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Eine Stadt geht durch die Hölle

Originaltitel: The Phenix City Story
  • 1955
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
3454
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eine Stadt geht durch die Hölle (1955)
DokudramaFilm NoirWahres VerbrechenDramaKriminalität

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA crime-busting lawyer and his initially reluctant attorney father take on the forces that run gambling and prostitution in their small Southern town.A crime-busting lawyer and his initially reluctant attorney father take on the forces that run gambling and prostitution in their small Southern town.A crime-busting lawyer and his initially reluctant attorney father take on the forces that run gambling and prostitution in their small Southern town.

  • Regie
    • Phil Karlson
  • Drehbuch
    • Crane Wilbur
    • Daniel Mainwaring
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • John McIntire
    • Richard Kiley
    • Kathryn Grant
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    3454
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Phil Karlson
    • Drehbuch
      • Crane Wilbur
      • Daniel Mainwaring
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • John McIntire
      • Richard Kiley
      • Kathryn Grant
    • 60Benutzerrezensionen
    • 34Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos19

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung33

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    John McIntire
    John McIntire
    • Albert L. 'Pat' Patterson
    Richard Kiley
    Richard Kiley
    • John Patterson
    Kathryn Grant
    Kathryn Grant
    • Ellie Rhodes
    Edward Andrews
    Edward Andrews
    • Rhett Tanner
    Lenka Peterson
    Lenka Peterson
    • Mary Jo Patterson
    Biff McGuire
    Biff McGuire
    • Fred Gage
    Truman Smith
    • Ed Gage
    Jean Carson
    Jean Carson
    • Cassie
    Kathy Marlowe
    • Mamie
    • (as Katharine Marlowe)
    John Larch
    John Larch
    • Clem Wilson
    Allen Nourse
    • Jeb Bassett
    James Edwards
    James Edwards
    • Zeke Ward
    Helen Martin
    Helen Martin
    • Helen Ward
    Otto Hulett
    Otto Hulett
    • Hugh Bentley
    George Mitchell
    George Mitchell
    • Hugh Britton
    Ma Beachie
    • Ma Beachie
    James E. Seymour
    • James E. Seymour
    Clete Roberts
    Clete Roberts
    • Clete Roberts
    • Regie
      • Phil Karlson
    • Drehbuch
      • Crane Wilbur
      • Daniel Mainwaring
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen60

    7,23.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8planktonrules

    Considering its modest budget, it's exceptional.

    Before the actual film begins, there is a 13-minute newsreel-style preface hosted by Clete Roberts in which he interviews the actual participants. Interestingly, this was done while the criminal cases discussed in the film were actually still being prosecuted.

    This film is a film noir-like film that dramatizes the actual story about the town of Phenix, Alabama--a city run by gamblers and organized crime. It seems that in the 1940s and 50s, all kinds of vice was ignored by cops and city officials who were paid to look the other way. As a result, the soldiers in nearby Fort Benning were routinely cheated and had little, if any recourse. Eventually when local citizens tried to stand up for law and order, the mob resorted to threats and even murder to hold on to their power.

    Unlike the typical film of the day, the scenes are quite brutal and violent. The only sour note is the scene of the child being tossed onto the lawn--it's obviously a dummy. There is also a lot of brutal and frank language--some of which might offend you, though it does lend the film an authentic sound. And, despite having mostly smaller caliber actors, they generally did very well. An odd note was having Richard Kiley of all people playing a tough action hero--he just wasn't the sort of guy you'd expect to see acting with his fists. Overall, this is an excellent low-budget film--well worth seeing.

    The only question I have about all this is how much is true and how much was changed for the film? According to IMDb the Attorney General was not quite the saint you see in the film, but what about the other facts? I'd sure like to know more.
    dougdoepke

    B-Movie Gem

    Sometimes rush jobs really work out, like Phenix City Story. Consider that the movie was scripted, shot, and processed in less than a year after the triggering event of Patterson's murder. Credit the producers or someone for coming up with a first-rate cast, a marvelous director, and a big enough budget for location filming in the actual Phenix City. The result is the best of the "city expose" movies so popular at the time.

    There's a rawness to the violence here that's more convincing than usual, in part because of director Karlson's "feel" for the material and also because it appears to grow organically out of the seedy surroundings of honky-tonks and carousing soldiers on leave from Fort Benning. Credit too the fine, underrated Edward Andrews for blending oily charm with ruthless violence, just the qualities needed to run an operation of that sort. Kiley too delivers in spades, his rage unusually intense and realistic. The only questionable note is Katherine Grant's Ellie, seemingly too sweet and naïve for a dealer in a crooked set-up.

    Getting Karlson was a real coup. He was just hitting his stride as a top crime drama director during this period. His staging of the little girl's murder is a real grabber, along with the parking lot beating. In fact, the movie has an unusually pervasive atmosphere of unrestrained evil. Credit should also go to screenwriter Dan Mainwaring for a good tight script and some timely notes on the downside of vigilantism. Apparently, the lengthy prologue was added to ease censorship concerns, and, aside from historical value, can easily be skipped.

    Anyway, the film's a must-see for B-movie fans, a happy coming together of a number of underrated Hollywood talents.
    8bkoganbing

    Not Even With Chicago And Al Capone

    I'm surprised that more people are not aware of this story which climaxed with no less than the murder of the Democratic nominee for Attorney General of Alabama at the time when said nomination was tantamount to election. That the election of Albert Patterson scared the local criminal syndicate into that kind of move is almost unprecedented. The only other example I can think of something like this occurring was in the early years of the last century when Special Prosecutor Francis J. Heney was shot and wounded while he was investigated the corrupt city machine in San Francisco.

