IMDb RATING
7.1/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Starting with a violent prison break, clever, ruthless Ralph Cotter corrupts everyone around him.Starting with a violent prison break, clever, ruthless Ralph Cotter corrupts everyone around him.Starting with a violent prison break, clever, ruthless Ralph Cotter corrupts everyone around him.
Benjie Bancroft
- Courtroom Spectator
- (uncredited)
Larry J. Blake
- Romer - on Telephone
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was banned in Ohio due to its sordid, sadistic presentation of brutality and its detailed stages in the commission of criminal acts.
- GoofsThe DA calls several of the defendants as witnesses during their trial for murder; this is not allowed.
- Quotes
Holiday Carleton: [addressing Cotter] You've only said one true thing in your whole life. And that's when you said you were going away tonight. And you are: three miles out of town and six feet down. All alone. With nobody to lie to! And you can kiss tomorrow goodbye.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)
Featured review
Gangster Cotter escapes prison and schemes his way into city underworld, leaving trail of broken bodies and broken hearts behind.
Cagney's pushing 50, but you'd never know it from the energy level. Ever the human dynamo, he's dishing it out to both the competition and the dames. True, it's a stretch when old man Dobson calls Cotter (Cagney) "young man", but you hardly notice. This is the legend's final gangster film. It may not be the best, still it is fast, tough, and unsentimental.
Once again, Cagney's the outlaw entrepreneur working his way up the money ladder with little more than guts, wits, and a .45 (automatic, please). Along the way, he corrals two crooked cops, a shady lawyer, a double-crossing garageman, and notorious Hollywood bad girl Barbara Payton. Looks like everybody's got an angle of some kind, just the types Cotter can subordinate to his relentless drive. The ending is really ironic when you think about it. This is a stone-cold movie. Hardly anyone's likable, least of all Cotter. His cocksure ambition fascinates even as it repels. Only a secure-in-his-skin actor like Cagney would risk a role as unsympathetic as this.
I wish IMDb had more on screenwriter Harry Brown (not Harry Joe Brown of the Ranown cycle of Westerns). This Harry Brown did a number of high quality screenplays (A Place in the Sun; Ocean's Eleven et al.), including the one here. Director Douglas manages several nice touches, such as the true believer at the phony psychic session. Note, however, that the quarry killings are not shown, at least in the version I've seen. In fact, showing that may have pushed the producers over the censorship line.
All in all, it's a worthy slice of thick ear for gangster Cagney to go out on, especially that last scene with it's great title line.
Cagney's pushing 50, but you'd never know it from the energy level. Ever the human dynamo, he's dishing it out to both the competition and the dames. True, it's a stretch when old man Dobson calls Cotter (Cagney) "young man", but you hardly notice. This is the legend's final gangster film. It may not be the best, still it is fast, tough, and unsentimental.
Once again, Cagney's the outlaw entrepreneur working his way up the money ladder with little more than guts, wits, and a .45 (automatic, please). Along the way, he corrals two crooked cops, a shady lawyer, a double-crossing garageman, and notorious Hollywood bad girl Barbara Payton. Looks like everybody's got an angle of some kind, just the types Cotter can subordinate to his relentless drive. The ending is really ironic when you think about it. This is a stone-cold movie. Hardly anyone's likable, least of all Cotter. His cocksure ambition fascinates even as it repels. Only a secure-in-his-skin actor like Cagney would risk a role as unsympathetic as this.
I wish IMDb had more on screenwriter Harry Brown (not Harry Joe Brown of the Ranown cycle of Westerns). This Harry Brown did a number of high quality screenplays (A Place in the Sun; Ocean's Eleven et al.), including the one here. Director Douglas manages several nice touches, such as the true believer at the phony psychic session. Note, however, that the quarry killings are not shown, at least in the version I've seen. In fact, showing that may have pushed the producers over the censorship line.
All in all, it's a worthy slice of thick ear for gangster Cagney to go out on, especially that last scene with it's great title line.
- dougdoepke
- Feb 13, 2011
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Den Morgen wirst du nicht erleben
- Filming locations
- Glendale, California, USA(Glendale market)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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