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Ville conquise

Original title: City for Conquest
  • 1940
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
James Cagney and Ann Sheridan in Ville conquise (1940)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:07
1 Video
41 Photos
DramaSport

Danny is a content truck driver, but his girl Peggy shows potential as a dancer and hopes he too can show ambition. Danny acquiesces and pursues boxing to please her, but the two begin to sp... Read allDanny is a content truck driver, but his girl Peggy shows potential as a dancer and hopes he too can show ambition. Danny acquiesces and pursues boxing to please her, but the two begin to spend more time working than time together.Danny is a content truck driver, but his girl Peggy shows potential as a dancer and hopes he too can show ambition. Danny acquiesces and pursues boxing to please her, but the two begin to spend more time working than time together.

  • Directors
    • Anatole Litvak
    • Jean Negulesco
  • Writers
    • John Wexley
    • Aben Kandel
  • Stars
    • James Cagney
    • Ann Sheridan
    • Arthur Kennedy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Anatole Litvak
      • Jean Negulesco
    • Writers
      • John Wexley
      • Aben Kandel
    • Stars
      • James Cagney
      • Ann Sheridan
      • Arthur Kennedy
    • 51User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins total

    Videos1

    City for Conquest
    Trailer 3:07
    City for Conquest

    Photos41

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    + 34
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    James Cagney
    James Cagney
    • Danny Kenny
    Ann Sheridan
    Ann Sheridan
    • Peggy Nash
    Arthur Kennedy
    Arthur Kennedy
    • Eddie Kenny
    Donald Crisp
    Donald Crisp
    • Scotty MacPherson
    Frank Craven
    Frank Craven
    • Old Timer
    Frank McHugh
    Frank McHugh
    • 'Mutt'
    George Tobias
    George Tobias
    • 'Pinky'
    Jerome Cowan
    Jerome Cowan
    • 'Dutch'
    Elia Kazan
    Elia Kazan
    • 'Googi'
    Anthony Quinn
    Anthony Quinn
    • Murray Burns
    Lee Patrick
    Lee Patrick
    • Gladys
    Blanche Yurka
    Blanche Yurka
    • Mrs. Nash
    George Lloyd
    George Lloyd
    • 'Goldie'
    Joyce Compton
    Joyce Compton
    • Lilly
    Thurston Hall
    Thurston Hall
    • Max Leonard
    Ben Welden
    Ben Welden
    • Cobb
    John Arledge
    John Arledge
    • Salesman
    Edward Keane
    • Gaul
    • (as Ed Keane)
    • Directors
      • Anatole Litvak
      • Jean Negulesco
    • Writers
      • John Wexley
      • Aben Kandel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    7.22.8K
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    Featured reviews

    10bkoganbing

    The Unconquerable Kenny Brothers

    As working class stiff Danny Kenny who drives a truck for a living, James Cagney created one of his most unforgettable screen heroes and one of my favorite Cagney films in City for Conquest.

    No studio could do a working class film like Warner Brothers and this is one of the best. It does get melodramatic and has large doses of sentimentality with it, but never to extreme.

    For a guy who eventually makes his living as a prizefighter, Danny Kenny is one of the gentlest heroes James Cagney brought to the screen. His greatest pleasures are found in the girl friend he has from the neighborhood, Ann Sheridan, and in listening to the music creations of his brother Ed, played by Arthur Kennedy in his film debut. Kennedy has ambitions to be a serious composer and Sheridan has ambitions herself to get out of the Lower East Side of New York via show business as a dancer. To realize those ambitions she hooks up with a no good dancer/gigolo in Anthony Quinn.

    So Cagney who if he had his way would have been content to spend his life driving a truck, to help Kennedy with his dream and to win Ann Sheridan back, takes up boxing. It all results in some terrible sacrifices he makes for both of them.

    Director Anatole Litvak gave Cagney and Sheridan a fine supporting cast to help carry the story along. Donald Crisp is Cagney's manager, Frank McHugh in his ever familiar role as best friend, and future director Elia Kazan as another pal from the neighborhood who becomes a gangster,

    Kazan exacts some vengeance on Cagney's behalf, but then pays for it himself in a never to be forgotten death scene.

