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Park Row

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Gene Evans and Mary Welch in Park Row (1952)
Watch Park Row Official Trailer
Play trailer2:02
1 Video
9 Photos
DramaThriller

The Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Ha... Read allThe Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Hackett decides to eliminate the competition.The Globe is a small, but visionary newspaper started by Phineas Mitchell, an editor recently fired by The Star. The two newspapers become enemies, and the Star's ruthless heiress Charity Hackett decides to eliminate the competition.

  • Director
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Writer
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Stars
    • Gene Evans
    • Mary Welch
    • Tina Pine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writer
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Stars
      • Gene Evans
      • Mary Welch
      • Tina Pine
    • 35User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Park Row Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Park Row Official Trailer

    Photos8

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Gene Evans
    Gene Evans
    • Phineas Mitchell
    Mary Welch
    Mary Welch
    • Charity Hackett
    Tina Pine
    • Jenny O'Rourke
    • (as Tina Rome)
    George O'Hanlon
    George O'Hanlon
    • Steve Brodie
    J.M. Kerrigan
    J.M. Kerrigan
    • Dan O'Rourke
    Forrest Taylor
    Forrest Taylor
    • Charles A. Leach
    Don Orlando
    • Mr. Angelo
    Neyle Morrow
    Neyle Morrow
    • Thomas Guest
    Dick Elliott
    Dick Elliott
    • Jeff Hudson
    Stuart Randall
    Stuart Randall
    • Mr. Spiro
    Dee Pollock
    Dee Pollock
    • Rusty
    Hal K. Dawson
    • Mr. Wiley
    Bela Kovacs
    • Ottmar Mergenthaler
    Herbert Heyes
    Herbert Heyes
    • Josiah Davenport
    Arthur Berkeley
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Carson
    Robert Carson
    • Irate Liberty Fund Contributor
    • (uncredited)
    Spencer Chan
    Spencer Chan
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writer
      • Samuel Fuller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    7.22.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Kalaman

    An engaging and entertaining tribute to American Journalism

    Before becoming a B-movie specialist and one of American cinema's finest filmmakers, Sam Fuller was a journalist who once worked as a crime reporter for The New York Daily Graphic. He made his great pictures in headlines, something more akin to tabloid journalism and sensationalism. "Every newsman is a potential filmmaker", Fuller once said and explicitly used it in "Park Row", an intensely personal work in which he financed with his own money but unfortunately failed miserably when it came out.

    "Park Row" is small but an engaging and entertaining tribute to American journalism. Under the opening credits we see a huge rolling title that lists about 2,000 American daily newspapers and this story is dedicated to them.

    Set in the 1880s New York, the film is about the rivalry between The Globe and The Star. An aspiring newspaper editor (Gene Evans) sets up his own daily The Globe after a man jumps off the Brooklyn Bridge. He struggles to compete with his former employer's (Mary Welch) newspaper The Star, who happens to be in love with him, while the Statue of Liberty is being donated to the U.S. by France.

    Unlike Fuller's bleak and lurid "Shock Corridor", "Park Row" is full of reverential optimism and is packed with so much gusto and excitement, featuring some terrific tracking shots that will make your head spin.

    Highly recommended.
    8planktonrules

    A bit uneven but still amazingly good due to how it was made.

    Sam Fuller is not a name most folks would recognize. However, to film lovers and critics, he's a famous guy--famous for making really good movies that are without the usual clichés and frills as well as with very low budgets. In the case of "Park Row", for instance, he completely financed the movie with his own money! And, it stars Gene Evans--an ordinary looking guy who starred is several Fuller films.

    The story is about a guy who is fired from one New York newspaper and decides to start his own. However, the deck is definitely stacked against him and a tough female newspaper owner seems willing to do anything to see his paper fail--and she takes this competition very personally. At first, she laughs off his attempts to put out a paper. But, when he starts seeing success after success, the competition becomes very dirty. In fact, the ugliness of this fight surprised me...it was THAT tough!

    The film has some amazingly good camera-work--with great lighting and composition. It never looks cheap. Additionally, Evans is memorable as a tough guy who not only can out-think but out-punch his competition! His intensity is what makes the film. Overall, despite a few rough moments, it's a great textbook example that a film doesn't have to be expensive or filled with mega-stars to be a very good picture.
    cereal_11

    An overlooked classic

    One of my favorites from Samuel Fuller; a frenzied, kinetic melodrama about journalism in the late 1800's. Although the film is laughably unrealistic at times in it's portrayal of two major newspapers competing for more readers, this is no hindrance to one's enjoyment of the film.

