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IMDbPro

Investigation criminelle

Original title: Vice Squad
  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Edward G. Robinson, Paulette Goddard, K.T. Stevens, and Adam Williams in Investigation criminelle (1953)
Film NoirCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

A tough captain investigates a cop shooting and stumbles upon a bank robbery plot. He's not afraid to bend rules to get results, using questionable tactics on witnesses and informants while ... Read allA tough captain investigates a cop shooting and stumbles upon a bank robbery plot. He's not afraid to bend rules to get results, using questionable tactics on witnesses and informants while balancing routine police work with major cases.A tough captain investigates a cop shooting and stumbles upon a bank robbery plot. He's not afraid to bend rules to get results, using questionable tactics on witnesses and informants while balancing routine police work with major cases.

  • Director
    • Arnold Laven
  • Writers
    • Lawrence Roman
    • Leslie T. White
  • Stars
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Paulette Goddard
    • K.T. Stevens
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arnold Laven
    • Writers
      • Lawrence Roman
      • Leslie T. White
    • Stars
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Paulette Goddard
      • K.T. Stevens
    • 37User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos78

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • Capt. 'Barnie' Barnaby
    Paulette Goddard
    Paulette Goddard
    • Mona Ross
    K.T. Stevens
    K.T. Stevens
    • Ginny
    Porter Hall
    Porter Hall
    • Jack Hartrampf
    Adam Williams
    Adam Williams
    • Marty Kusalich
    Edward Binns
    Edward Binns
    • Al Barkis
    Barry Kelley
    Barry Kelley
    • Dwight Foreman
    Jay Adler
    Jay Adler
    • Frankie Pierce
    Mary Ellen Kay
    Mary Ellen Kay
    • Carol Lawson
    Joan Vohs
    Joan Vohs
    • Vickie Webb
    Lee Van Cleef
    Lee Van Cleef
    • Pete Monte
    Harlan Warde
    Harlan Warde
    • Det. Lacey
    Dan Riss
    Dan Riss
    • Lt. Bob Imlay
    Lewis Martin
    Lewis Martin
    • Police Lt. Ed Chisolm
    Murray Alper
    Murray Alper
    • Cop
    • (uncredited)
    William Boyett
    William Boyett
    • Officer Kellogg
    • (uncredited)
    Leonard Bremen
    Leonard Bremen
    • Fred
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Bryar
    Paul Bryar
    • Lt. Cade
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Arnold Laven
    • Writers
      • Lawrence Roman
      • Leslie T. White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.71.1K
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    Featured reviews

    basketballpete

    movie kept my interest throughout.

    Excellent cast. Paulette Goddard, basic minor role but still has the oomph. E.G. Robinson never ceases to amaze me, he is always the main force in all the movies he is in, I never tire of seeing him on film. The film did a very good job of developing the day to day business of a major city police station without making the police to appear as super human beings.
    9theowinthrop

    Compare this one to John Ford's "Gideon's Day"

    This is one of those excellent programmers that studios used to churn out as fillers (second or third features) when a day at the movies was really a day at the movies. Not 90 minutes to two and a half hours, but five hours, followed by a late dinner with your girl friend, boy friend, spouse, or kids. Robinson knocked this film (and several other excellent ones) he did in the early 1950s because his days of movie stardom seemed over (due to blacklisting, as well as a messy divorce). It was a bitter time, and his memories were colored by that bitterness. Yet in this period he did films with Paulette Goddard, Ginger Rogers, Alan Ladd, John Forsythe, and Barbara Stanwyck (the last a western). He even did a second film with his old film co-star (and nemesis) George Raft. Not bad for a barren period. Considering the number of films he did appear in, and comparing his situation to that of ... John Garfield, Robinson did not do too badly.

