VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
612
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaFact-based story of a rookie cop who takes on a crime syndicate involved in corrupting government officials in Brooklyn, New York.Fact-based story of a rookie cop who takes on a crime syndicate involved in corrupting government officials in Brooklyn, New York.Fact-based story of a rookie cop who takes on a crime syndicate involved in corrupting government officials in Brooklyn, New York.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Margaret Hayes
- Lil Polombo
- (as Maggie Hayes)
Brian G. Hutton
- Jess Johnson
- (as Brian Hutton)
Joe Turkel
- Monte
- (as Joseph Turkel)
William Baskin
- Thug
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Arthur Berkeley
- Bar Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Robert Bice
- Policeman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Dwight Brooks
- Detective
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Booth Colman
- George - TV Interviewer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Dick Crockett
- Thug
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Joe De Santis
- Gus Polumbo
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Coming Near the End of the Film-Noir Cycle.
This Fact-Based Story Tells of a District in Brooklyn that was "Sewed Up" By "Organized Crime".
It Came on the Heels of the Televised Senate Commission.
America was Riveted to the "Idiot Box" that for Once was Used for the Purpose of Informing the Public and Shining a Light on Evil Doers.
The Film is a Hard-Boiled, Bleak Look at the Gambling Operations and the Bad-Cops who were On the Take.
The Police Department Decides to Use "Virginal", Un-Tainted Rookies to Infiltrate.
Because the Corruption was so Deep that No One on the Force Could be Trusted.
Darren MaGavin Reins in His Usual Over-the-Top Shenanigans and Gives One of His Best Realistic Performances.
Good Cast All Around.
Highlighted by Margaret Hayes in a Gut-Wrenching Role and Bares Her Soul as a Widow whose Husband was "In Deep" to the Mob.
The Film also Boasts Bare-Knuckle Fisticuffs that are Outstanding.
Many a Norish Scenes of the Back-Alleys and Tough-Turf as the Action Unfolds.
Striking to Look At with a Good Script from the Black-Listed Bernard Gordon form a "True" Magazine Story by Ed Reid.
This Could be Categorized in 1950's Off-Spring of Film-Noir that Proliferated Crime Films and Became Labeled "Police Procedurals".
Owing more than a Debt to Pure Film-Noir, this is One of the Best of the Bunch.
Note...Bobby Helms the co-author of "Jingle Bell Rock" shows up in an "insert" and does the Movie no favors removing the angst and ambiance. But its only 2 minutes.
This Fact-Based Story Tells of a District in Brooklyn that was "Sewed Up" By "Organized Crime".
It Came on the Heels of the Televised Senate Commission.
America was Riveted to the "Idiot Box" that for Once was Used for the Purpose of Informing the Public and Shining a Light on Evil Doers.
The Film is a Hard-Boiled, Bleak Look at the Gambling Operations and the Bad-Cops who were On the Take.
The Police Department Decides to Use "Virginal", Un-Tainted Rookies to Infiltrate.
Because the Corruption was so Deep that No One on the Force Could be Trusted.
Darren MaGavin Reins in His Usual Over-the-Top Shenanigans and Gives One of His Best Realistic Performances.
Good Cast All Around.
Highlighted by Margaret Hayes in a Gut-Wrenching Role and Bares Her Soul as a Widow whose Husband was "In Deep" to the Mob.
The Film also Boasts Bare-Knuckle Fisticuffs that are Outstanding.
Many a Norish Scenes of the Back-Alleys and Tough-Turf as the Action Unfolds.
Striking to Look At with a Good Script from the Black-Listed Bernard Gordon form a "True" Magazine Story by Ed Reid.
This Could be Categorized in 1950's Off-Spring of Film-Noir that Proliferated Crime Films and Became Labeled "Police Procedurals".
Owing more than a Debt to Pure Film-Noir, this is One of the Best of the Bunch.
Note...Bobby Helms the co-author of "Jingle Bell Rock" shows up in an "insert" and does the Movie no favors removing the angst and ambiance. But its only 2 minutes.
A real scandal involving several NYPD police officers stationed in Brooklyn was the basis for this crime and corruption story that became the plot for The Case Against Brooklyn.
Cops are being paid off at an alarming rate to close their eyes and look the other way as illegal betting parlors open up for business all over the Borough of homes and churches. The District Attorney in Kings County who at that time in real life was a man named Edward Silver is determined to do something about it. In the film the character's name is Michael Norris and he's played by Tol Avery.
What Avery's decided to do is literally hijack the whole graduating class at the Academy and have them work for him undercover. One of them, Darren McGavin is sent undercover to romance the recent widow of Joe DeSantis who committed suicide so his double indemnity clause could pay off Nestor Paiva the bookie who's sent some of his enforcers around to collect. As McGavin romances Margaret Hayes that certainly puts a strain on his marriage to Peggy McCay.
