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  • Robert Siodmak took to the city streets of New York for much of the location shooting in CRY OF THE CITY and it gives the whole story much more credence. Furthermore, the classic B&W photography of the city streets, a study in sunlight and shadows, heightens the tense mood and atmosphere of an engrossing crime story.

    VICTOR MATURE and RICHARD CONTE are adversaries, one good, the other bad, buddies who grew up together on the city streets. Mature is a police lieutenant whose mission it is to find Conte once he's escaped from jail, with most of the story involved in Mature's search for the ruthless thug who has committed several serious crimes including murder.

    The final scenes with Mature finally cornering Conte in a church are filled with high tension, thanks to director Siodmak's expert direction. He gets fully developed characterizations from his principal actors, as well as the supporting cast which includes FRED CLARK, DEBRA PAGET, TOMMY COOK, SHELLEY WINTERS and a standout turn from HOPE EMERSON as a woman intent on a jewel heist.

    New Yorkers will be especially interested in seeing the Third Ave. El appearing prominently in one of the lower Manhattan scenes, as well as other Manhattan shots that show the city as it existed in '48. A classic example of '40s film noir.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Robert Siodmak packs a lot of color and tension into this tale of Martin Rome (Richard Conte), an escaped and wounded murderer who wanders around a city that oozes staged authenticity, bringing trouble to everyone he manipulates into helping him -- a kind of "Odd Man Out" as seen in a schmutzy mirror.

    It's a very well-done example of a dark crime drama, and this despite the fact that it lacks a sense of place. The city is a huge presence rendered anonymous by its own incognito. The names of streets and neighborhoods always tell us something about the characters and the life styles as well as about the locations. Hollywood Boulevard, Haight and Ashbury, Greenwich Village, Chinatown, 42nd Street, Beacon Hill, Covent Garden, Montmarte. Even fictional names are evocative, as in Beaver Canal. This movie succeeds in steeping us in seamy urban setting despite the total absence of navigation aids.

    The sense of ethnicity helps. We get to know the Italian-American family of Martin Rome rather well. His father wants nothing to do with him. His mother is in the approach-avoidance conflict that all such mothers are in. Marty's younger brother, Tony, at first admires and helps Marty but then, when his back is to the wall, changes allegiances and helps the wounded Lieutenant Candella (Victor Mature).

    Mature, I understand, was of mixed ancestry, including Swedish, but I'm sorry -- he LOOKS Italian! He's fine as the business-like but not insensitive cop on Marty's trail. And as Marty, I don't think Richard Conte has ever given a better performance. His range was limited but this role plays into his strong suit -- the underground person who is not big and strong but lives by his wits, a wily man, ferret-like, who scans others quickly and accurately to sum up their weaknesses.

    The cast has many familiar names in it. Shelley Winters, Konstantin Shayne, Fred Clark, Barry Kroeger, Debra Paget. If you don't recognize the names, the faces will often register as seen-before.

    And then there is the almost unimaginable Hope Emerson, a woman so huge and so smarmy that if she didn't exist it would be necessary to invent her. She's easily a head taller than her patient, Conte, to whom she gives an ominous massage. (She calls him only by his full first name, "Martin.") And she's built along the lines of her contemporary, the pro wrestler, Man Mountain Dean, or maybe some East European shot putter fed on steroids. My God, watch her push pancakes into that mushy face! Look at her cross-eyed and she'd shove her fist down your throat and rip out your pyloric sphincter.

    The directorial style is heavily influenced by noir. Most of the story seems to take place at night. Pavements are wet with recent rain. Guns are small but ubiquitous. Siodmak actually inserts some scenes that are strictly speaking unnecessary but nevertheless powerful. Barry Kroeger, for instance, having been stabbed by Conte in the back through the chair he is sitting in. After he's been dead a minute or so and the camera has been on Conte who is ransacking the office, there's a shocking off-screen thump and a rhythmic squeak, squeak, squeak, and the camera moves to show us that Kroeger's body has fallen to the floor and the chair (with a gaping knife hole through the back) is swiveling crazily on its pivot in circle after circle.

    There's hardly any musical score but what there is, is used to good effect. Note the steady slow beat of the drums as Conte makes his escape from the hospital.

    It's just a gangster story but one of the better ones. Recommended.
  • I think this is an underrated (and under-publicized) film that sports an interesting story. Yes, it's a typical one of its day in that it highlights two boyhood friends who wind up on the opposite side of the law ("Angels With Dirty Face," etc.) but it is well done.

    Victor Mature "Lt. Candella") and Richard Conte ("Martin Rome") both do a very credible job as the good and bad guys, respectively.

