Film Review
As he awaited the result of his lawsuit against Warner Brothers (for
alleged breach of contract), James Cagney allowed Grand National Films
to talk him into playing an atypical, sympathetic role in
Great Guy, a break from his by now
familiar gangster portrayals. Cagney welcomed the change and
appears surprisingly at ease playing a good guy, albeit one with an
iron fist and the willingness to use it when the occasion
demands. Here, Cagney is again partnered with Mae Clarke, into
whose face he famously pushed a grapefruit half in
The Public Enemy (1931).
Great Guy was directed,
competently but with noticeably less flair than Cagney's recent films
at Warners, by John G. Blystone, who is better remembered for his
Laurel and Hardy films,
Block-Heads (1938) and
Swiss
Miss (1938). Cagney subsequently starred in Grand
National's
Something to Sing About
(1937). Whilst both of these films were generally well-received
by the critics, neither was a commercial success, and Grand National
filed for bankruptcy before a third film,
Dynamite, could be made.
Great Guy is a lesser film in
Cagney's career, an engaging but pretty shallow inversion of a gangster
film, with Cagney firmly on the side of the angels and petty
bureaucrats. Its main significance was that that it gave the
actor the opportunity to show he could play a likeable character,
allowing him to broaden his repertoire considerably over the following
decade.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Former prize-fighter Johnny Cave takes his duties as an officer in the
New York department of weights and measures seriously, too seriously
for those who seek to profit by defrauding the public. Cave's
predecessor is lying in hospital, after a car accident arranged by his
enemies. Now Cave is on the receiving end of an intimidation
campaign, orchestrated by the city's crooked alderman. So
committed is he to upholding the rule of law that Cave would rather
give up his girlfriend than let his enemies off the hook...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.