City Streets (film)
City Streets | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Rouben Mamoulian |
Produced by | E. Lloyd Sheldon |
Written by |
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Story by | Dashiell Hammett |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Lee Garmes |
Editing by | William Shea |
Studio | Paramount Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
City Streets is a 1931 American crime film noir directed by Rouben Mamoulian and starring Gary Cooper and Sylvia Sidney. Based on a story by Dashiell Hammett, this Pre-Code crime film is about a racketeer's daughter who is in love with a shooting gallery showman. Despite her prodding, the showman known as The Kid has no ambitions about joining the rackets and making enough money to support her in the lifestyle she's accustomed to. Her father implicates her in a murder and she's sent to prison, after which her father convinces The Kid to join the gang in order to help free his daughter.
Plot
Nan Cooley (Sylvia Sidney), the daughter of racketeer Pop Cooley (Guy Kibbee), is in love with The Kid (Gary Cooper), a shooting gallery showman. Cooley tries to urge him to join the gang, in order to earn enough money to support her in the lifestyle she is accustomed to, but The Kid refuses. Soon her father kills bootlegging chief Blackie (Stanley Fields), at the urging of Big Fella Maskal (Paul Lukas), because Blackie was against Maskal's involvement with Blackie's gun moll Aggie (Wynne Gibson).
After Pop shoots Blackie, he passes the gun to his stepdaughter Nan (Sylvia Sidney), thus implicating her in the murder. She naïvely takes the rap for her father, believing the mob will arrange for her acquittal, and is sent to prison. Pop Cooley then tries to convince The Kid to join the gang in order to free Nan, and he does so out of love for her. However, Nan's attitude had changed when she was railroaded to prison. When The Kid visits Nan in prison in a fur coat, she becomes terrified of his involvement with Pop's gang after witnessing a fellow inmate's mobster boyfriend being gunned down outside the prison gate the day the girl was to go home to him.
When Nan is released, having served her term, she wants nothing more to do with the mob. She tries to persuade The Kid to quit the gang, but he refuses. Things go downhill from there. She finds that her father is unrepentant and involved with a loose, gold-digging woman named Pansy (Betty Sinclair). Maskal soon takes a strong liking to Nan and throws her a homecoming party, forcing her to dance with him all evening. When The Kid finally asserts his claim over Nan, Maskal threatens him, then later sends his thugs to kill him, but The Kid successfully disarms them, then goes after Maskal.
Terrified her lover will be killed, Nan goes to Maskal to warn him and offers herself to him in exchange for The Kid's life. Aggie, now Maskal's mistress, shoots him with Nan's gun after he leaves her for Nan, and Nan is accused of murder. The Kid then names himself mob chief and escapes with Nan in a car with three of Maskal's men, who aim to kill him. Thus events culminate in The Kid and Nan being taken "for a ride" by rival thugs. By racing a train and maintaining high speeds, The Kid keeps himself alive until Nan pulls a gun on the men and disarms them. Dropping the thugs off with "no hard feelings," The Kid tells them he has quit the beer business, and he and Nan drive off.
Cast (in credits order)
- Gary Cooper as The Kid
- Sylvia Sidney as Nan Cooley
- Paul Lukas as Big Fellow Maskal
- William 'Stage' Boyd as McCoy
- Wynne Gibson as Agnes
- Guy Kibbee as Pop Cooley
- Stanley Fields as Blackie
- Betty Sinclair as Pansy
- Robert Homans as Police Inspector
- Barbara Leonard as Esther March
Awards and Nominations
City Streets was nominated for AFI's Top 10 Gangster Films list.[1]
References
External links
- City Streets at the American Film Institute Catalog
- City Streets at the Internet Movie Database
- City Streets (film) at allmovie
- City Streets (film) at the TCM Movie Database
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