    Shelley Winters, Debra Paget and Hope Emerson all provide solid female acting support in this little-known film noir. Emerson ("Rose Given") might be the least known of the three, but not to me since I am a big fan of the Peter Gunn TV series of the late 1950s in which she played a key role.

    With film noir making a comeback in recent years, I hope someone puts this movie out on DVD.
  • Marty Rome and Vittorio Candella both grew up in an Italian neighbourhood in New York. Both are smart, handsome young men. But that's where the similarity ends. Marty became a violent criminal, and now he lies in a hospital bed, riddled with gunshot wounds. Vittorio went straight, and is now the police lieutenant investigating Marty.

    It's not as if Marty never had a choice. The film stresses the decency of Marty's upbringing. The family is 'deserving poor' - crucifix on the living-room wall, mother attending Mass every day, display case of war medals in the back room. Marty's girlfriend, Teena Riconti, is also from an honest family. So what turned Marty bad? This is analysed through the treatment of Tony, Marty's kid brother. Tony is on the cusp of manhood and beginning to adopt Marty's warped values. Can he be saved, or will he inevitably gravitate towards the "poolroom hotshots"?

    Lest we conclude that moral depravity is the preserve of immigrants or even the urban poor, the film offers us Niles, the crooked lawyer. Played by Berry Kroeger with almost Wellesian flamboyance, Niles is the distillation of nastiness - a man with every advantage in life who still elects to sup with the devil. Twentieth-Century Fox's films noirs exhibited little love for attorneys, but Niles is probably the most unpleasant of them all.

    Victor Mature and Richard Conte are in great form as Candella and Marty respectively. There is no real romantic sub-plot - Teena appears briefly at the beginning and the end, but plays no part in the story - and Candella is too busy making himself at home in the Rome household to go out and get a girl. Shelley Winters plays Brenda, one of Marty's dumb broads. For her, here in 1948, the typecasting had already begun.

    As always, noir uses external scenery to symbolise internal emotion in the classic expressionist manner. Marty and Teena are filmed through the bars of the hospital bed-head, representing both the imprisonment awaiting Marty and the way in which Society is bearing down on these two, restricting their options. The hospital architecture is much vaster than the human scale, making a similar point - we like to think of ourselves as autonomous individuals, captains of our own destinies, but we are little more than insects, and the nest we have built around us dominates our existence. Marty's journey through the tunnel of the prison hospital is like an expressionist bad dream, a virtual street with pedestrians and vehicles, but no sky. Arches are everywhere. Marty's hospital ward is a forest of arch shapes. Niles' office has two arched windows whose insistent geometry dominates the screen. The church continues this motif with its lines of arches overhead. The city is our nest, and its institutions are the linked burrows through which we are obliged to scurry. Neon signs continually force themselves on our attention - the Gillette ad in the street, and the garage sign intruding through Rose Gibbons' apartment window. Just as with the terrific el-train shot, the city creeps into our consciousness, never allowing us to forget that we are living in its bowels.

    Tony's moral crisis centres on the hard decisions which his bad-guy brother forces him to make. We see his hesitation when Marty tells him to take Candella's gun, then later when he is asked to steal the family's savings. In the church, the wall picture shows Christ falling with His cross. When, moments later, Candella the Christ-figure slumps to the pavement, it is Tony who (quite literally) supports the police.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is, in my opinion, a vastly underrated gem of the film noir genre, and I fervently hope that some day soon it will get the restoration and DVD release it richly deserves.

    Victor Mature is often a rather wooden actor, but in this film he plays perfectly against Richard Conte. The two men are like opposite sides of the same coin. Conte the flamboyant, emotional criminal, Mature the tightly controlled police detective; both from the same background and both driven by their different codes of behavior. Conte is a wounded cop- killer on the run who encounters a variety of richly drawn and often bizarre characters in his long flight through the dark streets of the city.

    Often in film noir there will be a moralizing speech tacked in towards the end that is supposed to teach some imaginary, incredibly naive audience that "crime doesn't pay." In this film Mature's version of that speech actually rings true. He lists the people Conte has indirectly done harm to and says "He didn't forget them -- he didn't even think of them. He used them and brushed them aside just like he's used everybody he's ever known." There's a depth and honesty in that small speech that rises above its cliché'd origin. To this point we've been following the Conte character as an anti-hero; we believe that for all his criminality, there's some honor to him. But finally we realize that like everyone else, we've been fooled; in reality this character nothing but a hollow and worthless sociopath.

    For all the films that have been made about crime and criminals, how often do you see one that actually makes you think about crime and criminals -- much less one that was made so long ago?
  • It is not surprising that so much has been written about the sub genre of the "film noir". The execution of a noir film required a tremendous artistry and expertise in all aspects of cinema. The classic noir films are truly works of art; cinema at its best, not relying on star power or big budgets, but rather a mastery of the very rudiments of making movies.

