From American cult film director Samuel Fuller comes a brief yet
potent film-noir laced with communism, pick pocketing and a lot of shady
business on the streets of New York.
Grifter Skip McCoy (Richard Widmark) is just recently out of the
can and he is back on the streets up to his old tricks again swiping wallets.
His victim this time around is a pretty young dame named Candy (Jean Peters)
who has a mission of her own to drop off a package. Neither of them knows quite
what they have gotten into and to start off with nothing happens. What exactly
has Skip stumbled upon? The answer includes microfilm, spies and the Commies.
All of a sudden things are hot as McCoy tries to cut a deal with the Reds and
Candy tries to recover the film she unknowingly lost. Candy gets caught in the
middle of her boyfriend who is sided with Communists and Skip who wants to cash
in on his good fortune. Between Skip and Candy begins a wild and passionate
love affair that seems destined for disaster. Both have their own agendas but
it is ultimately Candy who drops hers because of her new found affection. McCoy
is callous at first but he comes around in the end leaving this Noir on a
surprisingly positive note.
Thelma Ritter was usually colorful in her many screen appearances
and she has another memorable turn as the wheeler and dealer Moe Williams in
this film. However, Moe does not just deal ties and secrets; she is a woman
with a conscience and a touch of good old-fashioned patriotism. In her own
simple way she is a hero whether people know it or not.
Widmark played a similar conman in Night and the City (1950) but
this time around things worked out a little differently for his character. The
pick pocket sequences were perhaps less elaborate but still similarly intricate
to Robert Bresson's Pickpocket (1959). It is possible that he got some of his
inspiration from Fuller's work here.
This is a real communist era thriller that Fuller injects with
passion, grit and some unadulterated violence. It is not a pretty film
necessarily but that is probably not what Fuller is going for, instead he
reveals to his audience the nitty-gritty of South Street up close and personal.
If that was in fact his objective he succeeded with flying colors.
4/5 Stars
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