Bad Company (1931 film)

Bad Company

Theatrical poster for film
Directed by Tay Garnett
Produced by Charles R. Rogers
Harry Joe Brown
Written by Jack Lait (novel)
Tay Garnett
Tom Buckingham
Starring Helen Twelvetrees
Ricardo Cortez
Music by Arthur Lange
Cinematography Arthur C. Miller
Edited by Claude Berkeley
Distributed by RKO Pathé
Release date
  • October 2, 1931 (1931-10-02) (U.S.)[1]
Running time
76 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Bad Company is a 1931 American Pre-Code gangster film directed and co-written by Tay Garnett with Tom Buckingham based on Jack Lait's 1930 novel Put on the Spot. It stars Helen Twelvetrees and Ricardo Cortez. Told from the view of a woman, the working titles of this film were The Gangster's Wife and The Mad Marriage.[2] Unlike many static early sound films, Garnett includes several scenes using a moving camera climaxing in a gigantic assault on an office building with both sides using heavy machine guns.

Plot

Rich and beautiful Helen King is about to marry Steve Carlyle, a wealthy young professional. Unknown to Helen and her family, Steve is a legal advisor to a megalomaniac gangster Goldie Gorio.

Steve wishes to leave the rackets but Goldie reintroduces him to his future father-in-law, a rival gangster where both parties see the marriage as a symbol of peace and an end of violence in their transactions. Steve remains with Goldie and fills in for him to a visit to a rival gangster's boat where he is ambushed and nearly killed by their machine gun. Helen vows revenge on Goldie.

Cast

(as per AFI database.)[1]

See also

References


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