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Outside the Law

  • 1930
  • Approved
  • 1h 19m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,5/10
242
MA NOTE
Edward G. Robinson, Owen Moore, and Mary Nolan in Outside the Law (1930)
CrimeDramaRomanceThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFingers is planning a half-million-dollar bank robbery in gang boss Cobra Collins' territory. Fingers' moll Connie tries to bluff Cobra into thinking the hit won't be for another week when t... Tout lireFingers is planning a half-million-dollar bank robbery in gang boss Cobra Collins' territory. Fingers' moll Connie tries to bluff Cobra into thinking the hit won't be for another week when the call comes through saying it's now.Fingers is planning a half-million-dollar bank robbery in gang boss Cobra Collins' territory. Fingers' moll Connie tries to bluff Cobra into thinking the hit won't be for another week when the call comes through saying it's now.

  • Director
    • Tod Browning
  • Writers
    • Tod Browning
    • Garrett Fort
  • Stars
    • Mary Nolan
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Owen Moore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    5,5/10
    242
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Tod Browning
    • Writers
      • Tod Browning
      • Garrett Fort
    • Stars
      • Mary Nolan
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Owen Moore
    • 15Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 9Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Rôles principaux18

    Modifier
    Mary Nolan
    Mary Nolan
    • Connie Madden
    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • Cobra Collins
    Owen Moore
    Owen Moore
    • Harry 'Fingers' O'Dell
    Rockliffe Fellowes
    Rockliffe Fellowes
    • Police Captain Fred O'Reilly
    Delmar Watson
    Delmar Watson
    • The Kid
    Eddie Sturgis
    • Jake
    John George
    John George
    • Humpy
    Louise Beavers
    Louise Beavers
    • Judy the Maid
    • (uncredited)
    Matthew Betz
    Matthew Betz
    • Mr. Sparks - Stage Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Assistant District Attorney
    • (uncredited)
    Frederick Burt
    • District Attorney
    • (uncredited)
    Wong Chung
    Wong Chung
    • Messenger
    • (uncredited)
    Rodney Hildebrand
    • Police Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    DeWitt Jennings
    DeWitt Jennings
    • Police Chief Kennedy
    • (uncredited)
    George Marion
    • Old Nightwatchman
    • (uncredited)
    Clarence Muse
    Clarence Muse
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Rose Plumer
    • Onlooker Outside the Bank
    • (uncredited)
    Charley Rogers
    Charley Rogers
    • Cigar Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Tod Browning
    • Writers
      • Tod Browning
      • Garrett Fort
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs15

    5,5242
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    Avis en vedette

    31930s_Time_Machine

    A failed attempt to make a Talkie in the style of a Silent Movie

    There's some good things to say about this but unfortunately there's a lot more bad things to say about it. Visually and technically it's very impressive. Tod Browning invests a great deal of thought into achieving perfect framing, atmospheric lighting and some clever imagery. His style however is so unsuited to this film that the overall effect is awful.

    The actual story is absurd. It begins as a crime movie but then evolves into an intense melodrama. Mary Nolan is the star and she plays a cynical, heartless gangster's moll who's tied up with a bank robber. What the story is about is whether her bank robber boyfriend (who's actually a decent guy) can change her into a loving, caring, sweet maternal young lady.... in the space of a couple of days. It's a stupid premise and is so ridiculous that the film loses all its credibility.

    Edward G Robinson was a rising star at Universal but he's only the supporting actor in this one. Even though he's not at the top of the bill, he seems to be the only member of the cast doing any proper acting. It is however not those actors' fault - the 'bad acting' is actually deliberate. Apart when E. G. R has a scene the dialogue is glacially slow. The weird slow motion style of delivery feels like the the film keeps freezing. A lot of very early talkies we're terrible - directors hadn't a clue how to make the transition to sound, actors forgot how to move and indeed how to speak but this is not one of those. It's a pretty bad film but not because the team at Universal didn't know what they were doing - no, they just didn't want to make this like a proper film.

    Tod Browning, although a little past his prime by now was one of Silents' most stylish directors. He was chosen to deliberately make this picture as much like a silent as a talkie could be. It was made with a sense of nostalgia, an attitude that 'if we must use this new fangled sound nonsense let's make sure it doesn't ruin our art form we've spent so long perfecting.' Sound was considered to be an unwelcome intruder not something which could enrich the experience. The experiment really doesn't work, it makes it seem like no one knew how to produce a talking picture and plays up to that old prejudice that those silent stars couldn't make talkies.

    Someone who really suffered was this film's star Mary Nolan. She had been an absolute megastar just a few years earlier but this would be her last film at Universal or indeed any major studio before plummeting into an utterly tragic life of heroin addiction, destitution and an early death. When you see how pretty and full of life she was here, it really is genuinely upsetting. She just didn't get a lucky break and found herself having to act in this painfully un-entertaining nonsense. That said, there were other reasons: she had some major personal problems, she wasn't a great actress and certainly couldn't play a cynical gangster's moll - she comes across as even less convincing than Jean Harlow and that's saying something! It wasn't all her fault though, she was directed by Browning to play it this way. In this picture however unfortunately she is one of the main reasons this comes across as such a poor film.
    6bkoganbing

    Dress rehearsal

    Before Edward G. Robinson had his career role in Little Caesar he did a few films including a couple of silent movies and in several of them played a gangster. Watching Outside The Law you think you are watching Robinson in a dress rehearsal for Little Caesar.

    All the snarling all the mannerisms are there for Robinson in this film. He plays a gangland boss who likes to control all the crime action in his are and get his cut. But Owen Moore and moll Mary Nolan aren't splitting with anybody when they pull a bank job. So it's a question of whether the cops will get them or Robinson.