    What Ford was to the western, Hitchcock to suspense, Sirk to melodrama, so was Robert Siodmak to the noir. While "Cry of the City" is often left out of discussions of the genre, it is, in many ways a near perfect example of the genre.

    By 1948 the noir was beginning to hit its stride. Siodmak came to this project with much valuable experience. His execution of this not especially remarkable story has a fluidity and assurance of style that one can only marvel at.

    Despite the well worn cop vs. gangster tale, there is a potent psychological complexity at the core of "Cry of the City". Richard Conte's Martin Rome, is charismatic and charming. Not only does he work his magic on unsuspecting females, we the audience are firmly on his side at the start of the movie. As the plot unfolds his ruthless, selfish and manipulative motives become apparent. Yet it will take some time before we are completely convinced. It's a masterly stroke of screen writing. It will take Victor Mature's impassioned indictment to completely convince us.

    Victor Mature is surprisingly competent in the lead in what must be surely one of his best roles. Richard Conte is simply superb in a complex and tricky role. His method is one of economy and subtlety and a lesson to screen actors. Despite a host of fine performances, Conte seems to not have garnered the respect he deserved.

    A classic of its kind.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Cry of the City, directed by iconic noir filmmaker Richard Siodmak, offers both good and bad aspects. Let's start with the positives: the film features intriguing and quirky characters, solid performances, and impressive on-location cinematography showcasing 1948 New York City. However, there is a notable downside-the story lacks suspense.

    One commendable aspect of this film is its unflinching portrayal of violence. Siodmak doesn't shy away from depicting it realistically, without sugarcoating or romanticizing the brutality.

    The movie opens with the introduction of the antagonist, Martin Rome (Richard Conte), who is receiving treatment for gunshot wounds sustained after killing a police officer. Our protagonist, Lt. Vittorio Candella (Victor Mature), arrives at the hospital with his partner, Jim Collins (Fred Clark), to question Rome. Candella approaches the investigation with more caution due to his shared Italian neighborhood upbringing and familiarity with Rome's family.

    The inciting incident becomes somewhat convoluted. Niles (Berry Kroeger), a lawyer representing a man he claims was wrongly accused of torturing and killing a woman named de Grazia, offers Rome $5,000 to confess to the murder. Rome refuses the offer, escapes from the hospital ward with the help of a disgruntled prison hospital trustee, and later discovers de Grazia's jewels in Niles' safe. In a series of events, Rome accidentally shoots and kills Niles' secretary and brutally stabs the corrupt lawyer. The unfiltered portrayal of the secretary's death exemplifies the director's refusal to hold back.

    The second act of Rome's journey lacks suspense. The primary point of interest becomes whether Rome will manage to pawn the jewels and escape, although it's evident that success is unlikely. Still recovering from his injuries, Rome seeks assistance from the unlicensed Dr. Verof (Konstantin Shayne), a shady yet intriguing character. Additionally, Rome's former girlfriend, Brenda (Shelley Winters), joins the mix by helping him track down one of the accomplices in the de Grazia murder, Rose Givens (played by the unique Hope Emerson, originally a circus strongwoman).

    In a turn of events, Rome betrays Givens, who accidentally shoots Candella in a subway station during her arrest. Rome's mother and teenage brother, who overlook his transgressions, also play significant roles in the unfolding drama.

    I almost forgot to mention Rome's teenage girlfriend, Teena (played by newcomer Debra Paget), whose appearances at the beginning and end of the film add a touch of humanity to his character. However, the predictable plot makes it clear that Rome's fate lies in his demise at the hands of Lt. Candella. The outcome is foreseeable from miles away. Despite the lack of surprises, "Cry of the City" earns points for its atmospheric setting and provides a glimpse into how certain parts of New York City appeared in bygone days.

    Conte delivers a believable performance as a hardened criminal, and Mature gives one of his stronger portrayals as he relentlessly pursues the elusive killer. While the film lacks a traditional femme fatale, the supporting cast compensates for this absence, adding depth to the overall narrative.

