Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuFed up with the rising crime rate in Miami, the police chief and leading members of the city council hire a former gangster who's gone straight to help eliminate the biggest crime syndicate ... Alles lesenFed up with the rising crime rate in Miami, the police chief and leading members of the city council hire a former gangster who's gone straight to help eliminate the biggest crime syndicate in the city.Fed up with the rising crime rate in Miami, the police chief and leading members of the city council hire a former gangster who's gone straight to help eliminate the biggest crime syndicate in the city.
- Harry Dobey - Editor
- (Nicht genannt)
- Charles Earnshaw
- (Nicht genannt)
- Clifton Staley
- (Nicht genannt)
- Simmons, Detective
- (Nicht genannt)
- Gil Flagg
- (Nicht genannt)
- Police Lieutenant
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- Kingsford - Detective
- (Nicht genannt)
- Gangster
- (Nicht genannt)
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It is a middling effort, standard B flick with standard b&w photography and unremarkable acting. The script really stretches your suspension of disbelief, especially the decision to send former criminal Mick Flagg (Sullivan) into the lion's den, in order to cure the town of its crime pandemic.
One positive aspect about MIAMI STORY: 75' long.
Which calls for some drastic measures and a citizen's committee similar to the one that aided in the takedown of Al Capone in Chicago is formed here. Their reluctant operator is former gangster Barry Sullivan who says he's fronting for a Cuban syndicate. It's all one giant con game on the local Miami kingpin Luther Adler.
Adler plays and plays well a lot of criminal types on the screen. He's a smart operator and won't be easy to fool. He also has as his number one trigger man John Baer who really loves his work.
Beverly Garland and Adele Jergens play a pair of sisters, Garland is an entertainer and falls for Sullivan. Jergens is part of Adler's team and I think this might have been her career role. She's a tough cookie in charge of the vice and prostitution part of Adler's criminal empire. I think she was the best in the film.
US Senator George Smathers introduced the film. I suspect that Smathers was looking for a little of Kefauver type publicity to attach itself to him. He was half way through his first term in the Senate and there was sure no downside to him being part of the promotion of The Miami Story.
Smathers is long gone but the film holds up well for today's audience.
This one is directed by Fred F. Sears and produced by the normally below-average Sam Katzman. It's actually pretty good, with nice performances by Barry Sullivan, Beverly Garland, Luther Adler, Adele Jergens, and John Baer.
The first thing we see is Senator George Smathers announcing that organized crime has been completely eradicated in Miami. This is how you know the movie is 70 years old.
In the film, a multibillion dollar crime syndicate is run by Tony Brill (Luther Adler). A citizens committee meets privately to figure out what to do.
A reformed mob boss, Mike Flagg, is located and brought in to pretend to move in on Brill's territory. He has a young son, whom he sends to live with friends.
Holly Abbott (Garland) has come to Miami to search for her sister Gwen (Jergens). Gwen is employed by Brill. Since Holly has befriended Flagg, Brill's associates beat her for information on his operation and plans.
Flagg has the police close Brill's gambling club. He retaliates by having Flagg's son (David Kasday) kidnapped.
Some interesting cinematography and exciting scenes. Others felt this film was above average. I think the cast certainly contributes to that, though for me it was an average crime story.
One of countless docu-noirs exposing every sort of crime ring in every major US city, this one even has a Florida senator chime in at the start, as well as the mandatory authoritative narration. Made on a low budget, it's pretty standard fare, but still manages to entertain. Sullivan ('The Gangster') is great as the former gangster who's still cold and callous when necessary, and Adler ('D.O.A.') played villains for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Jergens ('Armored Car Robbery') and Garland ('New Orleans Uncensored') play opposite roles, and esp Jergens is great as a bitter femme fatale just past her prime.
The directing by Fred F. Sears and cinematography by Harry Freulich is competent and occasionally inspired (there's a great shot of Garland when Sullivan first meets her inside his hotel room). They worked together on a number of movies, including other city/crime exposés like'Chicago Syndicate' and 'Inside Detroit'. Sears would even return to Miami a few years later for 'Miami Exposé'. All in all, while there's nothing under the sun here, and there are no real surprises (maybe that it's slightly more graphic than usual), it's a fast-paced and enjoyable movie if yer into this subgenre/corner of film noir.
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- WissenswertesEven though this was filmed while the Motion Picture Production Code (colloquially referred to as the Hays Code) was still being enforced, the filmmakers were able to push back on some of the limits, evidence that the Code was weakening in the 1950s. This film fairly graphically shows two men after being shot dead, shows a woman who had been badly beaten, and talks openly about prostitution and underage prostitution. The filmmakers most likely argued these "shocking" scenes would reiterate the pro-law-and-order message.
- PatzerMick Flagg obviously pulls his punches in several shots.
- Zitate
[first lines]
[as a montage starts, a voice can be heard narrating]
Narrator: In the years following World War II, organized crime in the United States grew to such proportions that it's scope was greater than the law enforcement agencies that tried to fight it.
[a shot of the U.S. Capitol Building can be seen]
Narrator: Finally, in the nation's capitol, the Senate Investigating Committee presented a new threat to gangland, and panic began to grip the overlords of crime.
[a montage of Miami can be seen playing]
Narrator: They sought a new central headquarters for their operation. The city where they felt they could be safe. They chose the Miami area, a vacation wonderland, a Mecca for tourists, who swelled the normal population of 600,000, to more than 2 million in the winter season. A city where the tough, honest police force was inadequate in size to protect the tremendous overflow of people. Then, out of sheer necessity, a way was found to crush crime in Miami. As Senator George Smathers, of the State of Florida relates...
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Secretos de Miami
- Drehorte
- Miami, Florida, USA(location shooting)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 15 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1