And the triangle becomes four sided as Warren Stevens who does a bit of everything for Paiva, muscle, bagman, and even hit-man also starts courting Hayes to see what could spill to the cops, if she can find some that she can trust.
Best performances in the film by far are from DeSantis and Hayes. As the victim you can feel things closing in for DeSantis as he makes that final gesture for his wife's solvency. And Hayes you can feel sorry for the fact she's being used by both sides.
How it all ends, let me say that the climax takes a leaf from the Fritz Lang noir classic The Big Heat and if you know that film, you know about 80% of how the story will come out.
McGavin himself is a ruthless sort looking to prove himself, knowing that a good job here will cement his reputation. In real life it would have gained him a long career in Internal Affairs.
A year after the Dodgers left Brooklyn, The Case Against Brooklyn is a fine noir drama based on a real incident in the beloved former home of the Bums.
Cops are being paid off at an alarming rate to close their eyes and look the other way as illegal betting parlors open up for business all over the Borough of homes and churches. The District Attorney in Kings County who at that time in real life was a man named Edward Silver is determined to do something about it. In the film the character's name is Michael Norris and he's played by Tol Avery.
What Avery's decided to do is literally hijack the whole graduating class at the Academy and have them work for him undercover. One of them, Darren McGavin is sent undercover to romance the recent widow of Joe DeSantis who committed suicide so his double indemnity clause could pay off Nestor Paiva the bookie who's sent some of his enforcers around to collect. As McGavin romances Margaret Hayes that certainly puts a strain on his marriage to Peggy McCay.
And the triangle becomes four sided as Warren Stevens who does a bit of everything for Paiva, muscle, bagman, and even hit-man also starts courting Hayes to see what could spill to the cops, if she can find some that she can trust.
Best performances in the film by far are from DeSantis and Hayes. As the victim you can feel things closing in for DeSantis as he makes that final gesture for his wife's solvency. And Hayes you can feel sorry for the fact she's being used by both sides.
How it all ends, let me say that the climax takes a leaf from the Fritz Lang noir classic The Big Heat and if you know that film, you know about 80% of how the story will come out.
McGavin himself is a ruthless sort looking to prove himself, knowing that a good job here will cement his reputation. In real life it would have gained him a long career in Internal Affairs.
A year after the Dodgers left Brooklyn, The Case Against Brooklyn is a fine noir drama based on a real incident in the beloved former home of the Bums.
Stumbled on this one today. Plot is very good, very realistic. Always fascinating to see what were once considered glamorous fashiones. The acting is top notch from names one would never consider important. The parts of the characters' lives might have seemed insignificant but here they were given real irony. Very frank 1950s violence . So much more fun to see fists used in unexpected places. All of this on a low budget, the only way film noir can be done.
It looks like a Don Siegel or Phil Karlson film, but director Paul Wendkos was an effective film maker, finally preferring the TV industry than the big screen one. Excellent, flawless acting, directing, photography. Of course, the topic tells the combat between good guys against the evil ones, the mob. It nearly evokes a pilot of a TV series in the basic plot. And Darren McGavin will also, as Paul Wendkos, prefer the small screen career. This film noir confirms the previous talent shown by Wendkos in THE BURGLAR, another crime film, solid, taut as this one, but for another story. A true good piece of work, solid material for noir gems seekers.
Opine that a film is noir, and the arguments will sprout up like mushrooms in a dark cellar. This gritty little feature, however, should cause contention only among those who designate noir in terms of directors, inclusive years, or other mercenary measures. The plot concerns police corruption, and the protagonist is an unsullied, but savvy rookie cop who is ready and willing to cast sentiment aside and get the goods by hook or crook. The Production Code is cracking, and characters talk of a woman putting out and a good guy's willingness to cheat on his wife. There's no soft soap or sappiness--only an oblique noir world that twists and turns and delivers flashes of light amidst the gloom.
Lo sapevi?
- Quiz"Raymond T. Marcus" is listed as the writer for this film, but that was an alias used by Bernard Gordon. Gordon co-wrote this movie with Julian Zimet. Since the two were blacklisted during the McCarthy-era "Red Scare", their real names could not be used.
- Citazioni
Ed Reid: When the law is suspended for a price, and truth and justice can be peddled in the marketplace, then every citizen's in danger. The law belongs to the highest bidder.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Case Against Brooklyn
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Brooklyn Borough Hall - Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(Establishing shot used as the office building for District Attorney Michael W. Norris)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 22min(82 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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