A top syndicate crime boss and his corrupt politicians make multi-million deals and order murders until the vicious pattern finally catches up to them.A top syndicate crime boss and his corrupt politicians make multi-million deals and order murders until the vicious pattern finally catches up to them.A top syndicate crime boss and his corrupt politicians make multi-million deals and order murders until the vicious pattern finally catches up to them.
Storyline
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- Quotes
Arnie Wendler: How'dya like me to sing? To turn states evidence?
Judge Kincaid: And what do you expect in return?
Arnie Wendler: To walk out clean. Absolutely clean.
Judge Kincaid: You have the audacity to suggest a proposal like that to me?
Arnie Wendler: That's the deal. Take it or leave it.
Judge Kincaid: What makes you think I'd make a bargain like this with you Wendler? You haven't a chance. This entire city is looking for you. You'll be picked up in a matter of days, hours.
Arnie Wendler: You'd like to crack the Syndicate wouldn't ya, Kincaid? You'd like to reach one of the big boys.
Judge Kincaid: Go on.
Arnie Wendler: Me, I'm small fry. Maybe I burn for Williamson's murder, but I don't have to testify. I don't even have to open my trap in the courtroom unless I want to, but if I do, I'll nail one of the big boys for you. Maybe 5he biggest. I can put the finger right on Charlie Lupo.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Invisible Man vs. The Human Fly (1957)
As such, it is wildly and tragically uneven. The leads all turn in brilliant performances, but the screenplay has all the earmarks of a committee job; fascinating ideas and characterizations butt up against terribly overwrought clichés. The main cast is on fire with weighty dialogue, but the supporting cast flounders about as if they were in the most pedestrian B-noir instead of a star-driven studio picture. For the most part, the design is static and lifeless, shot with little flair by Eddie Fitzgerald. Director and co-writer Russell Rouse's previous noir entry was the chancy THE THIEF, also an uneven experiment.
But the film has its scenes of incredible power, usually those revolving around Conte, as a cold and calculating hit-man for hire, and Bancroft, as the put-upon mobster's daughter who can't crawl out from behind dad's shadow; Conte dispatching with "hits", his gunshots creepily muffled by a silencer; Crawford's repeated near-meltdowns; murderous planning done completely straight in a corporate boardroom, just big business as usual.
A puzzler of a film, leaving the viewer to wonder what could have been, had it been shot by John Alton and penned by, say, Dalton Trumbo. Still, it's an extremely valuable entry in the film noir canon, strangely almost impossible to see.
- Howard_B_Eale
- May 22, 2009
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,300,000
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1