My uncle is a part time hitman
Who in accordance with
his wife’s wishes
Also works as a
janitor at the aquarium
Where he sweeps with
the fishes
My uncle is a part time hitman
Who in accordance with
his wife’s wishes
Also works as a
janitor at the aquarium
Where he sweeps with
the fishes
Are you wearing spats?
Like some old Chicago gangster
If you were told they were in vogue
Then you’re the butt of a prankster
“The Roaring Twenties” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay and Robert Rossen, from a Story by Mark Hellinger and Directed by Raoul Walsh.
The story begins in
the dying moments of World War I and after the Armistice Lloyd Hart (Jeffrey
Lynn) goes back to practice law, former saloon keeper George Hally (Humphrey
Bogart) turns to bootlegging, and Eddie Bartlett (James Cagney) becomes a cab
driver.
Through delivering
bootleg liquor Eddie manages to build a fleet of cabs and hires Lloyd as his
lawyer and George and Eddie become partners in the flourishing rackets, but
love, loyalty and rivalry will ultimately bring everything crashing down.
Priscilla Lane, Gladys
George, Frank McHugh and Paul Kelly complete the line up in this absolute
classic
“Angels with Dirty Faces” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by John Wexley and Warren Duff, from a story by Rowland Brown and Directed by Michael Curtiz.
It’s the story of two
boyhood friends, Rocky Sullivan (James Cagney) and Jerry Connolly (Pat O'Brien)
who were running from the police one night when Rocky was caught.
After he was arrested
he went into the prison system and became a lifelong criminal, while Jerry went
straight and became a Catholic Priest and ministered to people in the same
neighbourhood where he and Rocky grew up.
When Rocky is released
from prison after his latest term he resumes his criminal lifestyle and is hero
worshipped by many of the local kids.
Jerry is worried that
the kids will follow Rocky down the wrong path into the criminal world, and
works hard to keep them on the straight and narrow.
But no matter what he
says he can’t get through to them, even after Rocky is convicted of murder and
sentenced to the electric chair, so Jerry visits him on death row and asks him
for one last favour.
A classic of the
genre, with extraordinary acting by James Cagney, ably complimented by Pat
O'Brien as his friend, Humphrey Bogart who is the perfect actor as the arch
villain, and the radiant Ann Sheridan adds a feminine touch.
“The Untouchables” is a Crime Drama, Written by David Mamet, suggested by a book by Oscar Fraley and Eliot Ness and Directed by Brian De Palma.
The story is set
during the era of Prohibition in the United States, when legendary crime boss
Al Capone (Robert De Niro) rules Chicago with an iron fist after building an
empire with bootleg alcohol.
Prohibition Agent
Eliot Ness (Kevin Costner) attempts to take Capone down, but due to widespread
corruption within the Windy City's police force even his best efforts fail.
So because of the
rampant corruption, he assembles an elite group of lawmen, a small hand-picked
team who won't be swayed by bribes or fear, to help him, including
Irish-American cop Jimmy Malone (Sean Connery), George Stone (Andy Garcia) and
Oscar Wallace (Charles Martin Smith) and with his team in place Ness renewed
his determination to bring Capone to justice.
“White Heat” is a Crime Drama, Screenplay by Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts from a Story by Virginia Kellogg and Directed by Raoul Walsh.
The
central character of the story is Cody Jarrett (James Cagney) who is a sadistic
psychopathic criminal and leader of a ruthless gang of thieves.
Cody
is a volatile, violent, and eccentric leader, fiercely devoted to his ‘Ma’
(Margaret Wycherly) and afflicted with terrible headaches.
While
he is running the gang from in jail Cody's top henchman Big Ed Somers (Steve Cochran)
wants to lead the gang and, in cahoots with Cody’s two-faced wife Verna
(Virginia Mayo), plots with inmates for Cody to have an accident, but Cody is
saved by an undercover cop, Hank Fallon aka Vic Pardo (Edmond O'Brien) who
thereby befriends him and infiltrates the gang.
After
making a daring break from prison he leads his old gang back on the outside and
the stage is set for Cody's ultimate betrayal and downfall, during a big
payroll heist at a chemical plant.
