A Life in the Balance

1955 "A killer with the cunning of a maniac. A little boy with the courage of a lion."
6.1| 1h14m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 01 July 1955 Released
Producted By: Panoramic Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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A widower's young son leads the police to a killer of sinners in Mexico City.

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Director

Harry Horner, Rafael Portillo

Production Companies

Panoramic Productions

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A Life in the Balance Audience Reviews

Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
GarnettTeenage The film was still a fun one that will make you laugh and have you leaving the theater feeling like you just stole something valuable and got away with it.
Brendon Jones It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
MartinHafer Despite being a contract player for the top studio of the day, MGM, Ricardo Montalban was apparently not happy about the sorts of roles Hispanic actors got in Hollywood...hence he later started a non- profit ("Nosotros") to encourage Spanish-speaking actors and Hispanic themes in films. So I am pretty sure he was thrilled with a chance to star in "A Life in the Balance", as he was able to play a Mexican man and the film is set in Mexico City!When the film begins, it's very apparent that Antonio (Montalban) loves his son, Paco, very much. But he's lost his job and they barely make ends meet. Additionally, the boy often is on his own while his father is working. There is a lot of pressure on Antonio to let the neighbors raise the boy...but he won't consider it.Despite losing his job, Antonio pretends that he does have work and tries hard to convince the boy that everything is fine. In fact, he even promises to buy his son a guitar! But when Antonio goes to an old girlfriend to get some money she owes him, they argue a bit. Later, after he's gone, a serial killer (Lee Marvin) murders her and folks assume Antonio did it! To make things worse, Paco saw the murder and the maniac has captured him. What's next? See the film.I liked this film and was very prepared to give it a score of 7. However, at the very end, the characters all started talking and philosophizing...and it all came off as unnecessary and preachy. This was clearly a case where the film was finished...but they kept filming and talking! Still, despite this, the movie's pretty good viewing...and must have made Montalban happy because he was able to get back to his roots.
frankfob Lee Marvin is a crazed American serial killer on the loose in Mexico City who kidnaps an 11-year-old boy who is the only witness to his most recent murder. The boy is the son of down-and-out musician Ricardo Montalban, who frantically searches the city for his son and the psychopath who took him, and in the process hooks up with lovely Anne Bancroft. The Mexico City Police Department joins the pair in their hunt. Marvin is quite good for the most part--although he goes over the top on occasion--and Bancroft looks beautiful but doesn't have all that much to do. Montalban, unfortunately, crosses into "ham" on too many occasions, and the ending is trite and pat. Good use of Mexico City locations works in the film's favor, but the less-than-inspired writing, somewhat sloppy direction and Montalban's overacting work against it. Its good points and its bad points more or less cancel either each out, and the end result is that, while the film manages to hold your interest and has some tense moments, it's somewhat overheated and basically pedestrian.And, contrary to what several posters believe, it is not in any way, shape or form a "film noir" piece.
RanchoTuVu A serial killer (Lee Marvin) has Mexico City in a state of unease as he stabs his young female victims and leaves them with their arms folded. It's a bizarre part for Marvin and he does it perhaps like no one has ever seen him. He kidnaps the only witness to his last deed, an eleven year old boy, who is forced to accompany him over the course of a night in which one scene has them in church and Marvin is praying and asking God who he should kill next while the boy watches him and looks for a way to escape. The boy's father (Ricardo Montalban) is widowed and an unemployed musician, and the neighbors who live next door are angling to take the boy away from him due to his lack of money and instability. Montalban is OK in the film, but the emergence of Anne Bancroft as another out of work and broke character, whom he meets in a pawn shop run by the mean and greedy Dona Lucrecia, is quite interesting. As Marvin is on the run with the boy, night becomes morning, and the police dragnet is closing in. The film is a decent balance of the two strands, the fight over the boy and Marvin's psycho serial killer. The boy's character brings them (the two strands) together fairly well as the night unfolds and the police eventually close in.
Carolyn Paetow A Life in the Balance: even the name bespeaks noir. So, not surprisingly, destiny has a nasty shock in store for out-of-work widower Montalban, who is struggling to make a secure home for his motherless little boy. Neighbors are threatening a custody action, and a smitten ex-lover is resisting repayment of a large loan. And then father and son fall beneath the sinister shadow of maniacal psychopath Lee Marvin. Unware of the terrible turn of events, Montalban bounds fatefully into the Mexico City night. In a pawn shop, he meets Anne Bancroft, a prim, down-on-her-luck lady who is bereft of either street smarts or employment. As the two sally forth into the lights and activity of a holiday festival, his son is in the midst of a far different and dangerous pursuit on dark, deserted streets. Montalban looks sensational, but he is, after all, playing an everyman and conducts his characterization accordingly. Bancroft, though attractive, is unglamorously so and is most appealing in her emotional and intellectual reactions to Montalban. Their relationship, though expeditiously developed, seems deeper and more credible than many seen in classic movies. The plot spins out smoothly, and the settings are well suited to the story. As well as obscure avenues and alleyways, crowded tenement, and typical hock shop, a police station and cavernous cathedral enhance the somber mood. It all makes for a somewhat soft-soaped, somewhat predictable, but nonetheless interesting bit of noir.