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- Published: 2010-11-02
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Name | G Men |
---|---|
Director | William Keighley |
Producer | Louis F. Edelman Hal B. Wallis |
Writer | Darryl F. Zanuck (story, uncredited) Seton I. Miller |
Starring | James Cagney Ann Dvorak Margaret Lindsay Robert Armstrong |
Music | David Buttolph Bernhard Kaun (both uncredited) |
Cinematography | Sol Polito |
Editing | Jack Killifer |
Distributor | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Released | April 18, 1935 |
Runtime | 85 minutes |
Country | |
Language |
G Men was made as part of a deliberate attempt to counteract what many conservative political and business leaders claimed was a disturbing trend of glorifying criminals in the early 1930s gangster film genre. Although the gangster films were typically presented as moral indictments of organized crime where the criminal protagonist inevitably died, they nevertheless depicted a life of freedom, power and luxury enjoyed by gangsters in the midst of a real-life economic crisis. Foremost of these films were Little Caesar, the original Scarface, and perhaps the most memorable, The Public Enemy, which catapulted Cagney to stardom. Also notable about these films was that law enforcement was typically portrayed as either impotent in the face of crime, or, as with Public Enemy, akin to a derelict and largely absentee father shirking his duty. Based on this interpretation, G Men supplanted the criminal protagonist with the heroic federal police officer.
Most prints of this film include a brief scene added at the beginning for the 1949 re-release.
__TOC__ , who were tracking kidnappers in the Pacific Northwest.]]
Davis travels to Washington, DC to begin his training. A mutual dislike forms immediately between him and his instructor, Jeff McCord (Robert Armstrong). However, Davis is attracted to McCord's sister Kay (Margaret Lindsay), though the feeling is definitely not reciprocated.
Meanwhile, MacKay retires and buys a resort lodge out in the woods of Wisconsin. His men, free of his restraint, embark on a crime spree. Hamstrung by existing laws (federal agents have to get local warrants and are not even allowed to carry guns), the head of the G-Men pleads for new laws to empower his beleaguered men. They are enacted with great speed.
Davis identifies one of the perpetrators, Danny Leggett (Edward Pawley), by his superstition of always wearing a gardenia. Not having completed his training, he can only give agent Hugh Farrell (Lloyd Nolan) tips on Leggett's habits. Farrell tracks down and arrests his quarry, but he and some of his men are gunned down, and Leggett escapes.
McCord is put in charge of the manhunt and given his choice of five agents. He picks Davis, a decision that later pays dividends when Davis pushes him out the way and takes a bullet meant for him. Davis ends up in the hospital (where Kay is a nurse) for his shoulder wound. When Jean is brought in for questioning, Davis learns she is now married to Collins (Barton MacLane), one of the crooks. She inadvertently lets slip that the gang is hiding out at MacKay's lodge (against MacKay's will). In the ensuing wild shootout, Davis kills MacKay, who was being used as a human shield. Before he dies, MacKay forgives his distraught friend.
Only Collins gets away. He kidnaps Kay to use as a hostage. Jean finds out where he is hiding and telephones Davis, only to be killed in cold blood by her husband. Davis sneaks inside and rescues Kay. Collins is shot to death by McCord as he tries to drive away.
Category:1930s crime films Category:1935 films Category:American films Category:Black-and-white films Category:Drama films Category:English-language films Category:Films about organized crime in the United States Category:Films directed by William Keighley Category:Warner Bros. films
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