Rating: NR
Genre:
Crime
Release Date: 01/25/2005
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 84 Minutes
Flags: Violence, Adult Situations, Not For Children
Distributor/Studio: Warner Home Video
William Wellman's landmark
gangster movie traces the rise and fall of prohibition-era mobster
Tom Powers. We are first shown various episodes of
Tom's childhood with the corrupting influences of the beer hall, pool parlor, and false friends like minor-league fence
Putty Nose. As young adults,
Tom (
James Cagney) and his pal,
Matt Doyle (
Edward Woods), are hired by ruthless but innately decent bootlegger
Paddy Ryan (
Robert Emmett O'Connor). The boys quickly rise to the top of the heap, with all the accoutrements of success: custom-tailored tuxedoes, fancy cars, and gorgeous girls. All the while,
Tom's loving (and somewhat addlepated) mother (
Beryl Mercer) is kept in the dark, believing
Tommy to be a good boy, a façade easily seen through by his older brother
Mike (
Donald Cook).
Tommy's degeneration from brash kid to vicious lowlife is brought home in a famous scene in which he smashes a grapefruit in the face of his latest mistress (
Mae Clarke). Some dated elements aside,
The Public Enemy is as powerful as when it was first released, and it is far superior to the like-vintage
Little Caesar.
James Cagney is so dynamic in his first starring role that he practically bursts off the screen; he makes the audience pull for a character with no redeeming qualities. The film is blessed with a superior supporting cast:
Joan Blondell is somewhat wasted as
Matt's girl,
Mamie;
Jean Harlow is better served as
Tom's main squeeze,
Gwen (though some of her line readings are a bit awkward); and
Murray Kinnell is slime personified as the deceitful
Putty Nose, who "gets his" in unforgettable fashion. Despite a tacked-on opening disclaimer, most of the characters in
The Public Enemy are based on actual people, a fact not lost on audiences of the period. Current prints are struck from the 1949 reissue, which was shortened from 92 to 83 minutes (among the deletions was the character of real-life hoodlum
Bugs Moran).
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide