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City Across the River

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
487
YOUR RATING
Sue England, Stephen McNally, and Barbara Whiting in City Across the River (1949)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

The macho head of an urban community center tries to reform juvenile delinquents.The macho head of an urban community center tries to reform juvenile delinquents.The macho head of an urban community center tries to reform juvenile delinquents.

  • Director
    • Maxwell Shane
  • Writers
    • Maxwell Shane
    • Dennis J. Cooper
    • Irving Shulman
  • Stars
    • Stephen McNally
    • Thelma Ritter
    • Luis Van Rooten
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    487
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maxwell Shane
    • Writers
      • Maxwell Shane
      • Dennis J. Cooper
      • Irving Shulman
    • Stars
      • Stephen McNally
      • Thelma Ritter
      • Luis Van Rooten
    • 18User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Stephen McNally
    Stephen McNally
    • Stan Albert
    Thelma Ritter
    Thelma Ritter
    • Mrs. Katie Cusack
    Luis Van Rooten
    Luis Van Rooten
    • Joe Cusack
    Jeff Corey
    Jeff Corey
    • Police Lieutenant Louie Macon
    Sharon McManus
    Sharon McManus
    • Alice Cusack
    Sue England
    Sue England
    • Betty Maylor
    Barbara Whiting
    Barbara Whiting
    • Annie Kane
    Richard Benedict
    Richard Benedict
    • Gaggsy Steens
    Peter Fernandez
    Peter Fernandez
    • Frank Cusack
    Al Ramsen
    • Benjamin 'Benny' Wilks
    Joshua Shelley
    • Theodore 'Crazy' Perrin
    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • Mitch
    • (as Anthony Curtis)
    Mickey Knox
    Mickey Knox
    • Larry
    Richard Jaeckel
    Richard Jaeckel
    • Bull
    Al Eben
    Al Eben
    • Detective Kleiner
    Robert Osterloh
    Robert Osterloh
    • Mr. Bannon
    Sara Berner
    Sara Berner
    • Selma
    Anabel Shaw
    Anabel Shaw
    • Mrs. Jean Albert
    • Director
      • Maxwell Shane
    • Writers
      • Maxwell Shane
      • Dennis J. Cooper
      • Irving Shulman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.3487
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    Featured reviews

    6planktonrules

    Sort of like a tougher version of The Dead End Kids.

    "City Across the River" is a film about a gang of young punks who are being pulled towards lives of crime by a two-bit hood, Gaggsy. At the same time, a do-gooder, Stan Albert (Stephen McNally), is trying to get through to them and point them towards becoming decent citizens. Of the young punks, the story centers mostly on Frank Cusack....and Frank and his pal end up getting in some very, very serious trouble!

    During this era, there were a lot of exploitation films about 'youth gone wild', though I wouldn't place "City Across the River" in this category. It's not so much exploitation but more like a Dead End Kids movie combined with film noir. Overall, a decent picture...though the preachy prologue and epilogue was NOT necessary in the least.

    By the way, if you watch the film look for young Tony Curtis and Richard Jaekel as two of the hoodlums in the gang.
    9rsc-9

    Brings back Brooklyn memories

    I lived in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, NY and saw "City Across the River" after reading "The Amboy Dukes" when I was 13 years old, a very impressionable age. Tony Curtis was the rage and all the boys started combing their hair with the "Curtis look." At the time it seemed as if all of my contemporaries read the book, much like "God's Little Acre." The former because it described our lives in Brooklyn and the latter because of the "sexual" passages contained therein. It was a time of pegged pants, "ducks-ass" hairdos ala Curtis, stick and punch ball, athletic clubs, going to the 12 cent movies Saturdays at 12 o'clock to see a double feature, cartoons, the "chapter" (weekly serial), not getting caught with your feet on the tops of seats in front by the omnipresent white dressed matron, street gangs, zip guns and our beloved Brooklyn Dodgers. Immediately after seeing the movie, "the neighborhood" boys, from ages 13 to 16, vicariously adopted the nicknames of the characters in the movie according to their own personalities. As I recall, names were Crazy Shack, Bull Benson, etc. One of the things that sticks in my mind was the way the neighborhood kids, in order to show their machismo as depicted in the movie, would gather on street corners and lift the metal bus stop stands as dumb bell weights, with one arm and then the other. It was a great time and television was only seen if you looked in the window of the bar and grill around the corner on Flatbush Avenue and Winthrop Street.
    6arthur_tafero

    Better Than Average Inner city drama - The City Across the River

    There was a boatload of talent in this film; but not from the leads or even supporting actors, except for the incomparable Thelma Ritter. Richard Jaekel went on to a fine career in many roles. But we find a little gem for Anthony Curtis, who is Tony Curtis, of course. He shows little of the promise of his fine later acting career. but certainly fits in Brooklyn. The film could without the corny commentary by the overblown newspaper icon. On its own merit and without voiceover, the film is good enough by itself. So stop making guns in shop, kids.
    7bmacv

    Forgotten film among first to address post-war juvenile delinquency

    While the noir cycle sensed, in its oblique way, most of the tremors affecting America in the post-war years, one subject that remains conspicuous in its absence is juvenile delinquency. Though alienated youth cropped up now and again – in The Big Night, in Moonrise, in Talk About A Stranger and even, arguably, in The Window – they were viewed as individual cases, not as a social phenomenon. (It wasn't until the cycle had largely petered out that such films as The Blackboard Jungle and The Wild One emerged in the mid-1950s.)

