Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe bosses of the prostitution racket have one of their prostitutes go to New York City to entrap a police officer and get him thrown off the force. She does as she is told but then the gang... Tout lireThe bosses of the prostitution racket have one of their prostitutes go to New York City to entrap a police officer and get him thrown off the force. She does as she is told but then the gangsters make a mistake.The bosses of the prostitution racket have one of their prostitutes go to New York City to entrap a police officer and get him thrown off the force. She does as she is told but then the gangsters make a mistake.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Muggsy
- (as Shep Sanders)
- Marilyn
- (non crédité)
- Drucker
- (non crédité)
- Internal Affairs Hearing Officer
- (non crédité)
- Mushy - the Masseur
- (non crédité)
- Narrator
- (non crédité)
- Internal Affairs Hearing Officer
- (non crédité)
- Malone's Receptionist
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
****POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT****
The film runs a scant 71 minutes and cuts corners from the onset. Two vice cops a known low level mobster attempting to transport a would be model-call girl into town at a bus station. Since she's over 21 and stacked (Juli Reding as Gertie) it's assumed she's coming to town to become a working girl. What happens to her 'transporter' doesn't fit the accusation and it's only there to expose one of the vice cops as being a bad cop. The good cop takes Gertie to the ticket window to give her a bus ride out of town.
Good cop Sgt. Whitey Brandon (an OK Richard Coogan) is out to bust mob boss' Vince Malone's (Brad Dexter) model-call girl racket. The alluring Carol Hudson (Mamie Van Doren) is recruited from Detroit to entrap the vice cop. He poses as a photog; she hired as a 'date' and busted...but not before she struts her stuff in a white bathing suit.
Carol turns the tables on Brandon and charges him with entrapment and he's bounced from the force. Brandon then unbelievably goes into business himself to break Malone. One of Malone's thugs Phil Evans (Barry Atwater) lusts for Carol and when she rebuffs him repeatedly, goes after her younger, naive sister Louise (Carol Nugent).
After Phil attacks Louise, Carol decides to help Brandon bring down the racket because Malone (now her boyfriend) takes the mob's business first approach to little sister's attack.
I didn't know bad guys and cops still used tommy guns in 1960. Movie lacks any real seediness, looks like a bunch of air brushed gals right out of the men's mags of the day, doing a little fun modeling on the side for some randy clients. No hint of abuse, no booze, or drugs. Only hint of realism is innocent Louise being attacked by the creepy Phil.
Of course, the bad mob boss loses, Carol is exonerated since she helped and good cop Brandon she's both Carol and little sister Louise happily off as we reach the end. Only Mamie, clad mostly in form fitting white makes this one watchable.
A sensational topic, some steamy jazz, and the gritty big city. Could be good, I think. And it starts with a bang and a twist.
But it does not keep its high level of surprise and suspense, and it never quite forms a convincing plot The center of it is a vice squad, which is a police unit that investigates what are moral crimes like prostitution and, in the old days, things like homosexuality. The units are much revised (luckily) from the days in the mid-Twentieth Century when they would do raids on gay bars and suspicious clubs with back rooms, you get the idea.
I watched this very B-movie look at a vice squad in an unnamed city (let's say it's Cleveland) partly for the photographer, Stanley Cortez, who has some classics to his credit, yet even the photography is routine. The actors, and the acting, isn't bad, and they generally are fitting for the plot, which does keep interesting if a bit stiff all along.
It starts with a well used omniscient voice-over that makes it a pseudo-documentary. And the first part of the movie is a straight up story of a cop going after prostitution in town. And then things go wrong. And then, in a fun shift, the prostitute becomes a main character and her sweet little sister comes to town. This gives things another dimension, and if not exactly any more convincing, it's a welcome layer.
Eventually the tables turn again, and we see law enforcement do a clever job breaking up a syndicate. I don't think this makes for great watching--and for 1960 it feels very old, as if the director hasn't noticed the times both in the movies and in television have changed.
** (out of 4)
Crime boss Vince Malone (Brad Dexter) deals in various illegal activities but prostitution is his number one money maker. The only problem is vice squad member Whitey Brandon (Richard Coogan) who will stop at nothing to bring him down. Malone gets the idea of sending in a beautiful woman named Carol (Mamie Van Doren) to get Brandon kicked off the force but once off the force he finds more ways to get to the underground. VICE RAID is like many crime pictures from this era as it features the "Dragnet" type narration and a story that doesn't throw too many twists. In fact, the entire story pretty much plays out just like you'd expect it to and the lack of any real drama or tension keeps it from being much better than it could have been. The best thing about the picture is that it contains some rather frank dialogue involving teenage girls being abused by these smut magazines and the lowdown of prostitution is also talked about rather freely. The performances are another plus with Coogan doing a nice job in the role of the vice squad leader who finds himself on the wrong side of the law. I thought Coogan was quite believable in the part and made for a good heavy. Dexter was also quite good as the bad guy and we also get nice work from Barry Atwater and Frank Gerstle. This here is probably the best I've seen Van Doren, which might not be saying too much but I thought she handled her own quite well. Carol Nugent is rather memorable in the role of the sister. The biggest problem is certainly the screenplay but director Edward L. Cahn never adds any energy or life to the picture. In the end, VICE RAID is a decent crime picture but there's certainly nothing about it that makes it a must see.
It is a very Tame and Unremarkable Movie that Treats its Subject matter with Docu-Style Blandness and Never Opens up to Allow any Real Taste of the Lurid Backdrop that it Shamelessly Exploits. There is Nary a Scantily Clad Female Form to be had.
Dull and Barely Interesting it is one of those Low-Budget, Trash Flicks that can't even be Faithful to its Picturesque Premise.
It contains a Scene or two that Almost Approaches its Come-On with some Sharp Violence, but for the Most Part it is only Watchable for a Good Try at Playing it Somewhat Straight for Mamie, but not much else.
She does Manage to Don a Bathing Suit and a Trademark Shiny Dress.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe $25.00 per hour modeling fee charged in this 1959 movie would be the same as $241.18 per hour in 2022 dollars.
- GaffesMamie accepts the mob boss's business and pleasure offer and is set up in a fancy apartment. The bedroom in the love nest ridiculously has two twin beds.
- Citations
Vince Malone: I've got a proposition for you.
Carol Hudson: I've been propositioned before.
Vince Malone: Not like this on. You, uh, like money, don't you?
Carol Hudson: If I'd wanted glory I'd have joined the WACS.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Sex Kitten Confidential (2018)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Vice Raid?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 11 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1