| Index | 5 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Lighten up...it wasn't a real movie to begin with., 10 December 2005
Author:
Leslie Howard Adams (longhorn1939@suddenlink.net) from Texas
It was, just as it says at the top of the page, several episodes of the
syndicated TV series, GANGBUSTERS, stitched together to make a
feature-length film for the drive-in and grind-show theatres, and the
producers were only interested in getting some more return on their
investment...and didn't much care if some theatre patron came away
miffed because he had already seen this mess for free on television,
scattered across several 30-minute episodes. Each of those told a
single story of some gangster or gangs, through some law-enforcement
agent, and sometimes had different narrators telling the story.
Based on Philip H. Lord's radio program, and the comic strip of the
same name. This is not one of the FBI-endorsed films or, to be exact,
television series.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Just okay movie cut from the old Gangbusters TV show would have been better as individual episodes, 19 July 2006
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Author:
dbborroughs from Glen Cove, New York
Apparently re-cut episodes from the Gangbusters TV show on the big screen. While this was frequently done in the 50's and 60's because people didn't have a TV or a color TV and producers wanted an increased return on their investment (big screen ticket sales or if it went to the small screen resale of a series that isn't in syndication), the results were usually less then the sum of their parts. The only time I've ever seen it work were where multi-part stories were put together (Ala Rocky Jones or Man From Uncle) or in the case of horror anthology (The Veil and 13 Demon Street). Here the effect is to have stories of American criminals in the 20's and 30's (Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Bonnie and Clyde, etc)inter-cut with each other as a narrator talks about how the FBI hunted them down. Its a weird concoction that doesn't quite work because its clear that there are things here that don't belong together. More than once I looked at the TV oddly because things didn't seem right. In fairness I won't describe the cheapness of the production since this was what early TV (and the series) was like. Its not bad, but its not very good either. To be perfectly honest the episodes of the series that I've seen work better a single episodes where we're not expecting as much. Given the choice I'd rent dvds of the show instead of this movie.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Revisionist Criminal History for Hooverites, 13 June 2003
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Author:
Vornoff-3 from Vancouver, BC
`Guns Don't Argue' is essentially a docu-drama about the war against crime
in the 20's and 30's, with particular emphasis on the role of the FBI in
that process. It is very much pro-Hoover, pro-law-enforcement, and
anti-criminal, and is also quite heavy-handed (often laughably so) in its
narration and its portrayals of the criminal element. While offering an
interesting counter-point to such romanticisations of the outlaw as Arthur
Penn's `Bonnie and Clyde', this movie simply goes TOO far in the opposite
direction, to the detriment of what real history it presents.
The worst revisionist moments are in the portrayals of the executions of
John Dillinger and of Bonnie and Clyde (interestingly, consistently called
`Clyde and Bonnie' in this picture). In reality, each was gunned down
maliciously by lawmen who gave no warnings, having set up fool-proof
ambushes and using patsies to bait their prey. The vigillantism of law
enforcement officials in these days is a legacy America still must live
down. In `Guns Don't Argue,' however, Bonnie, Clyde and Dillinger are
somehow able to get off the first shots, and the implication is presented
that they were given ample opportunity to surrender. Also notably lacking
is
any sense of the popularity of bank robbers among the American masses,
especially after the stock market crash. Dillinger, particularly, was
regarded with considerable reverence in the 30's, not the abject fear that
this film suggests.
In another interesting twist on history (although a more informed criminal
historian will have to bring out the true story), Lyle Talbot takes on a
role out of Ed Wood's `Jail Bait' (1954) and is forced to perform plastic
surgery on gangster Al Karpis at gunpoint. Those who have seen Ed's
original
will agree - his `surprise ending' was more effective than this rip-off's.
The best sequence of this movie, however, is that of the vicious `Ma'
Barker' and her brood. The little old lady with a Tommy-gun is somehow the
most powerful image of the film. The film is quick to point out that the
only reason Barker's family attended church was because it helped them
avoid
jail sentences, of course. Ma' does spend a good deal of screen time in
the
kitchen, however, reminding us that 50's values cross race, class and even
legal lines.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Grade-Z brilliance, 30 May 1999
Author:
matthew wilder (picqueur@aol.com) from los angeles
The history of early-twentieth-century organized crime, and the response of law enforcement, narrated on the budget of a high-school sex-ed movie. Martin Scorsese recommended this movie as the ultimate exemplar of visual storytelling on a well-worn shoestring, and he knows whereof he speaks: even Sam Fuller never had to portray a shooting death by dissolving to stock footage of a firing gun.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Slightly interesting, not very good gangster history, 26 October 2006
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Author:
mlraymond from Durham NC
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I was quite impressed with this movie as a child of eight or nine. The gangsters seemed very real and threatening to me, and I could see why people would have been afraid of someone like Dillinger. Seeing it as an adult, it seemed almost comical, owing to the overdone narration and jarring details like Thirties gangsters driving cars that looked like they were from the Fifties. There is a certain gritty, unglamorous reality to the way the criminals are portrayed, but the overall effect is more like a bad soap opera. The most memorable and most unintentionally funny bit that sticks with me is the scene where Ma Barker and her sons are shooting it out with the FBI and the sons are killed. The narrator says something like " Perhaps in that moment, for the only time in her life, Ma Barker became a real mother". This is meant to be a moment of great tragedy and pathos, as Ma finally realizes how she's destroyed her family out of her own greed, but instead, it provokes laughter. A very odd film that is rarely shown anywhere these days. Gangster movie buffs might enjoy it, but more as a curiosity than a real movie.
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