    My suggestion is that when you watch City for Conquest do it alone, because if you do it alone you might more easily give way to tears at Arthur Kennedy's dedication to his symphony to his brother.

    Unless you cry better in a group. Kennedy's performance and this scene in particular insured that man of the long and great career he had.

    But the film is really for James Cagney fans in every generation.
    7AlsExGal

    Rather than a love triangle, a triangle of ambition

    The story begins in the tenements of New York, with two brothers, one an aspiring musician and the other a fighter, who already has a yen for a pretty young neighbor who is an aspiring dancer. Cut to some years later, and the boxer is James Cagney, the musician's Arthur Kennedy, and the young neighbor is Ann Sheridan. All three of them are on the way to making it in their chosen careers, but in doing so, Sheridan's character falls in love with a sleazy ballroom dancer (Anthony Quinn). Cagney makes it big in boxing in order to help fund his brother's music career, before tragedy brings the three back together.

    Cagney is Cagney as ever, but Sheridan seems a little too genteel as his tenement-bred girl - although that's partly the point - and I kept wondering why they didn't pick a dancer for the part. Whenever they need a dance number, they either shoot it from the waist down or cut to a long shot. It's too bad WB didn't have Rita Hayworth under contract - she would have been ideal, and a much better fit than the role she was doing over at Columbia at that time, in Ben Hecht's Angels Over Broadway (1940). Arthur Kennedy as the musical brother doesn't make a huge impression, but it's interesting to see Elia Kazan in a small role.

    It has great camerawork with a great sense of the late 30s. I didn't realize until afterwards that the great James Wong Howe had a hand in this, but it figures. It's one of those films that feels like it fell a little short of its lofty ambitions, but it's so handsome that I hardly cared.
    squelle

    Before Kazan was a big-time director, he played a terrific small-time thug.

    I saw this movie a long time ago (about 1968) and was quite impressed by the story, acting, and filming. Cagney plays a typical role for him--the decent little guy who's out to do big things but gets beaten down by the bad guys. As in "Angels with Dirty Faces" and "Torrid Zone," he teams up well with Ann Sheridan. Ann worked often and well with the movie tough guys of the late 30's and early 40's (e.g. John Garfield, George Raft, et al) but seems to have become rather forgotten over the years. All I remember of the Arthur Kennedy role is him sitting at a piano in a New York apartment composing a symphony, which he ultimately succeeds in doing due to the sacrifices of his on-screen brother played by Cagney. As I recall, the symphony is titled "City for Conquest."

    The ending of the film is exceptionally moving. But for me the best and most memorable sequences were those few brief scenes involving Elia Kazan as Googi Zucco. With his cocky bearing and slick black hair, Kazan plays as good a mob-like thug as anyone I've ever seen.
    7secondtake

    Lots of great night scenes, and a romance with the usual delays, beautifully done.

    City for Conquest (1940)

    Great credentials here, from director Anatole Litvak to photographers (two of them) James Wong Howe and Sol Polito. That's enough for any movie. And music by Max Steiner, and throw in James Cagney, and you get a sense of the rich tapestry of New York that gets better and better as it goes, with even a small (sensational) part by Elia Kazan and Arthur Kennedy's first role.

    Now it's a little stretch to see Cagney as a fighter--he's fit about as much as I am, and has no boxer's physique. But the movie is a hair lightweight in a heartwarming way (this is no Raging Bull, nor even James Garfield, later in the 1940s). But it creates a great milieux, just as the war is going in Europe and the Depression is ending in New York. The streets are abuzz, and love is in the air. There are a lot of 1930s era effects that are quaint--the fast montages of the city, or of dancers--and the plot itself, of a couple destined for each other but buffeted by life's usual distractions, is sweet.

