Gunman in the Streets
Gunman in the Streets
NR | 29 May 1952 (USA)
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An American is on the run in the streets and back alleys of France.

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Reviews
Linbeymusol

Wonderful character development!

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Fluentiama

Perfect cast and a good story

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Freaktana

A Major Disappointment

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Beystiman

It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.

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Richard Chatten

Atmospherically shot by the veteran Oscar-winning cameraman Eugen Schüfftan, 'Gunman in the Streets' is the English-language version of a co-production released in France as 'Le Traqué'. The French version is now even more obscure than this, and since it had a different credited director (Borys Lewin, normally an editor) may be substantially different from this one. All those obviously Gallic types speaking English seem a little incongruous and it would be easy to imagine this with subtitles (Dane Clark and Robert Duke were presumably dubbed). Jean-Pierre Melville probably saw 'Le Traqué', and Fernand Gravet's police commissioner, suavely hot on Clark's trail, strongly resembles Paul Meurisse's Commissaire Blot in Le Deuxième Soufflé' (1966).The English-language version bears the name of blacklisted Hollywood veteran Frank Tuttle (before he yielded in 1951 to pressure to name names to the HUAC), which may be why it was never released theatrically in the United States. But it can't have helped that it's so relentlessly sordid, grim and claustrophobic, with a hero unlikeable even by Dane Clark's usual charmless standard.It starts like 'Odd Man Out', with Clark on the run on the streets of Paris with a bullet in his shoulder after shooting his way to freedom. He contacts former girlfriend Simone Signoret, curtly informs her that he needs 300,000 francs pronto to get out of the country, and they hole up in the apartment of a creepy admirer of Signoret's (Michel André) who Clark handles predictably roughly. What Signoret (then in her absolute youthful prime) ever saw in this vicious little runt was beyond me; I guess he must have been dynamite in the sack.

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kapelusznik18

***SPOILERS*** Known to US audiences as "An American Gangster in Paris" the film "Gunman in the Streets" is about this US Army deserter Eddy Roback, Dane Clark, who after escaping from the police in a wild shoot out by his fellow gang members on the way to the Paris Hall of Justice lays low or on the lamb in his girlfriend's Denise Vernon, Simone Signoret, pad. Roback is waiting for the heat, police, to blow over and make his escape to natural, where he isn't wanted, Belgium. This effort on Roback's part becomes somewhat complicated with Denise's new boyfriend American reporter Frank Clinton,Robert Duke, comes on the scene.Things get even more hairy with Robeck tracking down that greasy, with what was at least a full tube of Brillcreme rubbed into his scalp, magazine photographer Max Salva, Michel Andre, who in fact ratted him out to the police when he was at large. Needing quick cash, at least 300,000 francs, to make his escape that money is provided, through a second party, by Frank Clinton who feel he owes it to Roback. Since it was his award winning expose of the fleeing mobster that made him famous.The film has a number of hair raising escapes from the law by Roback but in the end his arrogance and women beating ,in how he mistreats Denise, gets the best of him. There was a horrifying scene where Roback after knocking out Max puts his head on the gas stove and, after closing all the windows in the room, attempted to gas him to death. This may have been one reason that the movie was held from release from the American public for almost 50 years! In it showing an American, hoodlum that he was, acting like a Nazi concentration camp commandant! This some five years after the end of WWII.It's just when Roback reaches the Belgium border that he luck runs out with what looked like a full company of French solders and police waiting for him. With the brutally treated by him Denise by his side Roback makes his last stand and gets blasted to pieces in a hail of pistol rifle and machine-gun fire. As for Clinton he was left out in the cold or the train station with the women he loved , Denise, opting to stay with the crazed and murderous Eddy Roback and end up with the same fate, a slab in the morgue, that he ended up with.

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kc1328

Based on other reviews I was looking forward to seeing this "lost" film. It was disappointing. The plot was simplistic even by B movie standards. The main protagonist Eddy Roback is in no way romanticized, there is not much character development or background or back-story which means he is just a vicious thug. The director built tension well; there were some interesting scenes such as the scene in the dept store where he temporarily abducts a kid for cover, adding sociopath to this thugs character. Dane Clark added little more than brooding and visceral reaction with minimal dialogue, he brought little to this role, definitely not a leading Man. This is a unique film noir in that its set in Paris in English but that's about the only reason to watch this movie.

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LeonLouisRicci

Long Lost Foreign Film-Noir that wasn't available for Viewing in the US until 2001, it finally arrived and was well Received by Critics and Favorably Reviewed by Film-Noir Enthusiasts.It could be called a Cinematographers Movie because it is Literally Drenched in Fog, Shadows, Rain, and Darkness. Almost all of the Movie takes place at Night except the Beginning and the End.Cigarettes dangle from Luscious Lips, smoke and fog swirl as the Title Character is on the Lam after Escaping the Clutches of the Law that is only a Step Behind. Things weave in and out of Dingy Establishments, such as a Bi-Sexual Smut Peddler's claustrophobic Apartment loaded with Girly Photos on the Wall and a Fluffy White Cat who turns out to be a real Friend to this Pathetic Person.The two Leads, Dane Clark and Simone Signoret are Fantastic and the Supporting Players are all just Fine, but it is the Ambiance and the Gritty Tone that makes this a Joy to Watch. Ironically it was the French Film Critics that noticed and Coined the term Film-Noir, and here there Brainchild came Home to Roost. It was Welcomed with this Allied Collaboration and Delivered one of its own, True to Form for the Genre and added a Fine Entry for the Pantheon.

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