Ride the Pink Horse

Ride the Pink Horse

7.2 | 1h41m | NR | en | Drama

A con man tries to blackmail a Mexican gangster.

View More
AD

WATCH FREEFOR 30 DAYS

All Prime Video
Cancel anytime

Watch Now
7.2 | 1h41m | NR | en | Drama , Thriller , Mystery | More Info
Released: October. 08,1947 | Released Producted By: Universal International Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A con man tries to blackmail a Mexican gangster.

...... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Robert Montgomery , Wanda Hendrix , Andrea King

Director

Bernard Herzbrun

Producted By

Universal International Pictures ,

AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.

Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

ockiemilkwood To hell and back. Prologue: The salivating mob goes racing by, greedy and buggy, chasing the American dream like a doped-up greyhound at Corpus Christi racetrack, totally under the hypnotic spell of the Media Machine, screeching, "Please, please, give us the latest, blockbuster CGI fix, anything to relieve the oppressive boredom of reality!" (Day of the Locust redux.) Tease: Meanwhile, in some dusty, forgotten corner, far from the madding crowd, lies a buried gem, a goofy, superb "noire" fantasy, superbly written (Ben Hecht), superbly produced (Joan Harrison) and superbly acted (Wanda Hendrix, Thomas Gomez). What a pleasure, how refreshing and rejuvenating, to stumble onto this. We are, after all, not the slaves of the Media Machine and its CGI heroin. There is hope. The meat: This movie is thematic, B-movie grungy, relentlessly expository, as economic as the Bible, AND spits out dialogue like bullets ... God, what a treat! What it is : A ramrod straight, WWII vet (Robt Montgomery), with a large pistola in his belt, marches straight into the jaws of hell, on the Mexican fringes of 1947 post-war, WASP American society, seeking justice, revenge and bucks. Murderous sharks circle round him, certain to eat him up alive. And he's rescued from the jaws of death by whom? By a fat, unshaven merry-go-round operator (Gomez) and a wide-eyed, virginal teenage guardian angel (Hendrix), who sees death in his face!
Claudio Carvalho When a bus arrives in San Pablo, the mysterious American Lucky Gagin (Robert Montgomery) looks for the La Fonda Hotel and he meets the local Pila (Wanda Hendrix) that offers to take him there. Gagin is a tough man and army veteran and he seeks out a man called Frank Hugo (Fred Clark) and he learns that he will be back to his room only on the next day. Gagin stumbles upon FBI Agent Bill Retz (Art Smith), who is chasing the powerful mobster Frank Hugo, and he warns Gagin to forget his scheme for revenging his friend Shorty that was murdered by Frank. Then Gagin looks for a hotel room and he goes to the Bar Tres Violetas, where he befriends the owner of carousel called Pancho (Thomas Gomez) and he buys drinks for his friends in the bar. Pancho offers a place to Gagin to spend the night. On the next morning, Gagin goes to the hotel and meets Frank Hugo. He blackmails the mobster, asking for 30,000 dollars to give a check that incriminates him. Frank Hugo accepts the deal and tell that the money will be available only at 7:00 PM. Will Gagin succeed in his extortion of money from Frank?"Ride the Pink Horse" is a different film-noir directed by Robert Montgomery, who is also the lead actor. His bitter and unpleasant character is well-developed as a war veteran disillusioned with the post-war life since his lover is unfaithful and his best friend was murdered by a mobster. Wanda Hendrix performs a weird character, maltreated by Gagin but following him like a puppy. But the plot is a good story of friendship. My vote is seven.Title (Brazil): "Do Lodo Brotou Uma Flor" ("From the Mud Sprouted a Flower")
treywillwest As the Criterion commentator says, this is kind of an anti-Noir. It follows a criminal low-life intent on revenge of a sort on one of his kind. To get what he wants, he resorts to all manner of masculine clichés of hardness as he tracks his prey to a Mexican border town. But rather than finding success, or destruction, (two opposing forms of affirmation) through this brutishness, the tough is instead emasculated, made helpless and irrelevant to the narrative that supposedly revolves around him. The traditional noir anti-hero, rather like the classical Tragic Hero, is both empowered and doomed by his capacity for violence. Here, the anti-hero is saved by his inability to determine his own fate. Instead, an alien and indifferent culture chooses to save him, simply as an act of good will, or, as it amounts to the same thing, for the cheap thrill of doing so. The Noir Anti-Hero, like the Tragic Hero, becomes the pinnacle of the (doomed) world but cannot escape the horrible fate that world has in store for its subject. This movie's protagonist escapes this fate by becoming irrelevant to the space of its narrative world.
