Four Eyed Monsters
Advertisement

I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $14.19

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Mervyn LeRoy.
Warner Bros.' hard-hitting chain-gang movie was a faithful adaptation of the similarly titled autobiography of Robert Elliot Burns. Paul Muni plays World War I veteran James Allen, whose plans of becoming a master architect evaporate in the cold light of economic realities. Flat broke, Allen is forced to pawn his war medals, which have become a glut on the market. When Allen is innocently involved in a restaurant holdup, the police don't buy his story that the robber (Preston S. Foster) had forced him to clean out the cash register, and Allen is sentenced to ten years on a chain gang. The brutal scenes that follow make the later chain-gang movie Cool Hand Luke (1967) look like a picnic in the country. Unable to stand any more, Allen escapes and heads to Chicago. Using an alias, he builds a new life for himself and within five years is the respected president of a bridge-building firm. His landlady (Glenda Farrell), learning about his past, forces Allen to marry her. When he falls in love with another girl (Helen Vinson) and asks for a divorce, his wife turns him over to the authorities. The real-life Robert Elliot Burns was still a fugitive when he wrote his exposé of the chain-gang system; the publication of Burns' book led to the abolishment of that system and an erasure of Burns' sentence. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

kristenkristen I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Ga ...
by kristen in kristen Blog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang points fingers at a corrupt justice system: the chain gang. Based on the memoirs of a wanted fugitive, the movie chronicles the descent of one innocent man corrupted by this supposed justice system. James Allen (Paul Muni) is so innocent yet human that it is hard to watch the bad lot life throws at him. Allen works hard, is moral, courageous, studious, and outstanding and yet he suffers the grave injustice of the chain gang. And all because he is in the seriously wrong place at the wrong time. The injustice is thick. The majority of Allen's onscreen life is in slavery to some system or another. He finds himself trapped in the routine of the army, then his job, then the chain gang, then marriage, then the chain gang again. He is only free when he is wandering the country without the certainty of a next meal. Everyone demands something of him hinders his freedom. His father tries to force him into his old job after the army. But Allen finds the monot ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Movie year countdown viewing pr ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"This is a list for Round 2 of my movie year countdown viewing project as first described here. If by any strange chance whoever is reading this is actually following along you may notice that I'm still less than two thirds of the way through my original one. Well I'm starting this new one because as much as I love old movies it can get a little tedious watching just older movies. So I'm going to be blending my watching of the two lists together. Still focusing on the original one, but every once in a while sliding in the next entry from this new list.Again these new movies are limited to full length movies that are available on Netflix. And for this new round instead of picking a movie from every year, I will be picking a movie from every two years. For example the first movie must have come out during 2006 or 2007. The second movie must have come out in 2004 or 2005. The next in 2002 or 2003. You see.The list is not finished yet, but here is what I have decide ... " [More]
OvationOvation 5 Pre-Hays Code Films
by Ovation in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"I found this on Student Life's website and thought it was an interesting list.========================= ============================== == Indecent and deviant: Pre-Hays Code films you should see Daniel P. Hauesser At the dawn of motion pictures, directors had few restrictions on the subjects they were allowed to film. Raciness in the silent era extends from tranquil bathing scenes featuring naked leading ladies to the intense violence of early Cecil B. DeMille epics, or the exotic, erotic indigene dances found within some remote jungle. The advent of 'talkies,' coupled with a string of sex-and-drug-laden celebrity scandals, made such overt portrayals of indecency appear dangerous to society. Public outcries to ban 'immoral' films and preliminary motions by the government to censure motion pictures led studios to voluntarily implement a series of production guidelines outlining what was acceptable to include in a film for the public. These guidelines, known as ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Warner Bros was often thought of as the studio with a social conscience in the 1930s, and this film was one of the main reasons why. A movie as grim as I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang was hardly a sure bet at the box office, then or now: based on the memoirs of a man who was still a wanted fugitive from a Georgia work gang, it represented a brave and potentially dangerous attack on a corrupt penal system that created more criminals than it cured. Director Mervyn LeRoy made his work camps (conveniently located in an unnamed state) as dirty, back-breaking, and soul-destroying as the screen would permit in 1932, and many prison films made later under more lenient circumstances were not nearly as brutally effective. Just as significant, Le Roy and screenwriters Howard J. Green, Brown Holmes, and Sheridan Gibney indicted the shabby treatment of America's returning veterans after World War I and damned a society that would put an innocent man behind bars and turn him into a criminal. LeRoy had an ideal leading man in Paul Muni, who made James Allen decent but flawed, making clear that, but for fortune, this story could happen to anyone. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
loved it.
most people
Most people
liked it.

Other opinions

pogostick
pogostick
loved it.
Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
digitalconquest
digitalconquest
liked it.