The
final scene, with the line “Top of the World, Ma!” is one of the most famous in
all of film history.
“Once Upon a Time in America” is a Crime Drama, Screenplay by Leonardo Benvenuti, Piero De Bernardi, Enrico Medioli, Franco Arcalli, Franco Ferrini and Sergio Leone from the Novel by Harry Grey and Directed by Sergio Leone.
The
film chronicles the lives of best friends David “Noodles” Aaronson (Robert De
Niro) and Maximilian “Max” Bercovicz (James Woods) as they lead a group of Jewish
ghetto youths from being petty criminals to being prominent Jewish gangsters in
New York City's world of organized crime on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
The
film explores themes of childhood friendships, love, lust, greed, betrayal,
loss and broken relationships.
The film benefits from a fine and varied supporting
cast including, Elizabeth
McGovern, Treat Williams, Tuesday Weld, Burt Young, Joe Pesci, William Forsythe
and Danny Aiello.
“The Cotton Club” is a Crime Drama, Screenplay by Mario Puzo, William Kennedy and Francis Ford Coppola and Directed by Francis Ford Coppola.
The movie is centred around The Cotton Club
in the late 1920s and early 30s Harlem, it’s a premium night club owned by Owney Madden (Bob Hoskins) and
Frenchy Demange (Fred Gwynne),
Featuring the very best jazz musicians,
singers and dancers and is frequented by the great and the good and the very not
so good of the underworld.
A musician named Dixie Dwyer (Richard Gere) begins working with mobsters
to advance his career but falls in love with Vera Cicero (Diane Lane) the
girlfriend of gangland kingpin Dutch Schultz (James Remar).
The film benefits from a fine and varied
supporting cast including, Gregory Hines, Lonette McKee, Nicolas Cage, Allen Garfield, Laurence Fishburne
and Maurice Hines.
“The Untouchables” is a Crime Drama, Written by David Mamet, suggested by a book by Oscar Fraley and Eliot Ness and Directed by Brian De Palma.
The story is set during the era of Prohibition in the United States,
when legendary crime boss Al Capone (Robert De Niro) rules Chicago with an iron
fist after building an empire with bootleg alcohol.
Prohibition Agent Eliot Ness (Kevin Costner) attempts to take Capone
down, but due to widespread corruption within the Windy City's police force
even his best efforts fail.
So because of the rampant corruption, he assembles an elite group of
lawmen, a small hand-picked team who won't be swayed by bribes or fear, to help
him, including Irish-American cop Jimmy Malone (Sean Connery), George Stone (Andy
Garcia) and Oscar Wallace (Charles Martin Smith) and with his team in place
Ness renewed his determination to bring Capone to justice.
“The Public Enemy” is a Crime Drama, Written by Kubec Glasmon, John Bright and Harvey F. Thew and Directed by William A. Wellman.
The
movie is the story of best friends and fellow gangsters, Tom Powers and Matt
Doyle (James Cagney and Edward Woods).
However,
their lives are frowned upon by Tom's straight-laced brother, Mike (Donald
Cook), and Matt's straight laced sister, Molly (Rita Flynn).
Nonetheless
the hoodlums rise up through the ranks of the Chicago underworld, from their teen-aged
years into young adulthood, and have an increasingly lucrative life,
bootlegging during the Prohibition era.
Tom
in particular becomes more and more brazen in what he is willing to do and
becomes more violent against those who stand in his way, disagree with him or
cross him, until a gangster's accidental death threatens to spark a bloody mob
war.
Also
in the line-up are Robert Emmett O'Connor as Paddy Ryan and Joan Blondell as
Mamie.
The most famous scene is of course, Cagney smashing
a grapefruit into the face Mae Clarke (Jean Harlow), but there is a lot more to
this film than that.
“The Roaring Twenties” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay and Robert Rossen, from a Story by Mark Hellinger and Directed by Raoul Walsh.
The
story begins in the dying moments of World War I and after the Armistice Lloyd
Hart (Jeffrey Lynn) goes back to practice law, former saloon keeper George Hally
(Humphrey Bogart) turns to bootlegging, and Eddie Bartlett (James Cagney)
becomes a cab driver.
