Film Review
The Naked Street is another
competently realised film noir from writer-director Maxwell Shane but
it suffers from an unimaginative plot that is peppered with over-worn
clichés and scarcely credible. It's strange that the
film's weakest element should be its script, since Shane was far more
experienced as a screenwriter than a director, with well over fifty
screen credits to his name. Were it not for the solid
contributions from the three principals, the film would be hard to take
seriously, just a lazy concoction of plot ideas lifted from other crime
movies. Shane's mise-en-scène is hardly inspired, but
helped along by Floyd Crosby's heavily atmospheric noir cinematography,
it has a slick, gritty edge to it that makes it a fairly realistic
entry in the gangster line.
Cast somewhat against type, Farley Granger is surprisingly convincing
as an example of thuggish criminal lowlife who is what he is mostly
through environmental factors rather than any inherent propensity for
evil. Granger is clearly intended to epitomise the neglected
youth of a failed social system, someone who might have turned out well
if he had had a better chance in life. As Granger himself
observed (he personally loathed the film),
The Naked Street is painfully
unsubtle in its observations, resorting to trite archetypes to make a
social critique which would be handled far more intelligently in the
American gangster films of a later era (from the 1970s onwards).
A forerunner of the mob bosses in these later films (you can't help
wondering if it influenced Robert De Niro's gangster portrayals),
Anthony Quinn's unforgiving Phil Regal anchors the film in its sordid,
blood-stained reality and shows us what gangsterism is - ugly, brutal
and treacherous. Anne Bancroft shines in an early role, just
before she became a Broadway diva, although it takes some stretch of
the imagination to accept her as Quinn's demure sister. Let down
by its complacent script and preachy tone,
The Naked Street falls short of
excellence but the performances from the three leads are nothing less
than compelling and amply make up for its shortcomings. The
result is a grimly absorbing encounter with urban gangsterism that is
uncomfortably stark and bloody for its time.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Phil Regal is one of New York's most notorious racketeers, but so far
he has evaded the law and passes himself off as a respectable
businessman. When he learns that his sister Rosalie is pregnant
and that the unborn child's father is Nicky Bradna, a young man due to
be executed for murder in a short while, Phil moves fast to safeguard
his family's honour and ensure his sister's future happiness. By
forcing the witnesses who testified against Nicky to retract their
statements, Regal is able to overturn Nicky's conviction. Nicky
may have been spared the electric chair, but he is by no means a free
man. Pressurised by Regal, he must marry Rosalie and start
earning an honest living. Rosalie's pregnancy ends in a still
birth, causing a rift between Regal and Nicky which results in the
latter going off with other woman whilst getting involved with petty
criminal exploits. When Regal hears of this he frames Nicky for
another man's murder. Nicky's only hope is to confess to the
first murder...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.