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Invisible Stripes

1939

Action / Crime / Drama / Film-Noir

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Humphrey Bogart Photo
Humphrey Bogart as Chuck Martin
Leo Gorcey Photo
Leo Gorcey as Jimmy
William Holden Photo
William Holden as Tim Taylor
Frankie Thomas Photo
Frankie Thomas as Tommy
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
747.21 MB
956*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S ...
1.35 GB
1424*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by blanche-26 / 10

William Holden at 22

Somehow at the age of 22, William Holden looked like a better-looking Tom Hanks. And I'll bet there are a lot of people who could sit through "Invisible Stripes" and not know it was William Holden.

"Invisible Stripes" stars George Raft, Humphrey Bogart, William Holden, and Jane Bryan.

George Raft plays Cliff Taylor who, once released from prison, decides to stay on the straight and narrow. His pal, Chuck Martin (Bogart) has no such intentions. Cliff, who has a brother (Holden) and a mother (Fay Robson) finds the going tough, unable to get a job he can keep for various reasons, usually someone making trouble for him. His kindly parole officer encourages him to keep trying. With his brother Tim wanting to marry his girlfriend Peggy, and the job situation, Cliff decides to go in with Chuck's group.

Pretty good gangster flick, with Bogart, not long before his breakout role in High Sierra, giving the strongest performance. Raft is playing a good guy so he doesn't demonstrate a lot of bite. The film has some exciting scenes, particularly toward the end.

Holden, as stated above, is just a kid but does a good job as a man in love who wants to give his girlfriend the world, if only he had some money. It would be 11 years before he made his mark in "Sunset Boulevard" and became a true superstar.

As an aside, Jane Bryan retired to marry Justin Dart, who took over Rexall Drug chain. She died in 2009 at the age of 91.

In many ways a typical Warner Brothers gangster film, but a good one.

Reviewed by utgard147 / 10

"I'm one of them there realists."

George Raft and Humphrey Bogart play two parolees who take different paths when they leave prison. Bogie immediately goes back to a life of crime while Raft tries to go straight. But fearing that his younger brother (a baby-faced William Holden) might follow in his footsteps if he can't get a break, Raft turns back to a life of crime.

Solid gangster picture from WB with a good cast. George Raft doesn't always get respect but he shows in this and other films that he was a decent actor. Young William Holden is a little melodramatic here. He still had room to improve. Lovely Jane Bryan is his girlfriend. This was the penultimate movie in her all-too-brief career. Humphrey Bogart plays yet another of his many gangster roles. He may not have been enjoying playing these parts much at this point of his career but he really was perfectly suited for them. He really steals the film from his co-stars. Flora Robson, Paul Kelly, and Henry O'Neill are among the other fine actors in the cast. Leo Gorcey has a small but amusing part. WB had such a strong stable of talent in their crime dramas of the '30s and '40s.

This is in many ways a predictable movie for WB that follows a formula I've seen in many gangster movies. The actors play roles they're very comfortable with, most of them having played similar parts before. But that doesn't mean it isn't entertaining. It's very enjoyable for someone like me, who likes not only the genre but the specific way Warner produced these films at the time. They were the go-to studio for urban dramas then and they made many classics that defined these types of stories to this day. This is a good one most fans of Bogart, Raft, and old gangster flicks will like.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle7 / 10

compelling character work turns into less interesting gangster work

Cliff Taylor (George Raft) and Chuck Martin (Humphrey Bogart) are both released from prison. Cliff is trying to go straight but finds parole life difficult. His younger brother Tim grows frustrated at not having enough money to marry his sweetheart Peggy. Meanwhile, Chuck is back living the high life of crime.

I like Cliff's tribulation as an ex-con trying to go straight. That's a compelling character study. The best section is when he gets pulled in for a random unrelated crime. I actually like the brother growing angry. I hoped that Cliff would be facing off against Chuck for his brother's fate. It loses a bit of steam when it turns into a more conventional gangster crime drama. It actually becomes less compelling despite having more Bogie.

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