    And it all unfolds with such well-oiled perfection, the same era as Kane and Casablanca, and the same studio system and film stock. Great stuff, well made, and overcoming whatever conventional sentiments that thread through it all. It's even enjoyable without the plot, the boatride at night (think Weegee), the street scenes with kids everywhere (think Helen Levitt). It's a surprisingly honest, vivid movie.
    8blanche-2

    The power and the curse of dreams

    James Cagney, Arthur Kennedy and Ann Sheridan all live in the "City for Conquest" - New York, that is - in this 1940 film directed by Anatole Litvak and also starring Frank McHugh, Donald Crisp, Anthony Quinn and - yes, Elia Kazan.

    Cagney and Kennedy are the Kenny Brothers, Danny and Eddie. Danny is a truck driver in love with Peg, his childhood sweetheart. He has two dreams - Peg and his brother's composing career. When he's discovered by a fight manager (Crisp), Danny becomes a fighter for the money.

    The ambitious Peg has her eyes on fame and fortune and pairs up with a brutish but equally ambitious dancer, played with force by Anthony Quinn. Eddie, meanwhile, is discovered not for his magnificent composition "City for Conquest" but for his Broadway musical capabilities.

    When he realizes he's losing Peg, Danny, who is being brought up gradually into the bigger fights, demands to go for a big purse that will give him the championship - and, he thinks, Peg.

    Thanks to a crooked mobster, the fight nearly destroys Danny and he has to give up fighting. Down but not out, he insists that Eddie still pursue his dream of a classical career.

    This is a good movie that tugs at the heartstrings, very melodramatic, with excellent acting all around. Cagney is wonderful and sympathetic as a simple, loving man who takes what life gives him; Crisp gives a fine performance as his caring fight manager.

    Ann Sheridan, always an earthier, tougher version of Rita Hayworth, is marvelous as a young woman who, though she loves Danny, can't fight the lure of the glamor and fame offered by her dance partnership.

    Kazan, in a small role as a gangster, is great, though his contributions as a director are far more valuable than what he might have given film history as an actor.

    The standout for me was one of the most brilliant and underrated actors of our time, Arthur Kennedy. Kennedy enjoyed a wonderful career in film and on stage in a variety of roles, but because he wasn't a true leading man and not a Warners "tough guy" like Cagney, Robinson, or Bogart who could graduate into lead roles, he toiled as a supporting actor, earning no less than 5 Oscar nominations.

    Here he is young and good-looking, and his performance is passionate without being maudlin. Surely there wasn't a dry eye in any movie house after the speech he gives about his brother the night his symphony (very much modeled on "Rhapsody in Blue") debuts. Truly a great treasure, and he was discovered by James Cagney, who knew talent when he saw it.

    A heartfelt movie, and you'll need that box of tissues nearby. See it and celebrate the good old days of the rough streets of New York and movies about the common man and dreams coming true.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      James Cagney did not need boxing training for the film since, in his youth he was an amateur boxer - good enough to be runner-up in the New York State lightweight division.
    • Goofs
      When Danny and Mutt run into Googi at the construction site, the Chrysler Building can be seen in the background in shots from both sides of the truck.
    • Quotes

      'Googi': [His dying words after being shot by a hoodlum he thought was unarmed] Ah, gee, never figured on that at all.

    • Alternate versions
      In a part similar to his Stage Manager in Une petite ville sans histoire (1940), Frank Craven appears as "Old Timer", the "host" of "City for Conquest" in a sort of Greek chorus style. Almost all of Craven's footage was eliminated for the 1948 re-release. Totaling six or so minutes of screen time, this cut material was not seen until it was restored in a 2006 DVD release. Older prints not containing this material run approximately 98 minutes; the restored print runs 104 minutes.
    • Connections
      Edited into Head (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Magic Isle Symphony
      (1940) (uncredited)

      Music by Max Steiner

      Played on piano as well as by the Warner Bros. Studio Orchestra

      Played often throughout the picture

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 7, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • City for Conquest
    • Filming locations
      • Williamsburg Bridge, New York City, New York, USA(establishing shots at beginning of film)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $920,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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