Film Review
Adapted from the highly successful 1949 stage play of the same title by
Sidney Kingsley,
Detective Story
is a modern, character-centric crime drama that achieve a rare
intensity and dynamism by virtue of the fact that most of the action
takes place continuously in one set, a busy urban police station.
Although somewhat dated by the shortcomings in its script (which is
occasionally preachy and marred by some jolts of excessive melodrama),
the film represents a compelling tour de force for its director,
William Wyler, and distinguished cast, headed by a remarkable Kirk
Douglas.
Detective Story was nominated
for four Academy Awards (including Best Director and Best Screenplay)
but received none, although it was a critical and commercial success
and was better received by the critics than the original stage play on its first
release. Today, it is easy to snigger at the coy allusions to
abortion and pre-marital sex (which were doubtless the result of some
heavyhanded censorship), but the film was a genuine trail-blazer for
its time, the forerunner of the realistic police procedural dramas that
would come to dominate cinema and television in the following decades.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next William Wyler film:
Roman Holiday (1953)
Film Synopsis
Jim McLeod is a hard-nosed career detective who carries out his duties with
a cold, steely professionalism that might almost be mistaken for zeal.
Jim seldom conceals his loathing for the lowlife he often has to deal with,
but for Karl Schneider, a discredited doctor, his contempt is written all
over his face. Schneider is presently charged with the murder of a
several young women through his illegal activities as a baby broker. Jim
doesn't yet know that before he met her his devoted wife Mary she was made pregnant
by another man and gave birth at one of Schneider's baby farms, with the
result that she has since been infertile. When this fact is revealed
to Jim his whole world suddenly starts to fall apart...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.