    In conclusion, Cry of the City presents a mixed bag of strengths and weaknesses. It is worth appreciating for its distinct atmosphere, captivating characters, and historical depiction of New York City. However, the predictable plot and lack of suspense prevent it from reaching greater heights. I would rate "Cry of the City" a decent 6 out of 10.
  • Victor Mature and Richard Conte deliver strong performances in this engrossing, uplifting story of the struggle between a cop and a criminal. Both men are presented as products of the city's Italian working class, and the film manages to make much of their divergent paths without being pedestrian or pedantic. The supporting characters are finely drawn and add an intriguing dimension to a plot-line that, otherwise, could have come off as time-worn and predictable. Hope Emerson is of particular interest as a disgruntled masseuse of rich old ladies. The movie is a marvelous example of the excellence that could emerge from 40's morality and is missing from much of modern filmmaking.
  • dbdumonteil5 September 2007
    This Robert Siodmak work may seem derivative as another film noir.But it does not follow the rules.First the two leads are cast against type.We would expect Mature as Rome and Richard Conte as Candella.It increases the interest because we do not know how their characters will evolve.Then ,and it was extremely unusual at the time,there is no female central character;gorgeous Debra Paget appears in the first sequences ("she must be an angel") and only returns at the end of the movie in the church.No central female character ,but plenty of them ,and all are interesting: a nurse and her mom,a street gal (Shelley Winters),a mannish (lesbian?) female crook-the scene in the subway is very suspenseful-,and finally Rome's mom.A true mom,who still believes in her children ,but who begins to lose her illusions; fortunately there is a younger son,and the cop keeps a close watch on him.This mother is very different from the terrifying over possessive one Siodmak had introduced in his overlooked " Christmas holiday" (1944)
  • Cry of the City has good performances by Richard Conte and Victor Mature. Conte is great with his soft-spoken voice and shifty eyes. The best scenes though are with the bigger-than-life HOPE EMERSON! Her entry down the long corridor, eating the pancakes, and trying to strong-arm Conte are all memorable, cult-ish moments.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    **SPOILERS** Suffering from four bullet wounds cop killer Marty Rome, Richard Conte, had just about had it. with Marty to be given the last rites as he suddenly and miraculously recovers from his wounds. Marty is sent to the prison hospital to get well and healthy enough to be able to be executed in the state electric chair for first degree murder. It seemed that Marty got some help in his recovery when his sweet and innocent girlfriend Teena, Debra Paget, snuck into his not so well guarded hospital room in order to exchange sweet nothings with him. That was enough to bring Marty back from the dead.

    We have Marty, after his miraculous recovery, try get to the bottom of the de Grazia murder case whom he was to take the rap for. This sleazy shyster lawyer W.A Niles (Barry Kroeger), who was defending Mrs. de Grazias actual killer Leggy White, calmly and unannounced strolled into the hospital emergency ward and tried to get a death bed confession out of Marty.

    Marty first escaping from prison and then breaking into Niles, whom he ends up murdering, office takes the both missing and stolen jewels of Mrs de Grazia, by Niels client Leggy White, out of his office safe. Marty is also helped in his criminal adventures by both his younger brother Tony, Tommy Cook, and former girlfriend Brenda, Shelly Winters, in his eluding the police and getting medical attention for his gun-shot wounds.

    Suffering from four gun-shot wounds and needing immediate medical attention Brenda gets this quack doctor from the neighborhood Dr. Vernoff ,Konstantin Shayne, Marty is again brought back to life, just when you thought he was about to kick off for good. Marty goes back in trying to find his sweetheart Teena who's being kept safely hidden from the police by Nurse Pruett, Betty Grade. Whom the sweet taking and womanizing Marty charmed into making a fugitive from the law, for what? Teena wasn't wanted by the cops for any crime that she committed like Marty is!

    The other half of the story in "Cry of the City" has to do with Marty's boyhood friend from the neighborhood police Let. Candella, Victor Mature. Let. Candella is out to get Marty and bring him to justice or the electric chair. Still Let. Candella is just too nice to hurt Marty's mom Mr. Roma, Mimi Aguglia, in doing that. Candella want's Marty to give himself up instead so he can voluntarily be tried convicted and executed. With nobody having to be blamed for his demise but himself, fat chance!

    We get the inevitable ending with Marty about to check out of the country with his love Teena whom he contacts in the neighborhood church. Only to have Let. Cardella now also gravely hurt from getting shot by one of Marty's criminal associates: the 250 pound masseuse Rose Givens,Hope Emerson. Rose is also involved in the Mrs de Grazia murder robbery and only helped Marty in order to get the jewels from that crime that Marty has hidden in a subway public locker.

    The very predictable ending has Marty get what he so rightly deserves. At the same time Marty's girlfriend Teena and younger brother Tony, who looked up to the career hoodlum and cop-killer, see what a lowlife and creep he really was. Hopefully they'll see that no matter how clever and likable as well as lovable he was Marty only looked out for himself. He used everyone, even getting them involved in his crimes, to further his own selfish gaols which in the end lead the smirking and self-assured Marty into an early grave.
  • With his silky manners and glittering eyes, Richard Conte was a prince among hoodlums: elegant, magnetic and sharp as a shiv. As the mugs and roughnecks of the early thirties evolved into more sophisticated postwar gangsters, Conte's regal bearing gloved the gangster's raw aggression in smooth style. (Significantly, he was one of the first Italian-American leading men in Hollywood.) Conte always looks like he's plugged into some private source of electricity, like you could get a shock from touching him. He needs that intensity here, since he plays a wounded criminal who spends most of the movie lying in bed or limping around, dragging a gunshot-riddled leg and crumpling with pain. He still manages to radiate menace and charisma, threatening or seducing everyone who comes near him.

