Showing posts with label Warner Bros.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warner Bros.. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2025

When Gangsters Collide with the Dark Side: 65 Mobbed Up Films Noir


Jean Hagen, Sterling Hayden, "The Asphalt Jungle" (1950). 

In Noir, Racketeers
Aren't Like the Ones
In Your (Grand)Father's
Mob Pictures

By Paul Parcellin

Gangster films were already a cinematic staple when a new kind of crime film began to emerge in the early 1940s. Films noir captured the popular imagination for a couple of decades after World War II. While some of the post war films are about mobsters, they’re different in tone from 1930s gangster films. Warner Bros. gangster movies, the gold standard of the era between the world wars, are rags to riches tales about rough guys with machine guns blasting their way toward prosperity, a scenario that must have appealed to Depression era audiences.

James Cagney, Jean Harlow,
"The Public Enemy" (1931)
Noirs of the 1940s and ’50s that include gangsters distinguish themselves by leaning toward existential questions and characters’ internal conflicts. Gangsters of the 1930s are not complicated people. They know what they want — booze, broads and moolah — and they know how to get them. James Cagney never agonized over morality as a Prohibition era bootlegger. Ditto for Edward G. Robinson.
 
Noirs explore the blurred line between cops and criminals, sometimes with wrongly accused men on the run or in prison, and naive dupes lured into hornets' nests by seductive women and the promise of easy cash. Usually, they involved ordinary, relatable characters caught up in extraordinary circumstances. 

While gangster films are usually about syndicates of organized criminal enterprise, noir gang activities are often one-time operations, heists aimed at the big score, a last job sketched out by graying thieves eying retirement after a lifetime of criminal mischief. They’re about flawed people who want to lead more normal lives, as opposed to old time gang kingpins, who revel in the mobster lifestyle and lead excessive lives of tacky luxury.    

With that in mind, here are 65 noirs with gangsters, syndicate bosses and average, unassuming fall guys who stumble into the dark side (and gangster films with a noirish edge). It's not a complete list. Feel free to mention others that aren't included:

Paper Bullets” (1941)

Dorothy Adams serves time on a bum rap and emerges from the joint a hardened criminal who rises to power in the local crime organization.

"Dangerous Mission” (1954) 

A police officer tries to shield a young lady who witnessed a mob killing. She splits from New York with a hitman in hot pursuit.  

Hoodlum Empire” (1952)

After World War II, ex-mobster war hero Joe Gray goes straight, to the dismay of his New York mob boss uncle who's afraid that his nephew will testify against his outfit before a Grand Jury.

A Bullet for Joey” (1955)

A police inspector discovers a plot to abduct a nuclear physicist. Mobsters, spies and a seductive blonde all play a role in the plot.

Machine-Gun Kelly” (1958)

Public Enemy number one, George “Machine-Gun” Kelly, launches a crime wave in 1930s America.

The Hoodlum” (1951)

Career criminal Vincent Lubeck is out of the slammer and on parole but he still organizes a tricky armored car robbery.

Deported” (1950)

An American gangster sent back to his home country falls in love with a widowed countess.

Johnny Rocco” (1958)

A gangster and police look for a gangster's son who witnessed a murder. The question is, who will find him first?

Baby Face Nelson” (1957)

One of the most notorious gangsters of 1930's Chicago, George "Babyface" Nelson, earns his reputation by masterminding a number of brutal robberies.

Forbidden” (1953)

Eddie Darrow, searching for a mobster's widow in Macao, gets wrapped up in a casino owner's business.

Hell on Frisco Bay” (1955)

After five years in prison, ex-cop Steve Rollins is paroled and searches for the San Francisco mobsters who framed him for manslaughter.

Thunder Road” (1958)

A Korean War veteran comes home to the mountains and takes over the family moonshining business. But gangsters want to muscle into his territory and the cops want to lock him up.

Dillinger” (1945)

Notorious bank robber John Dillinger begins his life of crime as a petty thief, meets his future gang in prison and eventually masterminds a series of daring robberies.

One Way Street” (1950)

After stealing a gangster's money and his girlfriend, a doctor heads for a small village in Mexico.

The Naked Street” (1955)

A mobster springs a condemned murderer because the jailbird got his sister pregnant.

The Gangster” (1947)

A cynical gangster who controls the Neptune Beach waterfront runs a numbers racket with the local soda shop owner. The police are in his pocket and the local hoods are on his payroll.

Macao” (1952)

American Nick Cochran, living in exile in Macao, has a chance to restore his name by helping capture an international crime lord.

Tight Spot” (1955)

A female inmate is whisked out of prison and into a police-guarded hotel until the district attorney can convince her to testify against the mob.

The Trap” (1959)

In a remote Californian desert town, a lawyer arranges for a wanted mobster to skip the country via a small airstrip, but the local sheriff and his deputy throw a wrench into the plan.

Decoy” (1946)

A mortally-wounded female gangster recounts how she and her gang revived a killer executed in the gas chamber to try to find out where he buried a fortune in cash.

The Racket” (1951)

Two honest New York cops try to stop a crime syndicate from moving into their precinct, while preventing a corrupt prosecutor from being made a judge.

