Web of Danger (1947) Poster

(1947)

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5/10
Natural disaster vs blonde bombshell
ejrjr27 December 2005
Republic Pictures produced and distributed this drama/love story starring Adele Mara who first appeared in Blondie Goes to College (1942) and last worked in the TV mini-series "Wheels" (1978). Amazingly, the script sounds like it was written about Hurricane Katrina however this time steelworkers rush to complete a bridge as a storm causes floods which destroy levees and imperil residents in a valley.

Backstory revolves around triangle romance between Adele and the two male leads who play the supervisor and foremen for bridge construction company. Who will she choose? This is the old clicking clock plot but it is interesting. The locations and sets are good and obstacles are realistic. Adele is quite a dish especially in her then stylish clothes which are amusing as allegedly she is just an unemployed waitress. But, who cares as she is a treat for tired eyes.

Good, simple entertainment.
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6/10
A Flood And Adele Mara
boblipton28 February 2022
Bill Kennedy is the superintendent and Damian O'Flynn the foreman on a gigantic steel bridge to an isolated valley. They fight over everything, especially Adele Mara, who's around to give haircuts and other things that only women can do. It's dangerous high steel work, and then an accident puts them behind schedule, with a major flood a-coming, which will drown everyone in the valley, unless they can complete the bridge.

I would have tried to put up a temporary structure, or perhaps boated them out before the flood hit, but apparently I'm missing something, like Miss Mara when the guys try to explain the details of bridge-building to her. There are some exciting sequences, but it's largely a by-the-numbers B movie of how men bond over major projects and celebrate by sharing a cigarette. With Richard Loo, Victor Sen Yung, J. Farrell MacDonald, and Chester Clute.
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5/10
Deceiving title.
mark.waltz18 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
What sounds in its title and promoted in its advertising is far from what you get. Expecting a film noir or political thriller, what I got was a rugged action film with lots of comedy and macho men trying to show how tough they are while coming off as buffoons. The building of a bridge is threatened by a flood while dizzy blonde waitress (Adele Mara) is the subject of the desires of two men (Bill Kennedy and Donald O'Flynn) after her. It starts with the type of comedy that you see in two feelers involving mishaps in the greasy spoon where Mara works, involving a regular customer getting his breakfast spilled on him. While amusing, it goes on far too long.

This is at its best when dealing with the dangers the workers face, a couple of them very suspenseful. The flood scene is superbly photographed. It's how these workers deal with the disaster and its aftermath that come off the best in storyline terms. Mara, who seems made for seductresses and vixens, seems miscast here. Two well known Asian character actors, Richard Loo and Victor Sen Young, have nice featured parts that fortunately are minus stereotypical portrayals common during this time. One funny reference has an ironic connection to recently invented political terms where Mara is told the definition of "false work".
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