Through
delivering bootleg liquor Eddie manages to build a fleet of cabs and hires Lloyd
as his lawyer and George and Eddie become partners in the flourishing rackets,
but love, loyalty and rivalry will ultimately bring everything crashing down.
Priscilla
Lane, Gladys George, Frank McHugh and Paul Kelly complete the line up in this
absolute classic
“Each Dawn I Die” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by Norman Reilly and Raine Warren Duff, from a Novel by Jerome Odlum and Directed by William Keighley.
In this prison classic, a top-notch newspaper
reporter Frank Ross (James Cagney) angers a corrupt District Attorney with
political ambitions, and with Ross’s news stories implicating him in criminal
activity he decides to frame Ross for manslaughter in order to silence him.
“Angels with Dirty Faces” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by John Wexley and Warren Duff, from a story by Rowland Brown and Directed by Michael Curtiz.
It’s the story of two boyhood friends, Rocky Sullivan (James Cagney) and
Jerry Connolly (Pat O'Brien) who were running from the police one night when
Rocky was caught.
After he was arrested, he went into the prison system and became a
lifelong criminal, while Jerry went straight and became a Catholic Priest and
ministered to people in the same neighbourhood where he and Rocky grew up.
When Rocky is released from prison after his latest term, he resumes his
criminal lifestyle and is hero worshipped by many of the local kids.
Jerry is worried that the kids will follow Rocky down the wrong path
into the criminal world and works hard to keep them on the straight and narrow.
But no matter what he says he can’t get through to them, even after
Rocky is convicted of murder and sentenced to the electric chair, so Jerry
visits him on death row and asks him for one last favour.
A classic of the genre, with extraordinary acting by James Cagney, ably
complimented by Pat O'Brien as his friend, Humphrey Bogart who is the perfect
actor as the arch villain, and the radiant Ann Sheridan adds a feminine touch.
“White Heat” is a Crime Drama, Screenplay by Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts from a Story by Virginia Kellogg and Directed by Raoul Walsh.
The central character of the story is Cody Jarrett (James Cagney) who is a sadistic psychopathic criminal and leader of a ruthless gang of thieves.
Cody is a volatile, violent, and eccentric
leader, fiercely devoted to his ‘Ma’ (Margaret Wycherly) and afflicted with
terrible headaches.
While he is running the gang from in jail
Cody's top henchman Big Ed Somers (Steve Cochran) wants to lead the gang and,
in cahoots with Cody’s two-faced wife Verna (Virginia Mayo), plots with inmates
for Cody to have an accident, but Cody is saved by an undercover cop, Hank
Fallon aka Vic Pardo (Edmond O'Brien) who thereby befriends him and infiltrates
the gang.
After making a daring break from prison he
leads his old gang back on the outside and the stage is set for Cody's ultimate
betrayal and downfall, during a big payroll heist at a chemical plant.
The final scene, with the line “Top of the
World, Ma!” is one of the most famous in all of film history.
“Angels with Dirty Faces” is a Crime Drama, screenplay by John Wexley and Warren Duff, from a story by Rowland Brown and Directed by Michael Curtiz.
It’s the story of two boyhood friends, Rocky
Sullivan (James Cagney) and Jerry Connolly (Pat O'Brien) who were running from
the police one night when Rocky was caught.
After he was arrested, he went into the prison
system and became a lifelong criminal, while Jerry went straight and became a
Catholic Priest and ministered to people in the same neighbourhood where he and
Rocky grew up.
When Rocky is released from prison after his
latest term, he resumes his criminal lifestyle and is hero worshipped by many
of the local kids.
Jerry is worried that the kids will follow Rocky
down the wrong path into the criminal world and works hard to keep them on the
straight and narrow.
But no matter what he says he can’t get
through to them, even after Rocky is convicted of murder and sentenced to the electric
chair, so Jerry visits him on death row and asks him for one last favour.
A classic of the genre, with extraordinary
acting by James Cagney, ably complimented by Pat O'Brien as his friend, Humphrey
Bogart who is the perfect actor as the arch villain, and the radiant Ann
Sheridan adds a feminine touch.