अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंWhen his partner is killed, NYC detective Frank Hovannes and his organized-crime squad go against the mob, despite strong objections from his superiors and the legal-departmental restriction... सभी पढ़ेंWhen his partner is killed, NYC detective Frank Hovannes and his organized-crime squad go against the mob, despite strong objections from his superiors and the legal-departmental restrictions that hinder him.When his partner is killed, NYC detective Frank Hovannes and his organized-crime squad go against the mob, despite strong objections from his superiors and the legal-departmental restrictions that hinder him.
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 1 नामांकन
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
As I watched "Contract on Cherry Street", I couldn't help but think this should have been better. After all, it stars Frank Sinatra as well as many well respected supporting acts, such as Martin Balsam, Harry Guardino and Henry Silva. But sadly, the film is very slow paced and should have been much more exciting. Perhaps the actors were just too old to generate a lot of energy! After all, the actors I just mentioned all played cops and, by far, the youngest of them was 48 at the time!
Sinatra plays a Deputy Inspector in New York City that is in charge of a police unit aimed at attacking organized crime. For some reason, they are now centering solely on a car theft ring. However, over time, the unit never seems to be making any progress, so after one of the group is killed, they resort to trying to start a gang war. How? By assassinating some of the gang leaders in the hope that the gang will start distrusting each other and then start killing each other. Two wild cards in all this are two psychopathic Greek killers and a psychopathic cop.
The pacing of this film is, at times, glacial. It could easily have been done in 90=120 minutes but clocks in at over 150 minutes. There also is a huge chunk in the middle of the film where Sinatra disappears for at least 20 minutes....concentrating on other characters instead...which is pretty odd since he is the star. Because of this, you have a decent story but it's just bogged down by the pacing. It simply should have been better.
Sinatra plays a Deputy Inspector in New York City that is in charge of a police unit aimed at attacking organized crime. For some reason, they are now centering solely on a car theft ring. However, over time, the unit never seems to be making any progress, so after one of the group is killed, they resort to trying to start a gang war. How? By assassinating some of the gang leaders in the hope that the gang will start distrusting each other and then start killing each other. Two wild cards in all this are two psychopathic Greek killers and a psychopathic cop.
The pacing of this film is, at times, glacial. It could easily have been done in 90=120 minutes but clocks in at over 150 minutes. There also is a huge chunk in the middle of the film where Sinatra disappears for at least 20 minutes....concentrating on other characters instead...which is pretty odd since he is the star. Because of this, you have a decent story but it's just bogged down by the pacing. It simply should have been better.
This film essentially begins with two rival mob families led by "Baruch Waldman" (Martin Gabel) and "Eddie Manzaro" (Marco St. John) in contention over the lucrative automobile theft business in New York City. At first the detective in charge of this investigation, "Deputy Inspector Frank Hovannes" (Frank Sinatra) insists that his small section abides by the rules and use standard police tactics. This changes, however, when his good friend and colleague "Captain Ernie Weinberg" (Martin Balsam) is killed in the line of duty while on a raid on one of the automobile body shops operated by one of the men belonging to Manzaro family-and things spiral out-of-control after that. Now rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was a solid crime-drama for the most part but it suffered somewhat by some rather slow scenes along with a longer than normal running time (145 minutes). Likewise, although there were several decent actors involved, none of them really stood out in my opinion either. In any case, those looking for a basic 70's crime-drama of this sort might find this film to their liking and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
I worked for Columbia Pictures at the time and it was exciting to see Frank Sinatra starring in this TV made for movie. He made a visit to the Home Office and created quite a stir. I have to say when the movie premiered on television it fell short. It wasn't a bad storyline and actually was entertaining but Sinatra was too old for the part and given his age and short stature he wasn't believable as a tough guy detective. Even his much younger wife was not believable. He was past his prime as well as some of the other actors. It was almost like Barney Miller light. It did show a young and up and coming actor Michael Nori and a good performance by Steve Inwood. But overall the stellar cast of Martin Balsam, Henry Silver and Harry Guardian could not save this movie. The ending comes to one big thud you find yourself asking is this it?? Despite the disappointments it is still exciting to see Frank Sinatra at the age of 62 performing.
Talk about ego! In this movie, 5'8" 62-year old Frank Sinatra knocks around mob thugs and sends them home crying. Which for a film aiming for a realistic gritty tone, makes it hard to take seriously. Sinatra forms a special cop team to crack down on car thefts in New York City; the team is basically Michael Nouri as the idealistic kid, Henry Silva as the voice of reason (not something Silva was known for playing) and Harry Guardino as a vengeance crazed cop. Somehow, the dedicated team causes a gang war to erupt among the mob families and for a 1970's TV movie, there is a lot more violence than I would expect. The movie gets more and more out of control until Sinatra's mad dash to save the city at the end. Sinatra breaks so many rules, it is really hard to see how he would be able to stay out of jail, much less remain on the job. But hey, this is Sinatra's world and he makes the rules.
In the 1970s, the TV networks put a lot of money into creating their own collection of original films. The rationale was that they were about as cheap as a series pilot (indeed some, like "Marcus Nelson Murders" did become exactly that -- for "Kojak"; "The Night Stalker/Strangler" for the Kolchak series), and did not entail open-ended commitments like a series would.
This flick is certainly at the high-end of these (the low-end was things like "The Hard Ride" - - motorcycle-gang members with machine guns in Vietnam, in a low budget, low brow version of "Missing in Action"; the immortal "Killdozer"). Frank Sinatra shows his acting chops again (nearly for the last time, from here on there was only one episode of Magnum PI to be proud of), surrounded by the usual suspects of series TV and made-for-TV-movies (notably Harry Guardino, good as always.) The soundtrack is certainly movie-quality (as were most of this era's TV-movies.)
The movie suffers from having an enforced length -- 145 minutes to fill a 3-hour timeslot -- and thus there is painfully unnecessary padding of scenes and dialog, and long traveling shots with the obligatory shoe-leather-sound-effects. But there's a cracking good 90-100 minute movie in here.
This flick is certainly at the high-end of these (the low-end was things like "The Hard Ride" - - motorcycle-gang members with machine guns in Vietnam, in a low budget, low brow version of "Missing in Action"; the immortal "Killdozer"). Frank Sinatra shows his acting chops again (nearly for the last time, from here on there was only one episode of Magnum PI to be proud of), surrounded by the usual suspects of series TV and made-for-TV-movies (notably Harry Guardino, good as always.) The soundtrack is certainly movie-quality (as were most of this era's TV-movies.)
The movie suffers from having an enforced length -- 145 minutes to fill a 3-hour timeslot -- and thus there is painfully unnecessary padding of scenes and dialog, and long traveling shots with the obligatory shoe-leather-sound-effects. But there's a cracking good 90-100 minute movie in here.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाWas made by Sinatra because of his late mother's fondness for the novel, Contract on Cherry Street.
- कनेक्शनReferenced in Laugh-In: एपिसोड #1.3 (1977)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Das Cherry-Street-Fiasko
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- हैकनसैक, न्यू जर्सी, संयुक्त राज्य अमेरिका(the old Korvettes on Rte 4)
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें
टॉप गैप
By what name was Contract on Cherry Street (1977) officially released in India in English?
जवाब