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Kansas City Confidential (MGM Film Noir)

Kansas City Confidential (MGM Film Noir)

Product Type: DVD

Product Price: $3.98

Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)

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Description

Framed for a bank robbery by a dirty former cop, a reformed ex-con sets out to clear his name and get revenge.

Tightly plotted and perfectly cast, Kansas City Confidential is film noir at its finest. An obvious influence on Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, this riveting 99-minute potboiler builds its escalating suspense on the fate of reformed ex-con Joe Rolfe (John Payne), whose floral delivery truck matches a duplicate truck used in a Kansas City bank heist. Joe's been randomly framed by disgruntled, double-crossing ex-cop Tim Foster (Preston Foster) who masterminded the robbery, and in an effort to clear his name, Joe follows a trail of suspicion to a Mexican hideaway, where Foster's accomplices (a sublimely hardboiled trio played by Lee Van Cleef, Neville Brand, and Jack Elam) have gathered to split their $1.2 million haul. Under Phil Karlson's skillful direction, this nerve-twitching scenario unfolds as a clever case of hidden and assumed identities (having worn masks during the heist and getaway, none of the robbers knows the others' identities), and Payne gives a smart, sweaty-browed performance as a hard-luck case who finds time for romance with Foster's daughter (Coleen Gray) as he struggles to turn his fate around. For noir lovers, this movie's pure bliss as Brand, Van Cleef, and especially Elam fill the screen with slimy greed and infectious mistrust. As an iconic example of gritty film noir, Kansas City Confidential remains exciting, unpredictable, and thoroughly entertaining. --Jeff Shannon

Reviews

Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-05-06
Summary: "kansas city confidental"

very good story product arrived as advertised product was in very good shape


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-04-27
Summary: "An Unusual Bank Robbery"

Kansas City Confidential, 1952 film

The purpose of this picture is to expose the "perfect crime" whose true solution is not entered in any case history. The film begins with a view of a large building with tall buildings in the background. A man makes a delivery to a florist shop. A bank opens at 10AM. There is a money shipment by armored car. Pete Harris gets a call about a big job. They will all wear masks to protect their identity. Tony Romano and Boyd Kane are next. We see their well-planned robbery. They escape in a huge moving van that swallows their truck. The real florist truck is stopped by the police. The robbers will go into hiding until its safe to spend the money. The real driver is given the third degree to make him confess. How long can he hold out? Then the actual truck is found in that van. "These things happen." Joe Rolfe is now infamous.

Joe is given a tip about Pete Harris in Mexico. He follows this lead and finds the dice table. Harris decides to talk. But police show up and there is a shooting. Pete will not board the airplane. Romano is at the hotel, as is Kane. None of the money has been recovered. We learn more about retired Foster. His daughter Helen arrives with news. The men play poker in the bar. They must wait two days for the money. Who is Mr. Big? How can Harris drop his pistol? Will bad luck follow? Helen arrives to save him. Foster makes plans for a meeting. Harris talks to Romano and Kane by the well. What are Foster's plans? "Don't miss." They go to the boat. Will there be a conflict over the loot? Will the good guys win in the end? Dead men tell no tales. Mr. Andrews provides the happy ending.

This is a good story that differs from the usual plots about a bank robbery. There always seems to be a problem in splitting the loot, as in other stories. Only those with a prior personal bond seem immune (the James-Younger gang). But this personal bond identifies the suspects. Note how the handling of a suspect then contrasts to modern films. Would torturing Joe Rolfe have solved the crime? Were the correct inferences drawn from circumstantial evidence? Was this meant to be a lesson to the audience. [I wonder if this story was based on a real crime?]


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-04-07
Summary: "Great movie"


For the film noir buff this is a great movie. Its a great black and white copy unlike some of the other old 40's and 50's films I've purchased. This is story telling at its best. They certainly don't make them like this anymore.


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-08-11
Summary: "1950 film noir"

I was surprised at how good this film is. John Payne was one of the pretty boys from the FOX days of the 1940's.
He invariably appeared in musicals in technicolor primarily because of his voice and his looks. Surprisingly he stands out as an actor in this movie


Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-05-26
Summary: "The good guy gets the dame and the money"

It may have elements of film noir, but fall guy, Joe the florist played, by Mr Payne, gets the dame and the money in the end, so I question categorising it as noir. Solid moving making yes. Good acting yes. Effective use of close ups, yes (nothing like Me Elam filling the screen with his expressive features).... a satisfying film.