Detectives try to solve the case of a murdered Los Angeles defense attorney.Detectives try to solve the case of a murdered Los Angeles defense attorney.Detectives try to solve the case of a murdered Los Angeles defense attorney.
Larry J. Blake
- Det. Lt. Jerry McMullen
- (as Larry Blake)
Wong Artarne
- Chinese Waiter
- (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone
- Fire Warden at Car Wreck
- (uncredited)
John Canady
- X-Ray Technician
- (uncredited)
Michael Chapin
- Mike
- (uncredited)
Angela Clarke
- Mrs. O'Neill
- (uncredited)
Eddie Coke
- Williams
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe seductive Italian dialogue Sgt. Carey uses to sweet talk the blonde secretary at approximately the 35 minute mark roughly translates to "I think it would be great to make a nice dish of pasta and meatballs"
- GoofsAs O'Neil waits in another room to murder Red, one of the detectives climbs in through a window right behind O'Neil without making a sound, surprising O'Neil. But as the detective does this only a foot or so from O'Neil, O'Neil would have had to have been hard of hearing if not deaf to have not heard someone climbing in a window right behind him. Unless, of course, that was what was in the script.
- Quotes
John Morland: Murder, my friend, is like a game of solitaire. To be sure of winning it, it should be played alone.
- Crazy creditsThe version airing on the Fox Movie Channel has credits in a modern, video-generated font, suggesting that the original main and end titles are lost and were quickly and cheaply re-created.
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsSpoofed in Hare Do (1949)
Featured review
Backlash is a pretty decrepit programmer built upon a nifty premise: A jealous husband so hates his wife that he frames her for his own murder. He's a successful lawyer, middle-aged, grey and sporting a Thomas E. Dewey mustache, and, as such, indistinguishable from just about every other adult male in the cast (which may be among the most anonymous in the history of movies; the collective Q-rating of Backlash would be in the negative numbers).
When a burned-out car with a body in it turns up in a ravine, the police potter around trying to find out first who was killed and then who killed him. There was a cop-killer the lawyer saved from a murder charge; his law partner who owned him big money; the district attorney who may have been seeing his restless younger wife; another temptress connected to both the partner and the cop-killer; and so on. In fact there are a few too many red herrings squeezed into this compact (66-minute) can.
Surprisingly, Backlash boasts one fine scene which looks as though it was cut from a much better movie and spliced in by mistake. In a railroad yard at night, one of the principals meets up with a drifter who offers to share his bottle and some philosophical musings. It's filmed as an extended, highly shadowed two-shot that grows tighter and more oppressive as the talk turns to the murder case that dominates the headlines - and then to more urgent concerns. It's a sequence that makes Backlash almost worth a look.
When a burned-out car with a body in it turns up in a ravine, the police potter around trying to find out first who was killed and then who killed him. There was a cop-killer the lawyer saved from a murder charge; his law partner who owned him big money; the district attorney who may have been seeing his restless younger wife; another temptress connected to both the partner and the cop-killer; and so on. In fact there are a few too many red herrings squeezed into this compact (66-minute) can.
Surprisingly, Backlash boasts one fine scene which looks as though it was cut from a much better movie and spliced in by mistake. In a railroad yard at night, one of the principals meets up with a drifter who offers to share his bottle and some philosophical musings. It's filmed as an extended, highly shadowed two-shot that grows tighter and more oppressive as the talk turns to the murder case that dominates the headlines - and then to more urgent concerns. It's a sequence that makes Backlash almost worth a look.
- How long is Backlash?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 6 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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