    Nolan though she overacts considerably as did just about everyone in those early talkies. She tries to vamp Robinson, but he's as uninterested as he was in Little Caesar.

    Curiously enough both Moore and Nolan were coming close to the end of their respective careers. Both were known for high living and partying away in the Roaring Twenties. They both died too young.

    But Robinson was just getting started and you'll swear you are seeing Little Caesar. Had he been the main character as he was in Little Caesar this could have been the breakout role for him.

    Tod Browning directed this film and it's remake of one he did ten years earlier with Lon Chaney. A real treat for fans of Eddie Robinson.
    3planktonrules

    Some poor acting, an unconvincing change and poor sound make this one tough to love.

    I found "Outside the Law" today on YouTube. I was excited as it was an early Edward G. Robinson film but less excited when I began watching it because the sound quality was very poor. I literally found myself turning the volume up and down repeatedly as the sound kept changing. If you can find another copy, you might want to watch that instead. This copy was watchable but annoying.

    In at least three of Robinson's early films, he was inexplicably cast as an Asian guy! You wouldn't know it in this one until he introduces a Chinese woman...telling the girl that it's his mother. But he also plays more Asian guys in "The Hatchet Man" and "East is East"....and the results were, of course, ridiculous! I think some of this was because studios (in this case, Universal) had no idea what to do with this talented actor. And, not surprisingly, it will clearly offend folks today when they see this...but this sort of ridiculous racial casting was the norm in the 1930s and 40s. But the white actors USUALLY carried it off better. The major exception was "Dragon Seed" where, believe it or not, Katharine Hepburn played a Chinese woman!!!

    Now although I've talked a lot about Robinson, he actually is billed second in the movie. First billed is Mary Nolan, a very self-destructive actress who lived a very wild life and died young. It's pretty sad and shocking stuff. And, here in "Outside the Law", she's a hard as nails femme fatale without any apparent redeeming value. Just watch her with the little boy....you'll see what I mean!!

    The story involves Connie (Nolan) and Fingers planning a robbery. But when Cobra Collins (Robinson) sees Fingers (Owen Moore) doing a weird publicity stunt for the bank, he quickly realizes Fingers is planning on a bank job....and not an honest one! Much of the film concerns Connie trying to fool Cobra into thinking the robbery will take place later...and cutting him out of taking part of the loot. But this robbery is in Cobra's territory and he thinks he's owed at least a part of it....or else. As for Fingers, despite being a crook, he seems like a much more decent sort...and you care more about him than these other two sociopaths. So what happens next? See the film....and you WON'T suspect what actually occurs!

    So is it any good? I wouldn't say yes, as the film features some ridiculous change in Connie...going from completely evil and nasty to a redemption towards the end. It just didn't make much sense and happened too quickly to be realistic. Plus, Nolan's acting and Owen Moore's aren't particularly good nor convincing. Robinson is pretty good, though I noticed his voice wasn't quite the same as it would be in his later films for Warner Brothers. In these just a year or two later, he slowed down and lowered the tone of his voice just a hair...but it was an improvement. Overall, a tough movie to love...and with Tod Browning directing I was shocked how ordinary the film actually was.
    3kevinolzak

    Tod Browning before "Dracula"

    1930's "Outside the Law" was the first of director Tod Browning's three Universal pictures, to be followed by the immortal "Dracula" and "Iron Man" (both 1931). Leaving MGM after his first talkie, 1929's "The Thirteenth Chair," Browning debuted at Universal with this remake of his own 1921 silent crime drama, also titled "Outside the Law," one of his first collaborations with the late Lon Chaney. Second billed Edward G. Robinson easily dominates as gang leader Cobra Collins, who demands a piece of the cut when the local bank is robbed by a small time crook (Owen Moore) and his moll (Mary Nolan). What truly sinks it are the endless scenes depicting the two crooks alone in their apartment, coddling a nauseating little boy who just happens to have a police captain for a father. It's rather dispiriting to think that a director like Tod Browning, with a real feel for the macabre, would display such a heavy hand with such maudlin sentimentality, yet the glacial pace is a reminder of how he botched "Dracula." The unsympathetic bickering of the two insufferable leads clearly has the opposite effect of what was intended (their unspectacular careers quickly petered out, with Moore dead by 1939, and Nolan by 1948). Browning's next feature would leave this old fashioned claptrap in the dust: the 1931 "Dracula" (his triumphant return to MGM produced the shocking "Freaks" in 1932). Already typecast as underworld kingpins, Edward G. Robinson would follow this forgettable fluff with "The Widow from Chicago," leading to the vastly superior and uncompromising gangster classic "Little Caesar," released early in 1931, and then a pair of intriguing titles opposite Boris Karloff, "Smart Money" (co-starring James Cagney) and "Five Star Final."
    brliqq

    Nothing to go crazy over.

    This flick has Robinson in his vintage character form as a gangster named Cobra, with his cigars and his infamous "Ny'a See". Fingers and Connie play a robbery team thats moving in on Cobra's turf and is forced to hid out from the law, and Cobra. Nothing great about this film that should make one go crazy to see it. The most enjoyable parts in the movie is Robinson doing his ol' mob boss routine where it almost gets humorous.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Made its New York Premiere at the Globe Theatre 28 August 1930 at 10:30 PM.
    • Citations

      Harry 'Fingers' O'Dell: Say, if I had a wooden whistle that wouldn't whistle, could I blow it? Ha! Joke.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film (2008)
    • Bandes originales
      Grand Appassionato
      (uncredited)

      Music by Giuseppe Becce

      [main title music]

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 septembre 1930 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • De laglösas lag
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • société de production
      • Universal Pictures
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 19 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.20 : 1

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