    After a brief documentary introduction by CBS news reporter Clete Roberts of actual Phenix City residents, the story begins with the Pattersons, father John McIntire and son Richard Kiley getting reluctantly involved in the fight to clean up their town which is notorious for being a wide open cesspool of vice and corruption. It's pointed out that Phenix City is across from Columbus, Georgia and thirty minutes from Fort Benning. A certain amount of vice and corruption will inevitably settle there in towns that cater to the military and the pleasures the service people will seek off duty.

    But Phenix City has gotten way out of hand and it's become a state embarrassment to the people of Alabama. Which is why John McIntire wins that primary leading the way to the unheard of events that followed. Let's just say that what happens here was contemplated, but never done in Chicago during the days of Al Capone.

    The cast also includes Kathryn Grant as a young woman working as an informer in one of the clubs, Lenka Patterson as Kiley's loyal, but concerned wife, Edward Andrews and John Larch as brains and muscle behind the syndicate. It also includes James Edwards and Helen Martin whose child is killed when Edwards helps Kiley. With I might add the appropriate feeling one might have for a small black girl in Alabama of the Fifties.

    After the action of this film John Patterson took his dad's place as Attorney General and did put an end to the corruption of Phenix City. In 1958 he ran for Governor and won, but contrary to what you might think ran on a strict segregationist platform. His main primary opponent taking the more moderate racial position was George C. Wallace. That never happened again, Wallace saw to that.

    And Patterson is still alive and in 2008 was a supporter of Barack Obama for president. Truth can really be stranger than fiction.

    The Phenix City Story is a hard hitting, pulling no punches documentary style of a family's fight against corruption. Try to see it when next broadcast.
    8Kirasjeri

    A Rough, Tough Crime Movie

    After World War II the ungoing crime in Phenix City, Alabama, encouraged by the money from an Army base just across the river in Georgia, got even worse. Gambling, prostitution, loan sharking, and the like helped an organized crime apparatus in the city. Soon it was too bad and violent to even tolerate anymore. This movie is based on the real story of that fight.

    By the standards of the 1950's it was shockingly explicit. Although low-budget, that same small budget helped with the realism requiring location shooting. A very gritty film. Richard Kiley was marvelous as always, and John McIntire stolid.

    Why this good movie isn't on video is a real puzzle!
    9evanston_dad

    A Very Good Movie, But Not Exactly Enjoyable

    "The Phenix City Story" is a brutal, hard-hitting docudrama about what was once dubbed the "wickedest town in America." The film documents the events that led up to the murder by the Phenix City crime syndicate of Albert Patterson, an Alabama attorney who made a bid for the state attorney general's office as a way to clean up the vice and corruption plaguing his hometown. His son, John Patterson, picked up his father's mantle after his death and won the post, making clean up of Phenix City a primary item on his agenda.

    Director Phil Karlson created a film that has the ability to shock even today. The grimness is so relentless that the film is actually difficult to watch. We see the crime syndicate beat and kill in order to get what they want -- the beatings and killings include women and children, and one scene in particular, revolving around the death of a little black girl, is especially disturbing. It's not exactly an enjoyable film, because there's very little payoff at the end to reward the viewer for sitting through the infuriating events leading up to it, but it's a well made film, full of an intense and angry energy.

    A 15-minute prologue includes a series of interviews with the actual inhabitants of Phenix City, some of who are then portrayed by actors in the fictional portion of the film. It lends the film a quality of urgency that carries over into the narrative, so that we feel like we're watching a documentary the entire time, a feeling that's helped by Karlson's choice to film on actual locations.

    I'm glad I saw this movie, but it's one of those films that fills you with a sense of righteous indignation and then makes you feel helpless because you can't do anything about it.

    Grade: A

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    Kriminalität

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      In the film, John Patterson (Richard Kiley) is depicted as supportive of African-American Zeke Ward (James Edwards) and his family. In real life, following his term as Alabama attorney general (1954-58), Patterson ran for governor in 1958 in an openly racist campaign and won. One of his opponents, George Wallace, had run as a racial moderate and told his friends after the election, "John Patterson out-niggered me, and I'm never gonna be out-niggered again." Four years later, in 1962, Wallace won the governorship of Alabama as an avowed segregationist.
    • Patzer
      A moving shadow of the boom microphone can be seen on the wall above the promotion poster after the fight in the alley scene.
    • Zitate

      Albert L. Patterson: Rhett, I'm not stickin' my neck out. Why should I? Phenix City has been what it is for 80, 90 years. Who am I to try to reform it?

    • Alternative Versionen
      The initial release version ran 87 minutes, but soon after, a 13-minute "newsreel" preface was added and an epilogue, read by Richard Kiley. The real John Patterson used this film as campaign too when he ran for Governor of Alabama (beating the young George Wallace). Patterson filmed the same epilogue as Kiley, and Patterson's version was used when the film played in Alabama.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Moviedrome: The Phenix City Story (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      Phenix City Blues
      Music and Lyrics by Harold Spina

      Sung by Meg Myles

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1. Juni 1956 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Phenix City Story
    • Drehorte
      • Phenix City, Alabama, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Bischoff-Diamond Corporation
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 40 Min.(100 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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