    One exception was City Across The River, based on Irving Shulman's novel The Amboy Dukes. Though noirish in its look and urban setting, it's probably safe to call it a social-message movie (as was Nicholas Ray's Knock On Any Door, of the same year). It takes us to the slums of Brooklyn at a time when slums were slums and when conventional wisdom held that the root of juvenile delinquency was the turn-of-the-century tenements themselves – the physical plant, not the inculturated attitudes that perpetuate the culture of poverty and crime.

    Peter Fernandez plays the central character of the story, a teen-ager whose parents work holidays and double-shifts to make ends meet (his mom is Thelma Ritter). But he hangs around with members of a `club' called The Dukes (among them `Anthony' Curtis), whose older members seem to be rising lieutenants in the world of petty crime. Of course, in accordance with the official idiom of the times, the toughs caper and cavort like The Dead End Kids, and the worst epithet they hurl at one another is `you crumb.'

    Fernandez and friend confront a shop teacher who's responsible for their suspension and accidentally kill him with one of the zip-guns that seem to be the main enterprise of the school's industrial-arts program. In fear and panic, they not only raise suspicion but burn most of their bridges behind them. The movie ends unsentimentally – even harshly.

    The task of directing fell to the unlikely Maxwell Shane, whose most polished credits in the noir cycle are Fear in The Night and its remake Nightmare, oneiric cheapies that created a fantasy world. Yet he does surprisingly effective work in City Across the River, putting together a plausible neighborhood of vegetable peddlers, candy shops and pool halls. Despite the dated and bowdlerized street argot, the movie stays involving and humane without retreating into cliche (Fernandez' fall isn't assigned an easy scapegoat) or crocodile tears.
    7bkoganbing

    The Amboy Dukes

    Irving Schulman's novel The Amboy Dukes was written and being read around the time I was born. For those of you who don't know, Amboy Street is a street in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn where the street gang the Dukes hang out.

    It's almost kind of quaint, but sadly so in that these kids spend time in shop class making zip guns. Very soon all kinds of weaponry would be available for street gangs right down to today.

    And how things have changed. Back then one aspired like Luis Van Rooten and Thelma Ritter to move to a place like Canarsie. Now no one aspires to move to Canarsie.

    Van Rooten and Ritter are the parents of Peter Fernandez and Sharon McManus and Fernandez is a member of the Amboy Dukes. Social worker Stephen McNally has some hopes of reaching him. But when he and pal Al Ramsen shoot shop teacher Robert Osterloh with one of those make it yourself weapons they become beyond the reach of social workers. And detective Jeff Corey suspects them from the beginning.

    Fernandez and Ramsen had brief careers, but other members of the Dukes did a lot better. Richard Jaeckel certainly had a career of note already and Mickey Knox probably would have, but for the blacklist. And Tony Curtis stands far out in front of all of them. It was clear he was going to be star, in fact the film would have been better had he been in the lead instead of Fernandez.

    City Across The River is a somewhat quaint look at Brooklyn when I was only two years old. According to Tony Curtis's memoirs some establishing shots were done there, but the cast filmed in Hollywood. It's one of the first films to deal with post war juvenile delinquency, even before West Side Story. Dated, but it holds up well.

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    Related interests

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946)
    Film Noir
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Peter Fernandez.
    • Goofs
      All the actors playing teenage members of the Dukes gang were well into their twenties when the movie was filmed.
    • Quotes

      Drew Pearson: [opening speech] To most of us, the city where juvenile crime flourishes always seems to be 'the city across the river'. But don't kid yourself. It could be your city, your street, your house. Although this story happens in Brooklyn, it could just as well happen in any other large city where slum conditions undermine personal security and take their toll in juvenile delinquency. You may be lucky; you may be living where such conditions don't exist. But for the next 89 minutes, you're a kid named Frankie Cusack, going down a confused road toward gangsterdom, toward murder. You live in Brooklyn, just across the river from Manhattan, where Flatbush meets the slum. You're Frankie Cusack and this is your story. This is the main street of your neighbourhood, where you hang out with your gang. Busy by day, teeming at night. This is your country club, the Happy Times pool room, and this is your street. That tenement over there on the right is 62 years old. You were born there and it's the only home you ever had.

    • Crazy credits
      First credited film appearance of Tony Curtis (as Anthony Curtis).
    • Connections
      Followed by Girls in the Night (1953)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 4, 1949 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Amboy Dukes
    • Filming locations
      • Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,500,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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