Click on the headline to link
to a Wikipedia entry for the 1950s
film noir The Big Combo.
DVD Review
The Big Combo, starring Cornel
Wilde, Richard Conte, Jean Wallace, Allied Artists, 1955
Let’s say a clean cut, some
would say righteous, detective (played by Cornel Wilde), a public employee
detective working for cheap dough but with some kind of white knight thing
about honest work, honest cop work, and getting rid of crumb bum criminals
fouling up the city streets, not the usual private dick tilting at windmills
for cheap dough and maybe a roll with some femme like Phillip Marlowe, who is
not subject the vagaries of fearing for his pension or loss of revenue from his
cut of the kickbacks that people most film noirs takes on the big city, hell
maybe the Naked City, bad guys, the connected guys, the big combo guys, and
gets much grief for his efforts. Let’s say the bad guys, the big city bad guys
are now led by a guy name Brown (played by Richard Conte), although everybody
knows, everybody who counts knows, that the bad guys, the street bad guys are
not some waspy sounding named guys, but ethnic types, Kellys, Ricos, Slezaks,
and the like, cheap street growing up types who, well, who scratched and clawed
their ways to the top, who have certain habits, certain, well, unfriendly
habits like torture, intimidations, and occasional murder in their resumes to
keep the cops, the other low life, and the average citizen tied- up tied up
bad. Let’s say that good cop and that bad guy wind up in a life and death
struggle to see who, or what, is going to control the Naked City. Let’s say
that a beautiful blonde (played by Jean Wallace), an upscale blonde, tired of well-mannered,
predictable Mayfair swell guys, looked for some unnamed thrills, some bad guy
kicks, although it is not always blondes looking for such thrills before
returning to marry that next door neighbor stockbroker, entered into the
picture and that the cop and the bad guy are both staking claims to this
beauty. Let’s say that this bad guy is really bad, ready to move might and main
to keep his place at the top of the heap, and not afraid to waste half the
known world to keep his little secrets, including those previously mentioned
little tricks that he has perfected. Let’s suppose that that ethereal blonde got
fed-up with bad guys, with guys who aren’t afraid to slap her around a little
just to keep her in line, and cried copper, or wanted to. Let’s suppose that
the source of the bad guy’s secret turned up after some smooth good cop
detective work. And let’s suppose the bad guy’s world kept getting smaller and
smaller, small enough for even him to holler uncle. Then you would have a classic
1950s film noir like The Big Combo complete with suitable noir music, suitable
gritty feel, and superb black and white still shots to remember this one. And
that blonde, a blonde to disturb your dreams, walking back to Main Street, not
alone.
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