La historia de la infame Purple Gang, una banda de contrabandistas, secuestradores y asesinos en Detroit en la década de 1920.La historia de la infame Purple Gang, una banda de contrabandistas, secuestradores y asesinos en Detroit en la década de 1920.La historia de la infame Purple Gang, una banda de contrabandistas, secuestradores y asesinos en Detroit en la década de 1920.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
Suzanne Ridgway
- Daisy
- (as Suzy Marquette)
Joe Turkel
- Eddie Olsen
- (as Joseph Turkel)
James Roosevelt
- Self in Prologue
- (as Congressman James Roosevelt)
Benjie Bancroft
- Police Officer
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Low budget "exposee" style film paints a somewhat accurate picture of Detroit's Purple Gang from the 20s. Worth seeing for Robert Blake's performance, which transcends the movie.
Cheapo production. This is supposed to be the 1920s, but there is no attempt to use costumes or hair styles of that era. The men all wear 1950s hats. Robert Blake plays tough as the juvenile gang leader. Barry Sullivan walks through his part as the detective as though he wanted to be somewhere else. His wife,of course, wants him to quit. The gang looks like a Central Casting call for B-list juveniles. As clean and nice looking a bunch of hoodlums as can be imagined. If they could dance they would be ready for West Side Story. The sets are unadorned and look like they were assembled in somebody's garage. There is a lot of unconvincing gunplay and actors falling to the floor, but no blood.
This opens with a suit talking to the audience. The Purple Gang operated in Detroit during the late 20's and early 30's. They started out as bootleggers with Canadian liquor and quickly spread to all kinds of other crimes. The story begins with a teen gang called Purple led by William Joseph 'Honeyboy' Willard (Robert Blake). Police Lt. William P. Harley (Barry Sullivan) is assigned to clean it up. The kids take on the established mob and become their muscle. This launches them as the most violent criminals in the city.
I don't like the "Crime Does Not Pay" start. That takes this movie down to a B-short series. I also don't like them using a social worker as the foil. They could have used a lawyer, but they're trying to take down the bleeding heart liberal in a heavy handed way. The most interesting aspect of this is seeing Robert Blake. He's good, but that's about it.
I don't like the "Crime Does Not Pay" start. That takes this movie down to a B-short series. I also don't like them using a social worker as the foil. They could have used a lawyer, but they're trying to take down the bleeding heart liberal in a heavy handed way. The most interesting aspect of this is seeing Robert Blake. He's good, but that's about it.
The Purple Gang was a mob of bootleggers and hijackers with predominantly Jewish members operating in Detroit, Michigan, during the 1920s. They came to be Detroit's dominant criminal gang, but ultimately excessive violence and infighting caused the gang to self-destruct in the 1930s. This Allied Artists production, leveraged by a goodly amount of footage lifted from earlier films, plays fast and loose with what was an interesting history in a production weighted by two excellent leads, Sullivan and Blake, and which contains two or three memorably violent scenes while Blake's screaming claustrophobia offers other choice moments. Ultimately not one of the genre stand outs (for that one needs to seek out such titles as AL CAPONE or the RISE AND FALL OF LEGS DIAMOND etc) it is never the less a entertaining enough time waster even if it ends up feeling rather perfunctory. Sullivan's best gangster film, imho, is the appropriately named THE GANGSTER.
"The Purple Gang" is a film that is enjoyable to watch--much like an episode of "The Untouchables". However, like that television show, it's not much of a history lesson and the actions of the real Purple Gang in Detroit were very, very different than what you see in the film. In fact, you'd hardly recognize much of the gang in this one.
In real life, the Purple Gang was a tough organization in Detroit consisting mostly of Jewish gangsters. The gang was run by several brothers as well. And, the end of the gang was nothing like in the film. Yet, in the film they are run by one guy alone (Robert Blake) and the actors all seem like typical antisocial Gentiles.
So why, despite being mostly wrong, do I score this one a 6? Well, it's exciting and as long as you accept that it's mostly fiction, you'll have a nice time watching the film. It never is dull!
In real life, the Purple Gang was a tough organization in Detroit consisting mostly of Jewish gangsters. The gang was run by several brothers as well. And, the end of the gang was nothing like in the film. Yet, in the film they are run by one guy alone (Robert Blake) and the actors all seem like typical antisocial Gentiles.
So why, despite being mostly wrong, do I score this one a 6? Well, it's exciting and as long as you accept that it's mostly fiction, you'll have a nice time watching the film. It never is dull!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe real Purple Gang was made up of mostly Jewish members. The script of this film gave the members non-Jewish names. It was the dominate criminal organization in Detroit from about 1927 until 1932 when the gang self-destructed - with help from the Italian mob.
- Citas
William Joseph 'Honeyboy' Willard: [instructing some henchmen before setting up a deal] No liquor, no junk and no broads when I'm runnin' the show.
- Créditos curiosos[Prologue] This picture is based on information from official files which revealed the shocking story of the wave of juvenile delinquency which spawned Detroit's Purple Gang. Incredible as it may seem, this youthful rat-pack of terrorists dominated the city's underworld for more than a decade during the prohibition era.
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta