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DVD Search:
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DVD The Street with No Name:

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  • Actor(s): Mark Stevens - Richard Widmark 
  • Director(s): William Keighley 
  • Editor: Fox Home Entertainme
  • Category: Feature Film-drama
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    List Price: $14.98
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  • DVD The Street with No Name


    "What's the use of having a war if you don't learn from it?" The speaker is Alec Stiles (Richard Widmark), a menthol-sniffing asthmatic in a snap-brim hat who's nailed down the organized-crime franchise for a burg named Center City, and who runs it "scientifically," using methods he picked up in uniform during WWII. He can even tap into the databanks of the FBI. Which, by coincidence, is gearing up to bring his mini-crime wave to an end. Street with No Name invites us to sit back and watch both sides deploy their methodologies at each other.

    The semidocumentary crimefighting/spybusting thrillers of the late '40s are fascinating for their blend of institutionalized rectitude (the FBI is totally trustworthy and awesomely competent), authentic locations ("filmed where it happened"), and noir poetics. Once Inspector George Briggs (Lloyd Nolan repeating his House on 92nd Street role) sends agent Gene Cordell (Mark Stevens) to work undercover on Center City's skid row, the movie has settled into an evocative meditation on the underside of Middle American town life c. 1948: the never-empty arcades and diners; a seedy drifters' hotel you can almost smell; cars parked slantwise along a commercial street that retains a memory of countryside; and an upstairs gym--Stiles's place--where even in daytime a surprising number of men congregate in hopes of seeing someone take a beating. And there's one sequence of skulking in a ferry terminal, so beautifully observed by director William Keighley and ace cinematographer Joe MacDonald, you'll wish you could shake their hands. Harry Kleiner's screenplay was reworked seven years later for Samuel Fuller's House of Bamboo. --Richard T. Jameson

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    Review(s): DVD The Street with No Name
    Counter Attack!


    The FBI, determined to crack a gangland case involving two murders, sends undercover agent Mark Stevens to the mean streets. Posing as a lowlife, he is recruited by sinister crime boss Richard Widmark. Stevens soon discovers that Widmark is indeed the man responsible for the killings, but he needs concrete evidence before the FBI can move in. Meanwhile, Widmark has an agent of his own in the ranks of the police, and Stevens' cover may soon be blown.

    The opening minutes might make viewers wonder why this is included in a Noir series: its semi-documentary tone with urgent voice-of-God narrator appear to be setting up a fairly standard police procedural, complete with submissive awe for the saintly and all-powerful FBI. But once Widmark, following up his psychotic debut in Kiss of Death, is on the scene, the film becomes almost pure Noir. Hypochondriac, brutal, sexually ambiguous and brilliant, Widmark's character is the dark heart of the film, and what had been merely interesting before his arrival becomes powerfully suspenseful. The basic premise of the film turns up again in House of Bamboo.

    Historians James Ursini and Alain Silver do their usual sterling work on the commentary, deftly and wittily filling us in on the movie and its contexts. The theatrical trailer is, apart from ads for other Fox releases, the only other extra. The menu is basic.

    A fine film, especially thanks to Widmark. Good commentary too, but the print is a bit of a problem.

    Shilling for the FBI


    This wooden and disappointing film resembles an episode of the old Dragnet show, but not in a good way. Antiquated crime fighting techniques are demonstrated, al la CSI, and the virtues of the FBI (you know, the guys who couldn't figure out the 9/11 attacks were coming) are endlessly touted. Don't be fooled. This is NOT an example of film noir, just a second-rate crime drama filmed in black and white.

    Dynamite Noir


    This flick clicks on all cylinders. This is quintessential film noir. Director William Keighley employs two styles here. For the FBI procedural aspects of the film he employs a "Dragnet" style narrative. When dealing with the underworld element the ominous light and shadow noir approach is used. The marriage of these styles is utilized perfectly here. Richard Widmark adds another memorable character to his rogues gallery as crime boss Alex Stiles. Veterans Lloyd Nolan and John McIntire give good performances as an FBI field director and FBI undercover operative, respectively. Film was remade later as "House of Bamboo". The interesting thing about that film is all the basic elements from this film are present yet it pales in virtually every aspect to the original. "House of Bamboo" fails because it is a film almost bereft of style but see it if you must for comparison purposes.


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