Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaGangster Moran gives Joe Murphy several thousand dollars to bet on a horse race, the horse wins and Joe takes off with the money. Moran informs Mike Murphy, Joe's father, that no harm will c... Leggi tuttoGangster Moran gives Joe Murphy several thousand dollars to bet on a horse race, the horse wins and Joe takes off with the money. Moran informs Mike Murphy, Joe's father, that no harm will come to Joe if Mike doesn't interfere with the robbing of stores on his beat. Joe's policem... Leggi tuttoGangster Moran gives Joe Murphy several thousand dollars to bet on a horse race, the horse wins and Joe takes off with the money. Moran informs Mike Murphy, Joe's father, that no harm will come to Joe if Mike doesn't interfere with the robbing of stores on his beat. Joe's policeman brother, Terry Murphy, learns of the plot and sets out to free his father and brother o... Leggi tutto
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Recensioni in evidenza
The acting is pretty good. As Terry, Purcell gets top billing, but it's really Quigley's Joe who gets more camera time and chance to emote. But then it's the old Murphy folks, actors Sheridan and Elliott, who steal the show in subdued fashion. Low-budget Monogram's cost cutting shows up in the many darkened scenes, especially the shortened city street where no cars pass. Nonetheless, it's a decent, if unexceptional, time-passer.
With a runtime that respects your time, this film centers around integrity, tradition, and the pressures of upholding both in a rapidly changing world. The central characters - anchored by a family legacy in blue - are portrayed with sincerity, and the script wastes no time getting to the emotional stakes.
While the production is modest, it carries a surprising emotional weight. The film doesn't rely on action spectacle, but rather on human dilemmas and quiet moments of tension. Its black-and-white visuals, paired with a stirring score, give the film an air of solemn dignity.
It may not be well-known today, but Heroes in Blue holds its own as a respectful, grounded drama. Fans of pre-war police stories and classic studio-era morality tales will find something genuine here.
One episode of Blue Bloods probably costs twice as much as this no frills programmer from Monogram did back in 1939. Frank Sheridan is retired and doing private security work in the warehouse district in Hell's Kitchen and he and Lillian Elliott raised two sons, Dick Purcell who's on the police force and Charles Quigley who works for a trucking company headed by Edward Keane.
But the company is a blind for a man with his fingers in a lot of rackets. One of them is fixing horse races and when Quigley fails to get down a bet for Keane that sets in motion a series of events that leads to tragedy for the Murphys.
This is Monogram from Sam Katzman so don't expect much. But between the bad editing and lack of direction this is not too bad a film coming out of that poverty schlock factory. It's a decent story and even Sheridan's brogue rings true.
Worse has come from Monogram.
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- QuizMonogram Pictures production number 3901.
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- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 1min(61 min)
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- 1.37 : 1