    This film was made shortly after "Detective Story" with Kirk Douglas, William Bendix, and George Macready. While that was a good film too, it was based on a successful stage play. This is based on a script from Hollywood originally. But it is one of those "day in the work life of a police officer". Robinson is shown trying to find the two goons (Edward Binns and Lee Van Cleef) who killed one of his men in a robbery. He is also handling problems with a fake-Italian fortune hunter, a scared little man (Percy Helton), and even a television news spot he has to give. He handles everything with considerable professionalism and aplomb.

    "Detective Story" may have initiated this period of films like this, but in actuality "Detective Story" centered on the emotional problems of "good" cop Kirk Douglas, and how he resolves them by sacrificing himself to catch an armed criminal (Joseph Wiseman). A better film to compare it with is "Gideon's Day", an odd film made a few years later by John Ford. Unlike most of Ford's films it was shot in England, and starred Jack Hawkins. The "Gideon" novels were popular detective stories at the time, and "Gideon's Day" dealt with Chief Inspector Gideon tracking down the thieves who fatally injured a policeman who tried to stop them. Ford's film dealt with other incidents in the officer's day, including meeting a new constable who is something of a stumble-bum, who ends up being re-introduced to him as his daughter's new boy friend. Although minor John Ford, it has some good moments (such as Hawkins talking to the dying police officer in the hospital, which is shown from the point of view of the officer going in and out of consciousness). Except that it takes place in London, not L.A., it is a match for "Vice Squad".

    But somehow "Vice Squad" works better. Except for the comedy about Gideon's daughter and her new boy-friend, most of "Gideon's Day" is definitely set in England, and yet Ford can't get his Irish-Americanism totally out of himself. At one point an angry Gideon has to restrain himself from taking a poke at an arrested perpetrator. That would not have been normal in England, where that type of reaction is usually not met with. It would have happened in the 1950s (or even the 2000s) in any American city, but that seems to be expected.

    "Vice Squad" has some good performances holding it up. Binns and Van Cleef do their normally professional jobs as the killers. Percy Helton plays a timid rabbit of a man, who has seen Robinson before (the scene humanizes both men, for Robinson knows Helton's fears are based on psychological problems and has been trying to get him to see a doctor). Porter Hall plays possibly the funniest schlemiel type he ever had the luck to play, as a man who was out on a private toot but is paying for it again and again because he was at the scene of the crime, so he is possibly a witness. Ironically Hall never saw anything, but Robinson still manages to use him effectively against somebody who can unlock the mystery. Even Hall finally realizes that it's to his advantage not to deny anything, but to play along with Robinson's hunch. The two did well together in "Double Indemnity", and it pleasant to see they still well together here. Paulette Goddard's performance is smaller than one would have wanted, but she makes the most of the role of the head of the "escort" services. If the rule twisting here seems out of date, please remember this is from 1953. The Warren Court had not started changing the open door policy for police investigations yet.
    dougdoepke

    Thick-Ear at its Most Watchable

    A cop-killer main plot is woven into a typical day in a police captain's LA precinct.

    I really like seeing Barry Kelley's shyster lawyer get the run-around, getting all huffy and dyspeptic while the cops squeeze his client (Hall). Kelley was so good at smug, high- powered lawyer types that it's fun seeing him flustered for a change. The movie's almost a rogue's gallery of shady characters from the 50's, including that great little gnome Percy Helton whose deluded character apparently has "tv images" following him around! I'm just sorry we don't see more of the coquettish Goddard and her "escort" service (now what was that phone number again?).

    Nothing exceptional here, just a really well-paced look at a police precinct in action. So look quickly because the characters-- excepting Robinson's police captain-- move in and out briskly, as do the many LA-area locations, circa 1953. At the same time, many of the cameo characters are well- etched. Note, for example, how the mortuary's secretary tries to pull a "bait and switch" on a customer, using an advertised $650 service as bait and then switching to a much more expensive one. That's the sort of incidental touch that really adds color, especially to a B- movie like this.