    Never did Fuller create a film of such sheer energy and nostalgia. The film's tracking shots and frenetically-edited montages seem to get the most attention, but there are also some great monologues and magnificent performances, particularly from Mary Welch as the head of the "evil" newspaper, The Star, and Gene Evans as the leader of their opposing newspaper, The Globe.

    The film has it's moments of campiness, but overall it's one of cinema's overlooked classics.
    8MOscarbradley

    One of Sam Fuller's best pictures

    Samuel Fuller was a newspaperman before he was a filmmaker and his passion for journalism and free speech infuses every frame of "Park Row" making this one of his most enjoyable pictures which, for a movie about the printed page, is intensely cinematic. Of course, whether Fuller was a good journalist, a great journalist or even a lousy journalist I can't say but he had one of the great eyes in American cinema and he knew, in movie after movie, how to bombard our senses with a host of images that gave his films, be they westerns, thrillers, war pictures or, in this case, simply a picture about the founding of a newspaper, the feeling they were ripped from today's headlines.

    The plot of "Park Row" is relatively thin. Gene Evans is the newspaper man who becomes the editor of a crusading newspaper in opposition to the more powerful paper from which he's just been fired. It is, in other words, a feelgood movie about a David triumphing over a mean old Goliath, (in this case represented by Mary Welch's excellent performance as the owner of the rival paper), but it's a populist picture with none of the sentimentality that Capra would have brought to it. Indeed, being a Sam Fuller picture, there's a fair amount of violence en route to the happy ending. It also has one of Fuller's best scripts; this is a movie full of crisp dialogue that makes great use of factual material. Amazingly, despite it's substantial critical reputation, it's seldom revived. Time, I think, to rectify that.
    8bobt145

    Park Row Gets the Fuller Brush

    Sam Fuller was a newspaperman in his younger days. This is his love letter to his earlier craft, with a full dose of Fuller filmmaking prowess.

    I doubt that Fuller was ever well-budgeted. He made do, and boy did he.

    The office of the paper is a tight web of cubicles (that are torn down at one point) that cast dark shadows and patches of light. Fuller allows his camera to capture repeated black and white shadow portraits of the characters, their emotion forming the full frame of a shot.

    At other points, the camera tours the tiny den as characters move through it as if it were dancing a marvelous ballet Outside is a square, statues of Benjamin Franklin and Horace Greeley and a narrow street allegedly populated by newspapers.

    This is all Fuller has to work with, but he makes it work so that even though your subconscious is saying, well, that doesn't look quite realistic, your movie viewing buys in and ignores the tells, absorbing the essence of the scene. Terrific film craft, more than just cinematography.

    Can't argue the storyline is up to the filmmaking, but there are touches that Fuller sprinkles throughout that are marvelous.

    The newly found paper buys its paper from the butcher. On the floor is a box of unsorted type. It took me back to junior high school in upstate New York, where for a marking period, we had print shop and learned to sort our type and grab it to compose a line in a hand-held device.

    There's Otto Morgenthaler, a character borrowed from history, who actually did invent the linotype machine and first use it at the New York Tribune, which is referred to as a competing paper in the film.

    The statue of Benjamin Franklin is still there, at the end of Park Row. At one time, the street held The New York World in the Pulitzer Building, Greeley's New York Tribune, The New York Times at #41, the Mail and Express, the Recorder, the Morning Advertiser, and the only other survivor, The Daily News at #25.

    In the story, set in 1880s, AP is referred to. The concentration of papers eventually led to the Associated Press, located on Park Row, but that wasn't until 1900.

    In the next decade, the landscape was dramatically altered with the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. It not only cast its shadow over Park Row, but also caused some of its buildings to be demolished for ramp space to the bridge.

    Why were the newspapers all there? Strangely, it's never mentioned in the film. Park Row is right around the corner from City Hall, the NYC Police Headquarters and the financial district. That's a pretty good nexus for news.

    This one doesn't pop up very often. If you find it, watch and enjoy.

    (My ratings are usually to the next highest star. In this case, about 7.5)

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Samuel Fuller put up his own money to make the movie and lost it all.
    • Goofs
      Approximately 20 minutes into the film, there's a wall calendar showing the date as "1886 June 15 Monday." In 1886 June 15 was a Tuesday.
    • Quotes

      Phineas Mitchell: The press is good or evil according to the character of those who direct it.

    • Crazy credits
      Instead of "The End", the picture ends with "Thirty"; newspaper jargon for "that's all. There ain't no more!"
    • Connections
      Featured in The Typewriter, the Rifle & the Movie Camera (1996)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Park Row?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 7, 1953 (Peru)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Park Row - Eine Zeitung für New York
    • Filming locations
      • General Service Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Samuel Fuller Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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