zardoz-13 The grim, enigmatic, but compelling Universal-International Pictures release "Ride the Pink Horse" ranks as a robust, first-rate, post-World War II, film noir melodrama. A hard-boiled former serviceman sets out to blackmail a wealthy, white-collar crook that had one of his war-time pals murdered. The action unfolds in a small, anonymous, New Mexico town named San Pablo during an annual festival, but it is fairly obvious that lenser Russell Metty photographed the action on a Universal backlot. Interestingly enough, the studio imported the carousel that figures prominently in the film title. The setting lends a decidedly Hispanic quality to the film so that it resembles a contemporary western. Later, after our hero runs afoul of the villains, he has to rely on Mexicans to conceal him from the villain's thugs, kind of like Clint Eastwood had to do in "A Fistful of Dollars." Our roughshod hero is named Gagin; in Dorothy B. Hughes' novel, she simply referred to him as Sailor. Gagin (Robert Montgomery of "Night Must Fall") climbs off a Greyhound bus, stashes a canceled $100-thousand check in a bus station pay locker, hides the key, and then tracks down the villain at the local hotel. The first scene when he arrives in town and conceals the check in the locker is brilliantly done in one long, unbroken take that follows Gagin inside and back outside without any physical cuts. Gagin folds a blank piece of stationary, stuffs it into an envelope, and then scrawls the villain's name on it. After he hands the letter to the hotel desk clerk, Gagin watches as the clerk inserts the letter into a numbered slot where mail is place. Eventually, Gagin will demand $30-thousand in exchange for the infamous check. He packs an automatic pistol, and he is pretty savvy until he tries to play the game according to the villain's rules. Along the way, Gagin befriends a cheerful, tubby Mexican, Pancho (Thomas (Gomez in an Oscar nominated role), who operates a carousel. Pancho treats Gagin as a friend and even lets him sleep in his bed when our hero cannot find a hotel room in town. Hugo (Fred C. Clark in a non-comedic role) is the chief villain, and he is accustoming to getting anything that he wants. He smokes cigars and wears a hearing aid. We're never told anything about this gizmo, but in some ways it makes Hugo seem like even more sinister. If villains are supposed to look abnormal, then the hearing aid serves to characterize Hugo as a bad guy. Hugo—it seems--was a war-profiteer who has made a fortune. Hugo isn't easily frightened by Gagin, who spent time in New Guinea, and speaks derisively about Shorty who he had hired as a bodyguard. "Too bad your pal Shorty turned out to be a crook. Got himself all crumbed up reaching for easy money." A friendly but inquisitive Federal agent, Retz (a fatherly Art Smith), knows what Gagin is looking for and tries to talk in out of blackmailing Hugo. Eventually, some forty-two minutes into the film, Gagin gets to sit down with Hugo in his hotel room and discuss his blackmail proposition. Hugo They reach an agreement to meet later in the evening, and Hugo will hand over thirty grand in currency for the check in a local restaurant. Meantime, one of Hugo's seductive associates, Marjorie Lundeen (Andrea King), tries to convince Gagin to ask for $100-thousand and entrust the check to an attorney. Gagin refuses to follow Marjorie's shrewd advice. At the restaurant, Marjorie confronts Gagin, and this devious dame lures him outside in the shadows to smoke a cigarette. Actually, she sets Gagin up so they will be standing together alone in the shadows where nobody can see them. Andrea King's presence as a duplicitous woman is about as close as "Ride the Pink Horse" gets to being a film noir. Two of Hugo's stealthy hoodlums assault and stab Gagin while the treacherous Marjorie watches without emotion. Our resourceful hero kills one of them and leaves the other one face down in the street. Retz finds the dead and the wounded man and informs Hugo that Gagin has effectively thwarted him. The last thing applies to the femme fatale that plays with vigor. Gagin isn't really a hero, but you like him because he is squaring off against an affluent, ruthless adversary. Montgomery plays Gagin as part hard head and part hero. He doesn't really behave like a straight-up, clean-cut, churchgoer. The neatest touch in the entire film occurs when Montgomery does a lap dissolve from Hugo chewing on a steak to a monstrous doll, the symbol of bad luck, being paraded through the town as part of the fiesta. Incidentally, for people who love details, the San Pablo festival takes place in September."Ride the Pink Horse" was based on a Dorothy B. Hughes novel and Hollywood heavyweights Ben "The Front Page" Hecht penned the script with Charles Lederer. Thomas Gomez makes quite an impression as the affable Pancho. The film derives its title from Pancho's merry-go around, and at one point our battered hero has to ride it. Wanda Hendrix gives a very good performance as Pila, a helpful Mexican flaquita who comes to Gagin's aid. She learns something about life from the abrasive Gagin. He teaches her what a dame or a babe is: a woman with a heart like a cold fish that cares about nothing but herself. Andrea King stands out as a semi-femme fatale. A neat little scene occurs in the latter half of the film when Pila hides Gagin on the merry-go around while Pancho takes a beating from two of Hugo's hoods. The camera is focused on the foreground with Pila hiding Gagin while in the background we catch a glimpse of the strong arm guys giving it to Pancho.Criterion has done an exceptional job putting "Ride the Pink Horse" on Blu-Ray/DVD.