    Plot-wise, CRY OF THE CITY is that old chestnut about two boys from the same neighborhood (New York's Little Italy, presented with far more nuance and authenticity than Hollywood's usual spaghetti-with-meatballs style) who grow up on opposite sides of the law. Lieutenant Candella (Victor Mature) pursues Martin Rome (Conte) relentlessly after he escapes from a prison hospital; Rome is determined to clear his girlfriend of suspicion in a jewel theft by finding the real culprits. The plot is just a scaffolding to support a series of scenes in which Rome and Candella alternately vie for leverage and influence over an eclectic parade of supporting characters, all of whom seem driven by fear or greed. Desperation inhabits the city like weather. Director Siodmak, one of the masters of film noir, suffuses the film with a dark mood, atmospheric locations, and those corrupted personal transactions that define the genre.

    In a hospital in the middle of the night a priest murmurs and family-members weep quietly over a dying man who is chained to his bed—Martin Rome has just killed a cop in a shoot-out. Later, after he has escaped and collapsed again, his girl (Shelley Winters in a leopard-print coat) enlists an unlicensed foreign doctor to treat him in the back seat while they drive around damp city streets, using neon signs for light. Stolen jewels get stashed in a locker in a subway station. Marty almost meets his match in a massive, burly masseuse (Hope Emerson), who looms over him as he works his bright-eyed, caressing charm. Their scene together is funny, scary and perversely titillating all at once, as the mountainous woman starts to massage his back and then gets her hands around his throat. Sadder is Marty's seduction of a plain, middle-aged hospital nurse who is burdened, we later find out, with a nasty, selfish, annoying old mother. At one point Candella reads off to Marty a list of all the former girlfriends the cop has had to look up, and Marty amusingly reacts to each name with regret, embarrassment or fondness. For this tough guy, sex appeal is as powerful a weapon as a gun or a knife—sometimes it's the only one he has.

    All the time we're rooting for Marty—at least I was. CRY OF THE CITY perfectly demonstrates how easily movies can mess with one's moral compass. Marty is a killer and a selfish, remorseless crook, but his élan and vulnerability make him an irresistible underdog. His adversary, Candella, is a self-righteous moralizer, a monomaniacal Javert whose hatred seems inspired more by his enemy's charisma than by his crimes. Victor Mature's heavy, stolid presence sharply contrasts with Conte's proud, dazzling quickness. Someone once described Mature as an intelligent actor cursed with the face and physique of a dissipated life guard; I forget who wrote that, but it hits the nail on the head. The poor guy *looked* like a bad actor—all beef and no brains—even though he wasn't. Here his scenes with the Rome family are intended to soften his character, and he does have likable moments, but the way he turns them all—finally even the kid brother—against Marty only increased my sympathy for the endangered outcast. His accusation that Marty uses people is fair enough, but he lays it on too thick; it wasn't Marty's idea to enlist the illegal doctor or the "trusty" who helps him break out of jail. Booming, "Stop in the name of the law!" Candella embodies implacable authority, and who could root for that?

