The System (1953) Poster

(1953)

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6/10
Likeable Frank Lovejoy can't quite convince in '50s topical crime melodrama
bmacv8 March 2003
Lewis Seiler's The System tries to have it both ways. It wants to show us that betting a couple of bucks on a horse with your neighborhood bookie feeds a mammoth and murderous syndicate. But then, too, it wants us to believe that its central character (Frank Lovejoy), who controls the syndicate's operations in a midwestern city hovering somewhere between the gravitational fields of Chicago and St. Louis, is at heart a pretty decent guy who'll do the right thing once destiny points out the error of his ways.

That's a pretty big chunk to swallow, but, once it's down, The System turns out to be fairly digestible, if on the bland side. It opens when a 19-year-old kid, armed with a water pistol, gets shot and killed by the police for burglary; he needed money to pay off his local book. An old newspaper man who knew the kid wants to run an exposé on the whole operation and nail Lovejoy; his publisher gives a cautious go-ahead, as Lovejoy is dating his daughter (Joan Weldon, a detachable accessory to the plot). Lovejoy pays a courteous visit to the reporter, whom he knows; both their sons are in college together. But the reporter sticks to his guns, and Lovejoy leaves him alone.

The storm of publicity, however, brings a Congressional investigation to town (making The System yet another '50s movie riding the coattails of the Kefauver Committee on Organized Crime). This so scares the big shots in Chicago that they send down some heavy artillery to protect their interests....

The movie's at its best in its many small roles for quirky players and in Lovejoy, a solid, likeable actor who gets a part that's hard to sell with any conviction. The System ends up being less film noir than topical crime drama, at once both somber and melodramatic (the interconnections among the characters, and some of the turns they take, are soap-opera baroque). But don't put any money on Lovejoy's living in a posh penthouse and buying a flashy roadster for his kid without getting his soul as well as his hands dirty; that's a sucker's bet.
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Classic gangster melodrama
jarrodmcdonald-12 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Frank Lovejoy, who stars in this classic gangster melodrama from Warner Brothers, is an underrated actor. He died at a relatively young age (50) and we were robbed of many more performances from him...probably a lead role on a TV crime show or primetime soap would've been on the cards had he lived longer.

In this film, his character basically runs the system in question-- calling the shots in a tristate area. On paper he's a real estate mogul but in reality he oversees a gambling racket and has diversified into other arenas of organized crime. He's just so suave and debonair, clothed in the finest suits, with a pretty gal by his side. He doesn't seem like a crook, but he is.

What I love about this movie is how carefully laid out it all is. The writers take great pains to fill in all the gaps and explain each character's backstory, even the minor characters. What we get is a community of interrelated people, sharing many common interests on both sides of the law. Of course the most important relationships in the story involve Lovejoy.

He has a dicey relationship with the local newspaper editor (Fay Roope) whose daughter is dating Lovejoy. The daughter (Joan Weldon in her motion picture debut) is not receptive to dear old dad's suggestion that she dump Lovejoy. So when Roope's star columnist (Don Beddoe) decides to do a series of articles exposing the mob, this gives Roope some ammunition. He offers to kill the series if Lovejoy will break up with Weldon. But that ain't happening anytime soon.

Beddoe is allowed to push ahead with his crusade. The situation is underscored by the fact that Beddoe and Lovejoy know each other personally. Their eighteen year old sons are pals and in their first year of college together. These families, two sides of the same proverbial coin, are still friendly with each other. Meanwhile Lovejoy enjoys membership at a nearby country club and generously provides funds to make improvements there, so the town's most influential men are on good terms with him.

The news articles lead to a senate committee investigating Lovejoy for illegal interstate commerce. He is advised by his shrewd lawyer (Jerome Cowan). A hearing is conducted to gather evidence for an indictment. Witnesses have to name names and provide substantial details. They will be subjected to perjury charges or charges of obstruction if they do not fully cooperate. It is very much like the McCarthy-led hearings with the House Committee on Un-American Activities that were occurring around this time.

On the day that Beddoe is scheduled to testify, he is murdered outside his home by some goons hired by one of Lovejoy's cronies. This precipitates a huge crisis for Lovejoy's son (Robert Arthur). He realizes that his father's dealings have led to the killing of his best friend's father, and it's too much for him to process. Instead of returning to campus, he goes home then locks himself in his bedroom. In the next scene he shoots himself.

The scenes where Lovejoy learns his boy committed suicide are expertly handled. Some of this seems very melodramatic, but it works. We are drawn in by the characters and their interconnected scandalous lives. It's like a mobster version of 'Peyton Place.' The performances are first rate.
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5/10
Kiss him or Kill him
happytrigger-64-39051729 November 2020
The System is a melodrama, and certainly not a film noir. If the script has been written by Jo Eisinger (Gilda, Night and the City), there are in this movie completely ridiculous scenes such as the kid's suicide (and that surrealistic shot of the vacuum cleaner, it has to be seen, such a mess, mixing comedy and tragedy) or the newspaper man's death (the two killers are more clowns than killers, unbelievable, and it's shot from far away without imagination), ans so many more scenes. What saves this movie is Frank Lovejoy's character as the chief of bookie Organization, he's an illegal businessman but doesn't want to go too far in violence, and Lovejoy is convincing in his tough acting. Two good appearances of Dan Seymour and Bruno VeSota (they both cannot be bad). But the rest of the casting is quite poor. Director Lewis Seiler is unknown to me, except The True Story of Lynn Stuart, with a frightening Jack Lord (the first sequence is a must). He also directed five early Bogart and I have to see the Guadalcanal Diary which has a good reputation.
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