Desperate” (1947)

A young married couple flee the police and a gangster who’s out for revenge.

Suddenly” (1954)

Three gangsters trap the a family in their home as part of a plot to kill the president of the United States.

711 Ocean Drive” (1950)

An electronics expert creates a gambling broadcast system for a crime boss, then takes over the operation when the boss is murdered.

M” (1951)

In this American remake of the 1931 German thriller, both the police and the criminal underworld stalk a mysterious serial killer who preys on little girls.

House of Bamboo” (1955)

Planted in a Tokyo crime syndicate, a U.S. Army Investigator probes the death of a fellow Army official. 

Party Girl” (1958)

Atty. Tommy Farrell defends crooks. Vicki Gaye wants him to go straight, but mobster Rico Angelo disagrees.

New York Confidential” (1955)

A top syndicate crime boss and his corrupt politicians make multi-million dollar deals and order murders until the vicious pattern finally catches up to them.

The Glass Key” (1942)

A crooked politician finds himself accused of murder by a gangster whom he refused to help.

His Kind of Woman” (1951)

A deported gangster's plan to re-enter the United States comes to a head at a Mexican resort, and gambler Dan Milner is stuck in the middle.

The Street with No Name” (1948)

An FBI agent infiltrates a ruthless gang, but a mysterious informant funnels information to the hoodlums that puts his life at risk.

Johnny Eager” (1941)

The step-daughter of a district attorney falls in love with a gangster on parole whom her father sent to prison.

Border Incident” (1949)

Mexican and American federal agents tackle a vicious gang exploiting illegal farm workers in Southern California.

The Damned Don't Cry” (1950)

A New York socialite climbs the ladder of success, man by man, until a life among rich gangsters gives her what she thought she always wanted.

The Mob” (1951)

A policeman botches a murder case and is suspended from the force. It’s a ruse that allows him to go undercover and identify the mysterious crime boss of the New York waterfront.

The Enforcer” (1951)

A crusading district attorney finally gets a chance to prosecute the organizer and boss of Murder Inc.

The Big Combo” (1955)

A police lieutenant is ordered to stop investigating deadly crime boss for lack of hard evidence against the mobster. Instead, he seeks information by pursuing the mobster’s girlfriend.

The Lineup” (1958)

A psychopathic gangster and his mentor retrieve heroin packages carried to the United States by unsuspecting overseas travelers.

Criss Cross” (1949)

An armored truck driver and his ex-wife conspire with a gang that wants to rob his truck.

High Sierra” (1941)

After being released from prison, a notorious thief is hired by his old boss to help a group of inexperienced criminals plan and carry out the robbery of a California resort.

The Narrow Margin” (1952)

A woman planning to testify against the mob must be protected against potential assassins on the train trip from Chicago to Los Angeles.

Key Largo” (1948)

A drifter visits a hotel run by the family of a war buddy who was killed in action. A Chicago mobster and his gang have taken over the place.

Force of Evil” (1948)

An unethical lawyer wants his older brother to become a partner with a big-time client in the numbers racket.

The Big Heat” (1953)

Tough cop Dave Bannion takes on a politically powerful crime syndicate.

White Heat” (1949)

A psychopathic criminal with a mother complex makes a daring break from prison and leads his old gang in a chemical plant payroll heist.

Don’t Touch the Loot” (“Touchez pas au grisbi”) (1954)

An aging, world-weary gangster is double-crossed and forced out of retirement when his best friend is kidnapped and their stash of eight stolen gold bars is demanded as ransom.

The Killers” (1946)

Hit men arrive in a small New Jersey town to kill an unresisting victim, and insurance investigator Reardon uncovers his past involvement with beautiful, deadly Kitty Collins.

This Gun for Hire” (1942), 

When assassin Philip Raven shoots a blackmailer and his beautiful female companion dead, he is paid off in marked bills by his treasonous employer who is working with foreign spies.

Nobody Lives Forever” (1946)

Ex-GI Nick Blake gets involved in a scheme to fleece a rich, young widow, but finds himself falling for her, much to the displeasure of his racketeer cohorts.

Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye” (1950)

Starting with a violent prison break, clever, ruthless Ralph Cotter corrupts everyone around him.

Night and the City” (1950)

A small-time grifter and nightclub tout takes advantage of some fortuitous circumstances and tries to become a big-time player as a wrestling promoter.

The Asphalt Jungle” (1950)

A major heist goes off as planned, but then double crosses, bad luck and solid police work cause everything to unravel.

Bob le flambeur” (1956)

An aging gambler loses a pile of cash and decides to return to a life of crime, this time robbing a highly secure gambling casino.

The Killing” (1956)

Career criminal Johnny Clay masterminds an audacious racetrack robbery committed in broad daylight with a packed house of spectators.

Out of the Past” (1947)

A private eye hiding out in a small town is discovered by one of the last people he ever wanted to see again, and is sent on a mission to find a gangster’s runaway moll.

Ride the Pink Horse” (1947)

Lucky Gagin arrives in a New Mexico border-town seeking revenge against mobster Frank Hugo. But FBI agent Bill Retz watches over Gagin and tries to keep him on the right side of the law.

Kansas City Confidential” (1952)

An ex-con trying to go straight is framed for a million dollar armored car robbery and must go to Mexico to unmask the real crooks.

He Ran All the Way” (1951)

A cop killer meets a young woman and he forces her family to hide him from police who are scouring the area to find him.

The Big Sleep” (1946)

Private eye Philip Marlowe is hired to get a spoiled heiress out of trouble with gamblers and blackmailers.

Kiss Me Deadly” (1955)

Mike Hammer picks up a hitchhiker and is lured into a Cold War nightmare that centers around a briefcase full of hot nuclear soup.

Brighton Rock” (1947)

Gang leader Pinkie Brown murders a news reporter then tries to cover up his crime. But the police, some witnesses and another gang all make his life rough.

Lady Gangster” (1942)

A woman acting as a decoy in a bank robbery is arrested. But she grabs $40,000 of the loot from her accomplices before she's carted off to prison.

The Crooked Way” (1949)

A war hero recovers from amnesia and is confronted by his criminal past, a stellar example of the ever popular amnesia noir films.

The Chase” (1946)

A mobster's chauffeur gets involved with the boss's fearful wife, and (as you might expect) it turns into a nightmare.

Highway 301” (1950)

A violent gang robs banks and murders anyone who might identify them.

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

'Highway 301': There's a Killer on the Road

Wally Cassell, Steve Cochran, Richard Egan, Edward Norris,
Robert Webber, 'Highway 301' (1950). 

It’s a wonder that anyone gets through the first few minutes of "Highway 301," a noir based on the true-life crime wave perpetrated by an outfit called the Tri-State Gang. The film is a taut little thriller that starts off with wooden speeches by three, count ‘em, three state governors, the honorable gentlemen of  North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland, where the real Tri-State Gang did its dirty work. Their turgid preambles are the same: Crime doesn’t pay, kids. It’ll make you roll your eyes and, depending on where you are, either change the channel or head for the snack bar.

But don't be put off. You might assume that the rest of the movie is just as cringe-worthy as the opening sequence but you’d be dead wrong. The action whips up to a furious pace as we follow a gang of bank robbers led by George Legenza (Steve Cochran), who seldom hesitates to squeeze the trigger whenever someone gets in his way — and that “someone” can include any of the gang members’ women who are traveling with them. He’s got pure Freon coursing through his veins and a thousand-yard stare that could stop a freight train. This being noir, the film admirably avoids giving us a fancy psychological profile explaining how he ended up this way. Bad childhood? Obviously, but who cares? He’s a B-movie killing machine. Enough said.

The rest of the hoods are a good deal less trigger happy than their boss and are quite subservient to him — who wouldn’t be? The guy’s nuts. They include Herbie Brooks (Richard Egan), Bobby Mais (Wally Cassell), Bill Phillips (Robert Webber) and the driver (Edward Norris). 

Steve Cochran, Gaby André.
French-Canadian Lee Fontaine (Gaby Andre), newly wed to gang member Bill Phillips (Robert Webber), hangs out with the band of henchmen not realizing that she’s sitting on a powder keg. Bill tells her that he and his buddies deal in women’s apparel and furs. Legenza’s girlfriend Madeline Welton (Aline Towne) who offers a bit of sarcastic comic relief, scoffs at the naive Lee. “Furs that fell off the back of a truck,” she sneers. Tension mounts as Lee finally gets the full picture of what’s going on. She knows too much, which is a surefire way to end up in a landfill. 

Voiceover narration by head investigator Det. Sgt. Truscott (Edmon Ryan) sets up each sequence, giving the film a documentary feel which fits well in this true crime drama. The cops want desperately to stop the gang’s wave of murder and robbery which Truscott characterizes as terrorism.

Director Andrew L. Stone keeps the action flowing and the tension wound as tightly as a two dollar watch. He plays with the audience’s emotions and expectations the way a conductor directs a symphony. Particularly good are his action sequences that include car chases and shootouts. One standout sequence moves from the interior of an apartment building to a park and finally to city streets and ends with a stunning twist. He also ramps up the jitteriness in a chase scene involving elevators and staircases. The tension of watching the elevator floor indicator dial move as a killer approaches his victim is heart-stopping. The unintended corker is that the elevator operator witnesses a particularly vicious murder and seems barely moved by it — maybe that’s business as usual in the elevator game. 

The film boasts the use of real-life locations, but most of it was shot on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank. The studio rushed it into production to capitalize on the success of “White Heat,” in which Cochran co-starred with James Cagney. Like his role in the Cagney film, Cochran again fits perfectly into the part of a deadly lothario who acts with chilling brutality. It’s understandable that audiences in 1950 would be shocked by the level of violence depicted here — which probably helps explain the outsized concession that allowed the three governors the chance to hijack the first few minutes of the film.

Even so, we’re apt to concede that, yes, crime doesn’t pay, as the three stuffed shirts tell us, but it can also be pretty entertaining, and that’s why it’s worth watching.