    I like to think that in real life superficial concerns like these wouldn't get in the way of my knowing right from wrong, but this is a movie; style is bound to trump substance. Are films like this one—made under the Hays Code, when movies were not allowed to openly glorify criminals—deliberately subversive? The script says one thing, but the casting says another. In a way, that hypocrisy is essential to noir, an under-the-radar phenomenon that made caustic comments about human nature while ostensibly endorsing the Ten Commandments. For Martin Rome, a premature death isn't too high a price to pay for all the fun he had breaking the rules. And a clichéd ending is not too high a price for the pleasure of this movie.
  • raveup31 July 2023
    Warning: Spoilers
    Generally, a very intriguing film noir. Well written and acted. Puzzling that they allowed such an impossible scene like the office safe scene. One shot toward the ceiling takes out a secretary in the outer office (without leaving a hole in the frosted glass or wall). Supposedly the bullet then turns 180 degrees, goes back through the wall, through a man behind a desk, through a desk chair and leaves a large hole in the wall. Could this have been the basis years later for the JFK "magic bullet" theory? Fortunately it doesn't sink the film though. Conte puts in his usual excellent performance. Even Victor Manure (named after the constant expression on his face that he just stepped in something) seems less like a cardboard cutout than his usual roles.
  • Despite having a good cast, this fails to be a good film. There are some good performances from Victor Mature and Debra Paget, and the director really makes Mature look as though he can act. Paget gives a grounded performance, and Richard Conte is doing what he is known for. There is a big lady who attempts to strangle Conte in the film. I remember seeing her in 'Westward the Women'. It's good seeing Mature square up against Conte. It's almost like 'Kiss of Death' where Richard Widmark challenges Mature. However, it is everything in between these challenging scenes that make this film dull. The problem is with the script rather than the performances. An actor can only pursue truth if the script is truthful. If the script is not truthful then the film is just a calling card of truthful performances.
  • You just know that slimy lawyer Niles (Kroeger) is going to get his somewhere along the line in this highly interesting noir. More a movie of parts than a whole, some of these parts nevertheless remain pretty memorable. Was there ever better tough guy than Richard Conte. Here he's wounded gangster Martin Rome getting his way with everyone, that is, until he runs into Rose. Now, whatever the 6'2", 230 lbs, Hope Emerson is, she's no rose. Her massage scene with Conte is priceless, and in my book, the movie's high point, one of the most amusingly unexpected and well calculated in all noir. At the same time, scope out the breakfast scene with Conte, where she fills her mouth like Godzilla churning up Tokyo, or where she manhandles the unfortunate cops trying to take her down. I hope there's a special place in Hollywood heaven for one-and-only characters like the hulking Emerson.

    In fact, the film features a number of unusual and unheralded players that spice up the proceedings—Walter Baldwin as the trustee Orvy, crooked teeth and all; Betty Garde as plain- looking nurse Pruett, who takes no guff from anybody including cops; and Barry Kroeger as puffy-face lawyer Niles, an insult to his profession. These are not pretty people in the usual Hollywood sense, and I think one of the fascinations of noir is to feature such types at a time when movies prized good-looking people above all. Here, along with the shambling Emerson, they leave us with an impression of real city streets instead of a casting call along Hollywood and Vine.

    Among the more conventional, it's fun to see a still slender Shelley Winters (Brenda) doing her cheap blonde bit as she fends off a tipsy masher in a bar. Her character sort of drops into the narrative out of nowhere, making me wonder whether something connective got edited out. Frankly, headliner Victor Mature (Candella) hasn't much to do except stand around and look handsomely imposing. Instead, co-star Conte gets all the best scenes, good lines, and audience interest. At the same time, something should be said for young Tommy Cook who makes a good gritty impact as Conte's younger brother.

    Then too, check out director Siodmak's visual approach to the filming. Usually the light and shadow of expressionist noir takes place on a sound stage where control is absolute. But here, the imaginative Siodmak mixes expressionist light and shadow with location shooting to create an unusual overall effect. Note the number of location shots without the natural lighting that ordinarily would create a more documentary feel. It's a curious but effective blend. In passing—note too Siodmak's beautifully paced direction of the jailbreak sequence, a really suspenseful look at bureaucratic paper-shuffling, in this case, a police department.

    The story itself is pretty shopworn—two friends growing up together in the ghetto, where one ends up becoming a cop, while the other turns to crime. In short, the sort of thing Cagney and O'Brien did in the 30's. Nonetheless, Siodmak's imaginative approach, plus the many interesting characters and entertaining vignettes make this version a noir worth catching up with.
  • blanche-221 November 2007
    Richard Conte and Victor Mature play tough adversaries in "Cry of the City," a 1948 film noir from 20th Century Fox, directed by Robert Siodmak. It also stars Shelley Winters, Debra Paget, Tommy Cook, Hope Emerson, Roland Winters and Barry Kroeger. Set on the streets of New York, the subways, the lower class neighborhoods, the film's atmosphere is perfect,although the story of gangster versus cop is derivative. Conte plays Martin Rome, a completely amoral thug who escapes from the prison hospital where he's recovering from bullet wounds. He manipulates and/or uses everyone he runs into in his quest to get some relief from his injuries, get money to leave town and find his girlfriend. His victims include an equally crooked attorney (Kroeger), a she-man masseuse (Emerson), an old girlfriend (Winters), his mother and his brother. Meanwhile, another kid from the neighborhood, Lt. Candella (Mature) tries to find him and at the same time convince Martin's little brother that Martin's choices should not be his.

    The film is a little slow-moving at times, but Conte and Mature have never been better. There was always something a little dumb about Mature's performances - probably because he didn't take himself too seriously. Just as filming had started on a scene of 1984's "Samson & Delilah," he announced to the entire cast and crew, "I knew he was gay," when one of the actors sat next to a known gay actor. The scene had to be started over. Despite Mature's less than committed attitude, Robert Siodmak drew an excellent performance from him, possibly his best. The underrated Conte was always a force to be reckoned with, and this is one of his best roles.

