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White Heat
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Directed by Raoul Walsh.
In later years, James Cagney regarded White Heat with a combination of pride and regret; while satisfied with his own performance, he tended to dismiss the picture as a "cheap melodrama." Seen today, White Heat stands as one of the classic crime films of the 1940s, containing perhaps Cagney's best bad-guy portrayal. The star plays criminal mastermind Cody Jarrett, a mother-dominated psychotic who dreams of being on "top of the world." Inadvertently leaving clues behind after a railroad heist, Jarrett becomes the target of the feds, who send an undercover agent (played by Edmond O'Brien) to infiltrate the Jarrett gang. While Jarrett sits in prison on a deliberately trumped-up charge (he confesses to one crime to provide himself an alibi for the railroad robbery), he befriends O'Brien, who poses as a hero-worshipping hood who's always wanted to work with Jarrett. Busting out of prison with O'Brien, Jarrett regroups his gang to mastermind a "Trojan horse" armored-car robbery. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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RisseladaRisselada movie year countdown #58 - 1949 ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
loved it.
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"This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”. To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.White HeatIt's always exciting to see an older movie and hear a famous line you'd heard before but didn't know where it came from. It's even more exciting when the movie totally rocks, as is the case for me with White Heat.Cagney is such a watchable actor for me. And it was interesting to see Edmond O'Brien again just after watching D.O.A. This seems to happen to me often in watching movies from my "movie year countdown" list. Other actors I've seen in movies very close to each other are Tony Curtis, Takashi Shimura, Claude Rains, and Olivia de Havilland, from what I remember. It kind of reminds you that there were the same cast of stars and regular players in all eras of movie making. Another movie where you have the good guy and the bad guy, but you almost root for the bad guy more than the good guy even though y ... " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Re:Short Survey
by JakeStevens in Black And White
hasn't rated it.
"Hi there! Proud to say this is my FIRST BLOG here on SPOUT! Anyways, here goes...1. NAME/ALIAS - Jake Stevens2. WHY I JOINED B&W - I love that era of filmmaking! Specifically the 40's & 50's (WWII era). Bogey, Hitchcock, Peck, Davis, Kelly, Hepburn, Zanuck, early Looney Tunes...I'll take 'em all!3. ANY LISTS YOU'D LIKE TO SEE ADDED - Hmmm...maybe a "favorites" list. Like favorite actors (Top 10?). Favorite directors. Favorite films. Favorite moments. 4. WHAT YOU FEEL YOU UNIQUELY BRING TO THE TABLE - A ridiculous amount of trivial knowledge. I have over 1,200 DVDs at home...many of them are considered "classics", I suppose.5. WHAT FILM(S) SPARKED YOUR LOVE FOR THE CLASSICS? - Hmmm...maybe it was a knee-jerk reaction from seeing crappy new movies and wanting to know how much better the original was. Also, I did a family tree a while ago and wanted to know and see what the world was like in the era of my grandparents, whom I have endless love and respect f ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Movie year countdown viewing pr ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
loved it.
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"Here’s the dilemma. I have a list of well over three thousand movies I want to see saved on IMDB. I have a subscription to Netflix and recently every time I return a DVD it has been an extremely arduous task to make the decision as to which movie I should see next. In an effort to narrow down my choices and make the process of choosing slightly less overwhelming I have devised a system, almost a bit of a game for me. Here’s how it goes.For my first film selection, I have narrowed the options down to only films that were released in the year 2006. Then after I have watched that movie, my next selection would have to be a film released in 2005. Then I would see a film from 2004, then 2003, etc. The process of deciding is still laborious, but actually quite a bit more exciting. (I'm going by IMDB as my source for release years)I have already been making a list and have also already begun watching the films. I decided this might be a good time to start fooling ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
James Cagney made his name on screen as a criminal, and he gave his last truly great outlaw performance in White Heat, which may well be the most intelligent and striking work of his career. While Cagney always knew how to lend his characters a charismatic menace, his Cody Jarrett in White Heat is both menacing and uncomfortably bizarre. Given to strange semi-epileptic seizures, sudden bursts of horrible violence, and a bizarre attachment to his mother that stops just short of incest, Cody represents the criminal as head case, at once fascinating and disturbingly unstable. Cagney manages to lend Cody just enough of his traditional tough-talking, wise guy veneer that he seems like a conventional screen criminal at first, but it doesn't take long for Cody to reveal himself as a full-blown psychotic, and the perversely self-immolating "Made it, Ma! Top of the world!" finale is only the most spectacular symptom of his madness. Raoul Walsh's direction is hardly as audacious as Cagney's performance, but it is crisp, efficient, and briskly paced, and in a way Cagney's portrayal may well be all the more effective in this context. While White Heat's narrative often seems like the traditional story of a charismatic bad guy who will be forced to pay for his crimes in the last reel, it instead houses a different and most puzzling sort of villain, who paved the way for the stranger, more brutal outlaws who would dominate crime cinema in the 1960s and 1970s. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



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