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Angels with Dirty Faces (1938)

Crime | 97 minutes
3,64 332 votes

Genre: Crime / Drama

Duration: 97 minuten

Country: United States

Directed by: Michael Curtiz

Stars: James Cagney, Pat O’Brien and Humphrey Bogart

IMDb score: 7,9 (24.630)

Releasedate: 26 November 1938

US
UK

This movie is not available on US streaming services.

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Angels with Dirty Faces plot

"The saga of America’s dirty faced kids... and the breaks that life won’t give them!"

Rocky Sullivan (James Cagney) is a charismatic tough guy who works his way from the ghetto to the top of the underworld. He is esteemed by the young slum guys, until Reverend Connolly (Pat O'Brien), Rocky's childhood friend, solemnly resolves to put an end to his evil influence.

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Reviews & comments


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Guest

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avatar van Kiekerjan

Kiekerjan

  • 119 messages
  • 106 votes

A fairly boring crime film with a weak story that is revealed at a bumpy pace. Some scenes seem to last an eternity and don't matter at all while others seem to flash by. The bizarre basketball game shows how misplaced and contrived certain characters and story elements feel. In terms of acting, there can be no complaints, although Cagney does come across as a 'one trick pony' who was typecast as a gangster for the umpteenth time. I didn't notice much difference with his acting in 'The Public Enemy'. This film also introduces the legend Humphrey Bogart, who looks noticeably younger here than in Casablanca, even though that film is barely four years away. However, there is no real connection or sympathy with the characters. Many secondary characters are undeveloped and contribute little or nothing to the whole. The mob of children is absolutely insufferable and the forced 'love interest' disappears without boo or ba. Other than that, not much happens and apart from a shooting around the end I was nodding almost continuously. The recurring problem in old gangster films remains the rigidity that is ingrained in each scene. The language, the forced moral at the end and even the way everyone walks and gestures feels old-fashioned. A few moments are memorable, such as the aforementioned shooting, but also the last walk to the chair. The rest is mostly long-winded and has not stood the test of time well.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van Bobbejaantje

Bobbejaantje

  • 2260 messages
  • 2062 votes

James Cagney and Pat O'Brien star in this studio-era gangster movie, with more than fun supporting roles for Humphrey Bogart and George Bancroft. The scenes with Cagney and Bogart in particular are splashing from the screen. Love interest & tough girl Ann Sheridan can also be there.

The film opens with a beautiful crane shot of the neighborhood as it appeared in the childhoods of Cagney and O'Brien's characters, with the entire intro pointing out where the seeds of their lives were planted. In a subsequent crane shot of the same neighborhood we end up in the present time (1938) in which the film is set. A great start and a level that director Michael Curtiz and cinematographer and Sol Polito will maintain throughout the film. Low angel camera angles and the better shadow work make it an enjoyable viewing. Cagney's last mile is a feast for the eyes, a journey through light and dark. See also the symbolism as the boys follow Father Pat O'Brien up the basement stairs, toward the light.

Angels With Dirty Faces has a tightly structured screenplay and is also a film with a message. Besides a gangster tale, it is a socially inspired study into the reasons why someone chooses the criminal path. The moral is pretty ostentatiously slapped in the viewer's face - of course the Hays Code has something to do with it - to such an extent that the twist with Cagney at the end didn't seem very believable to me. A minor critique of an otherwise excellent work. The extras on the DVD indicated that it is an ending that can be interpreted in two ways. I myself as a viewer believed that Cagney did indeed answer O'Brien's question.


Thanks to the masterful direction of Curtiz and the compelling presence of James Cagney, this is for me one of the better gangster films of the 1930s.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van Dievegge

Dievegge

  • 3166 messages
  • 8185 votes

James Cagney's squashed head made him fit for gangster roles. Humphrey Bogart often played a criminal supporting role in his early days, here a lawyer with ties to the underworld. Ann Sheridan plays Laury, the only one who accepts Rocky as he is without being afraid of him. The title refers to the Dead End Kids, who played in various Warner productions, but also to the opening scenes with Rocky as a young angel. At the time, there was a lot of discussion about whether gangsters on the silver screen didn't arouse too much sympathy. That's why Pat O'Brien had to be brought in as a childhood friend, priest and social reformer. Their conversation in Sing Sing is as intense as the climax with the gunshots.

Cagney has a tough posture and speaks quickly. The language contains slang words, Americanisms and typical expressions of the 1930s. An fin is a five dollar bill. We're in the big chips, smooth rags and big bozo are other examples. Early noir elements are shadow, smoke and mirror images. Newspaper articles are often edited in to represent the public version of the facts. It is an exciting crime drama with some comedic moments and pressing questions about juvenile delinquency.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original