    There are some stunning shots to be appreciated in "Cry of the City" - my favorite is as Rose Given takes a walk down her long hallway, the shadows that look like prison bars giving way to curtains and Rose's face and body walking into focus.

    Much to like here, but in the end, it's quite predictable, right down to the ending. But the acting, atmosphere and characters created are a real treat.
  • In New York, when the cop killer Martin Rome (Richard Conte) arrives in the hospital badly wounded, the lawyer W.A. Niles (Berry Kroeger) unsuccessfully tries to convince him to confess the robbery of a collection of jewels and the death of the owner. Along the night, Martin's girlfriend Teena Riconti (Debra Paget) sneaks and visits him. Later Niles threatens Martin telling that he would catch Teena to force her to assume the other crime. When Martin escapes from the hospital, Lieutenant Candella (Victor Mature), who is an old friend of the Rome family, investigates the case and has to chase Martin.

    "Cry of the City" is a moralist police story, with the fight between good, represented by Lt. Candella, and evil, represented by Martin Rome. Both characters have the same origins in the lower class neighborhood, but follow different paths of law: while Candella accepts to earn a low salary and "sleep well at night", the manipulative Martin uses people and prefers to taste the pleasures of life whatever the final price is. Their duel has a predictable and corny conclusion, but the story is engaging and supported by a beautiful black and white cinematography and good acting. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Uma Vida Marcada' ("A Marked Life")

    Note: On 20 Dec 2018, I saw this film again. Now my vote is eight.
  • writers_reign17 April 2015
    Warning: Spoilers
    For what seemed the bulk of his career Victor Mature was regarded as something of an acting joke not least by himself and he developed a nice line in self-deprecation. In the nineteen forties however he made a handful of films in which he turned in decent performances - Kiss of Death, Moss Rose, I Wake Up Screaming and this entry, Robert Siodmak's Cry Of The City which co-stars him with Richard Conte in our old chestnut friend, the one about the two guys from the same tough neighbourhood one who takes the easy way out and becomes a hood (see Jimmy Cagney) and one who becomes one of the good guys (see Pat O'Brien). This time around it's Richard Conte who remains a hood and Victor Mature who becomes a cop. Robert Siodmak was, of course, a German émigré who fled from the Nazis, would up in Hollywood and brought with him a highly developed feel for 'noir' and a touch of the expressionism so that his movies were always worth watching. This is no exception and if Fred Clark makes an unlikely cop the Mature-Conte psychological dual more than compensates. Vastly underrated it remains a first-class example of film noir.
  • Had Cry Of The City been done at Warner Brothers in the Thirties this would have been perfect material for a James Cagney/Pat O'Brien film with the story of two childhood friends, one who goes into the police force and one who goes into a life of crime. Of course they would have to have been Irish because neither Cagney or O'Brien would have made convincing Italian protagonists as Cry Of The City has in its leads.

    And the leads are Victor Mature and Richard Conte. Mature is good as the upright cop who makes it personal to go after Richard Conte who has now committed the ultimate sin, he's killed a cop. But like a film a year earlier for Mature, Kiss Of Death, the film is dominated by Richard Conte who plays a charismatic and fascinating villain just as Richard Widmark did in Kiss Of Death.

    Unlike Widmark who is a loner, Conte is charming and is ruthless in his use of that charm. The film opens with him seriously wounded after shooting a police officer. But he recovers and is in a prison hospital awaiting trial. It's the death penalty for sure, but Conte does in fact charm his way into an escape (I won't say how) and from then on because of his wound has to rely on a lot of help including his own family.

    Some other standout performances including an old girl friend, Shelley Winters whom he has obtain an unlicensed physician to tend him. Hope Emerson who is as evil as she was as the prison matron in Caged, plays a masseuse who Conte uses to obtain traveling money as the woman is quite mobbed up. Tommy Cook plays Conte's hero worshiping younger brother who realizes just how much he and the family were being used in the climax.

    Most of all there's Berry Kroeger who plays one of his usual slime ball characters as a criminal attorney who indulges in a bit of criminality himself most discreetly behind the scenes. Kroeger split parts like that with George MacReady back in the day and is always fascinating to watch.

