Cagney's energy and Wellman's gutsy direction carry the day, counteracting the moralistic sentimentality of the script and indelibly etching the star on the memory as a definitive gangster hero.
The Public Enemy (1931)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:26
Fresh:26
Rotten:0
Average Rating:8.4/10
Runtime: 84 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: In William Wellman's classic crime film THE PUBLIC ENEMY, James Cagney does a star turn as Tom Powers, a trouble-ridden individual who rises from the position of cheap thug to that of a powerful... In William Wellman's classic crime film THE PUBLIC ENEMY, James Cagney does a star turn as Tom Powers, a trouble-ridden individual who rises from the position of cheap thug to that of a powerful Prohibition gangster. When his best friend is murdered, Powers self-destructively seeks deadly retaliation. He picks fights. He slaps women around. He roughs up speakeasy owners and tells them whom they'll get their hooch from and how much they'll order. Fists, kisses, and guns are the only things Tom knows. He eventually gets promoted to become the muscleman of mobster Nails Nathan (Leslie Fenton). But Tom's violent acts are about to catch up with him. After Tom guns down a cop, he's on the run. Later, thugs dump him, beaten, on the doorstep of his estranged and horrified family. It's only then that Tom realizes his decision to live the gangster life has been an irrevocable and deadly choice. Known as the picture that launched Cagney into stardom, THE PUBLIC ENEMY doesn't hold back from exposing the violence and tedium underscoring this ostensibly sexy life of crime. The screenplay, based on a story entitled BEER AND BLOOD by John Bright and written by Harvey F. Thew, was nominated for an Academy Award. [More]
Starring: James Cagney, Jean Harlow, Eddie Woods, Beryl Mercer
Starring: James Cagney, Jean Harlow, Eddie Woods, Beryl Mercer, Joan Blondell, Donald Cook, Mae Clarke, Leslie Fenton
Director: William Wellman
Director: William Wellman
Producer: Darryl F. Zanuck
Composer: David Mendoza
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Reviews for The Public Enemy
Overripe, rigid, and at times clunky ... and that's part of the enjoyment.
Contrary to popular opinion, the best moment in the film isn’t when Jimmy Cagney shoves a grapefruit in his girlfriend’s face.
Now a classic, this is the movie in which Cagney famously crams a grapefruit into Mae Clarke’s face.
Its success proved, if by then there was any doubt, that audiences will go for a charismatic lowlife over a dull hero any day of the week, a lesson Hollywood never forgot.
The Public Enemy (1931) is one of the earliest and best of the gangster films - the second one from Warner Bros. in the thirties. Director William Wellman's
Still a classic of the gangster genre, showing neither glorifying the life nor pulling its punches.
James Cagney's portrayal of a bootlegging runt is truly electrifying (he'd made five films, but this one made him a star), and Jean Harlow makes the tartiest tart imaginable.
Crime may not pay, but The Public Enemy was one of the first pictures to recognize that it sure can be exciting to watch.
The implication is that there are hundreds, maybe thousands of guys like Tom Powers, little criminals living fast and dying hard.
...it was Cagney's film from beginning to end, to win or to lose, and he came out one of the biggest winners in Hollywood.
The film's juiciest scene has the misogynist Tom squeeze a half a grapefruit in his nagging girlfriend Kitty's (Mae Clarke) kisser.
There's no lace on this picture. It's raw and brutal. It's low-brow material given such workmanship as to make it high-brow.
The film set the template for the likes of "Scarface" and "GoodFellas."
A stunning starring vehicle for Cagney that shaped his career. Dated and a bit slow, but Cagney magnetism shines through even then.
Latest News for The Public Enemy
October 31, 2007:
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