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The Mob
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Directed by Robert Parrish.
Broderick Crawford plays Johnny Damico, a detective who suddenly finds himself up to his neck in trouble and his career on the line. Going home in the rain one night, he finds himself just a few feet from a shooting on a dark street, where the gunman claims to be a detective from another precinct, flashing a real badge -- and then slipping away. Damico discovers that the victim of the shooting was a witness who was to have appeared before a grand jury investigating waterfront crime, and that the same man who shot him also murdered the chief investigator on the case just a few hours earlier (which is where the badge came from). Damico could lose his job, but instead he's given the chance to redeem himself -- he's sent undercover and given a new identity as New Orleans tough-guy Tim Flynn, who insinuates himself onto the New York waterfront when he arrives on ship. He manages to hook up with union thug Joe Castro (Ernest Borgnine) and his strong-arm man Gunner (Neville Brand), who try to frame him for a murder that also gets a potential stoolie out of the way and that hooks Damico up with crooked police sergeant Bennion. After following one blind alley involving a federal agent (Richard Kiley) working as a longshoreman, Damico manages to get an intro to Blackie Clegg (Matt Crowley), the man working behind Castro, Gunner, et al, who's as cool and slippery as they come and as sadistic as he is vengeful. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
The Mob is not On the Waterfront, though the middle section, in which tough cop Johnny D'Amico (Broderick Crawford) infiltrates the ranks of New York's longshoremen, might make you think for a minute that you've tuned in to a rip-off of Elia Kazan's classic. Actually, The Mob was made two years earlier by Robert Parrish, an award-winning editor in his first directorial effort, and it's closer in spirit to film noir than to Kazan's almost operatic crime drama. The action and pacing in The Mob are almost dizzying, as plot elements unfold with no time wasted and amid some very colorful tough-guy dialogue; the authors even leave room for a few comic twists that don't slow the action up until the very end. The audience might feel "cheated" by the movie, as the hero and several supporting characters spend part of their time pursuing blind alleys and tripping over themselves, although most of the loose ends and even the mistakes made by the characters get tied up neatly at the end, in a manner that leads one to suspect that the authors of the film saw The Big Sleep more than once (all except for a too-cutesy ending that deflates some of the action). Neither a classic nor a bomb, The Mob is a solidly stylish film noir whose makers needed to decide precisely how good-natured it would be and decided wrongly. If not for that error, it could have recalled George Sherman's quietly brilliant The Sleeping City or even anticipated Fritz Lang's The Big Heat, instead of being merely diverting and entertaining. The performances, from Broderick Crawford and Richard Kiley on down, are all very good, and the film is worth seeing on that basis, even with its flaws in plot and mood. Best line (among many): "I'm going underground -- like moles and Communists." ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 



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