    Speaking of touches, note the questionable tactics the cops use in chasing down the killers. Getting wimpy undertaker Hall to lie about his eye-witness identification is perhaps the most legally questionable, but not the only one. There's a clear effort at portraying police methods more realistically than usual, especially for the politically chilled 1950's. Anyway, in my little book, this is Hollywood thick ear at its slickest and most watchable.
    ChanRobt

    Great period piece. Only one star, lots of characters.

    If you're old enough to remember L.A. in the early fifties, this is particularly fun. Lot's of location stuff, downtown, Long Beach or San Pedro. And the bank robbery takes place in Beverly Hills on Camden or Roxbury Drive, just below Little Santa Monica Blvd. Edgar G. Robinson is great as always. It's a cousin to Noir, lots of great faces and character acting. They couldn't afford a lot of sets, or any star beyond E.G.R., which is part of the charm of the movie. And if you like Detroit when it still had character, you'll love the great early fifties cars.
    7bkoganbing

    The Cop And The Madam

    Vice Squad takes a documentary style approach to a single day in a police captain's life and what he might encounter.

    Of course the murder of a police officer doesn't ever qualify as an ordinary day, but even on those days when an entire force is mobilized looking for a cop killer, still more mundane matters intervene.

    Edward G. Robinson was in his B film period which is roughly between All My Sons and The Ten Commandments. Still Robinson always brought a certain class to the films he was doing and Vice Squad is no exception.

    Second billed in the cast is Paulette Goddard who is a madam at a bordello. She was on a blacklist of sorts herself at the time, not for politics, but because she had antagonized the powerful Cecil B. DeMille during the shooting of The Unconquered. Her career was winding down, but she would be marrying Erich Maria Remarque and be leaving the screen shortly for Switzerland.

    Goddard and Robinson have a nice bond between them. It's obvious he lets her operate because she can be most valuable as a snitch in a pinch. In fact she does come through with some information that starts the case being cracked.

    Funny though, ten years earlier Robinson and Goddard as co-stars would have commanded an A list budget, even five years earlier. Hollywood could be very fickle at times.

    Still for a B police drama, Vice Squad has an impressive cast list of quality players. Best in the film is Porter Hall, a two timing funeral director who Robinson knows saw something, but won't crack because he was spending a night with his girlfriend instead of being out of town as he told his wife. How they manage to keep him 'in the system' so to speak is really quite ingenious much to the exasperation of his lawyer, Barry Kelley who runs a close second to Hall.

    Mixed in with the hunt for a cop killer are more routine matters like exposing a phony Italian count, dealing with Percy Helton's imaginary crimes and a TV interview for publicity's sake. All in the life of a Vice Squad captain.

    Fans of Edward G. Robinson and Paulette Goddard will like what they see and Vice Squad is a nice tightly scripted and edited police drama.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First film produced by the newly formed Sequoia Productions.
    • Goofs
      When Mona is in Barnaby's office smoking a cigarette, the orientation of how she positions the hand holding it changes from cut to cut.
    • Quotes

      [Two people can be seen in an apartment. One of them is a man named Jack Hartrampf. The other is a woman named Vickie Webb. As some music plays, Vickie looks outside the door for a few seconds. After that, she closes the door starts to approach Jack]

      Vickie Webb: All clear.

      Jack Hartrampf: Are you sure?

      Vickie Webb: I'm sure, I didn't see nobody.

      Jack Hartrampf: I'd better go now, Vickie.

      Vickie Webb: Will you call me?

      Jack Hartrampf: First chance I can.

      [the two of them share a quick embrace before Jack heads to the door. He opens it, and after looking around for a few seconds, closes the door and begins to descend the stairs]

    • Connections
      Remade as Lux Video Theatre: Vice Squad (1957)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 23, 1953 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "classictbone" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Full Moon Matinee" YouTube Channel
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Vice Squad
    • Filming locations
      • N Bedford Drive & S Santa Monica Blvd Beverly Hills, California, USA(Al Barkis smoking under the street clock)
    • Production companies
      • Gramercy Pictures (II)
      • Sequoia Pictures
      • Sol Lesser Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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