Trapped

Trapped

194978 min
5.9/10
CrimeThrillerMystery

Plot Summary

Secret Service agents make a deal with a counterfeiting inmate to be released on early parole if he will help them recover some bogus moneymaking plates, but he plans to double-cross them.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (45)

Lloyd Bridges

Lloyd Bridges

Tris Stewart

Barbara Payton

Barbara Payton

Meg Dixon

John Hoyt

John Hoyt

Agent John Downey

James Todd

James Todd

Jack Sylvester

Russ Conway

Russ Conway

Chief Agent Gunby

Robert Karnes

Robert Karnes

Agent Fred Foreman

Jay C. Flippen

Jay C. Flippen

Bartender (uncredited)

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Lucille Barkley

Betty Mason (uncredited)

Tommy Noonan

Tommy Noonan

Bank Teller (uncredited)

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Dick Gordon

Mr. Baker (uncredited)

Rory Mallinson

Rory Mallinson

Agent Charles (uncredited)

Frank Sully

Frank Sully

Sam the Bartender (uncredited)

🎬Crew

Director

Richard Fleischer

Writers

Earl Felton, George Zuckerman

Producers

Bryan Foy

🖼️Gallery (1 images)

Trapped backdrop 1

🏷️Keywords

film noircounterfeittreasury departmentb movieblack and white

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

7/9/2022

Try as I might, I am afraid that I just cannot take to Lloyd Bridges. His boyish good looks and finely coiffured hairstyle try, and try quite hard, but can't really make up for the fact that he just can't really act! This time around he is "Tris", a convicted counterfeiter who is recruited by the US Secret Service to help them get to the bottom of a ring that is flooding the place with dodgy bills. Eventually agreeing to help them, he escapes their supervision and rejoins his girlfriend Barbara Peyton ("Meg") and his old gang where he proposes a new, lucrative, scheme. John Hoyt is quite effective as the double-dealing "Downey" and Richard Fleischer keeps the first half hour or so quite suspenseful, but for some reason the thing just rapidly falls away as we head to a pretty flat denouement in an eerily lit trolley-bus hangar. Ultimately, it's an adequate crime noir, but the characterisations lack depth and I found the whole thing rather unremarkable.

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