    Most of all there is Richard Conte who should have merited Oscar consideration in one of his best screen performances.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A different kind of film noir and I quite liked the fresh approach here. Victor Mature's cop feels like the nominal lead but actually is more of a distraction and it's the Richard Conte show for the most part. Conte plays a wounded gangster trying to navigate a way out of his capture, and there are some fine suspenseful moments and twists along the way.
  • From the opening strains of Alfred Newman's "Street Scene" Theme Music, which accompanies the Credits to the End title, "Cry of the City" invokes a tale of good and evil in the persons of Victor Mature & Richard Conte........Boyhood pals from the lower East Side of N.Y......One a Cop, the other a Gangster................But make no bones about it, this film is Conte's showcase and he makes the most out of it in a chilling performance as Martin Rome(Roma), a savage killer with no remorse at all.........He is persued throughout the film by Victor Mature as Leut. Candella, Chief of the Homicide Beaureau......and Mature gives a fine performance in the role...........Supporting players are highlighted by Hope Emerson in a performance of a lifetime, as a Female version of Conte.....their scenes together are cat & mouse......but which is which?.......For a special treat on the film noir craze of the 1940s; and a pure New York City feeling; do not miss "Robert Siodmack's"...."Cry of the City"-1948---20th. Century Fox........Respectfully submitted, sasheegm at the movies
  • Cry of the City (1948) : Brief Review -

    Some cry, some laugh at the trademark film noir of dark night player Robert Siodmak. Almost all the majorly known films of Siodmak have that darkness and night to capture, no matter what the story is. Mostly, it's a crime world, so it's a good excuse for him to get away. But I feel some of his films are boosted by the same night watchman thing. Cry of the City falls into the same category, and it's an engaging flick too, but it lacks some hardcore seriousness. Like I said, some cry and some laugh. Those laughs shouldn't have been there because they don't belong to the dark film noir genre in the crime world. The film is about a criminal who has killed a cop and is now admitted to the hospital. There are more charges against him than the murder of a cop, but he just doesn't accept any of them since he knows that he can't go to the chair twice. Well, to add more dramatic conflict and take the story forward, he escapes from the police's eyes. Now that's strange and too easy for him, and he does it again and again. For once, I might have overlooked this flaw, but again and again? No, definitely not. Then, the officer who is trying to capture him is on his tail throughout the film and is finally shot in a raid. That wounded man, with a strong dose of sedation, flees from the hospital just to catch the criminal. Can you believe it? I mean, who does that? A big laugh. And how poorly this entire process goes on and somehow reaches its conclusion. The script didn't really work for me, but the screenplay did. There may be fewer twists, but the pace and thrills are there. Victor Mature and Richard Conte's performances held me well for 95 minutes, while others just passed their time for the screen's sake. This may not be one of Robert Siodmak's best works, but it is not that bad or mediocre either. My night player knew how to hit better than this.

    RATING - 6/10*

    By - #samthebestest.
  • Very fine noir. From beginning to end this character driven tale is very well told with some solid performances, dialogue and location shooting. Maybe this lacks a little 'action' but it is gripping and suspenseful in places nevertheless. Everyone is believable, even the kid, and that's a rarity. Richard Conte's performance as the truly ruthless bad guy is quite majestic and Victor Mature, as the ever on his heels good cop, does well to keep up, in both senses of the word. Even the smaller parts are great, including a lovely performance (which I understand was virtually all removed from the US release) from Shelley Winters. It is an almost nothing part and easily cut but she plays the moll so well, with a mixture of caring, humour and concern for her own safety. I was astonished that the several family scenes did not slip into sentimentality and even increased ones general concern for all concerned. Great street scenes, busy ones too and including shots of overhead railway. Really good, attention grabbing noir of the first order.
  • Victor Mature and Richard Conte make excellent role rivals; Mature the hero, and Conte, the too-clever-for-his own-good hood. The film also features a scene-stealing supporting actress; Betty Garde, who is as fearsome as any man caught on film. She is not a good-looking woman, but she has the hands of a large pro wrestler. You will know her as soon as she appears on the screen.

    Conte is a crook who escapes from the prison hospital, while awaiting trial for murdering a cop. Mature is your average city lieutenant, who works in homicide with his partner. Robert Siodmak outdoes himself by creating the perfect noir atmosphere of fear and loathing.

    This is a top ten film noir in my book; and I have seen hundreds of film noir pieces. Don't miss it.
  • Lieutenants Victor Mature (Candella) and Fred Clark (Collins) get to gangster and cop-killer Richard Conte's (Martin) hospital bedside because they want to bust his backside and get information regarding a couple of crimes. He's not the sort to play ball, though, and gives them the slip. Mature gets on his case despite there being a family friendship.

    The story seems a little empty and the film never really kicks into gear. The cast are good but the storyline is unrealistic and uninteresting. Family friends take a different life-path - one good and one bad - leading to a showdown in the end. Even the climax is horribly contrived. Nothing very memorable but the cast make it ok for a single viewing to pass some time.
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