Film Review
Rogue Cop is a superior noir
thriller which, whilst dealing with familiar themes (police corruption
and revenge) distinguishes itself with the quality of its screenplay
and mise-en-scène, both of which achieve the kind of
near-documentary realism and hard-edged brutality that characterised
the best of the later film noir dramas. The film is based on a book of
the same title by the acclaimed American crime writer William P.
McGivern, whose equally uncompromising novel
The Big Heat had been adapted by
Fritz Lang the previous year.
Tougher and smoother than a Teflon-coated brick, Robert Taylor heads a superlative cast and delivers
a suitably hardboiled portrayal of the seemingly amoral cop around whom
the drama revolves. At a career low-point after a series of
incredibly bad decisions, George Raft makes a startling return to form
as the vicious gangster boss, the very role that had first brought him
fame in the 1930s. Janet Leigh is stunning as the femme
fatale, but Anne Francis gets to play the more interesting female
character, one whose ill-treatment drives home the viciousness and
sordid nature of this particular noir landscape.
Whilst the noir archetypes are easily identified, they are also
recognisable as real people, whose motivations and failings are
convincing enough for us to identify with. The stereotypical good
cop, bad cop delineation breaks down way before the film's
mid-point and the characters are revealed to be much more complex than
we had supposed. Roy Rowland directs the film with great flair,
eschewing the stylised
approach of previous film noir thrillers whilst respecting the rules of
the genre almost to the letter. Rowland particularly excels in the
spectacular final shoot out sequence, which is easily one of the most
nerve-wracking and realistically violent of any noir thriller of this
era. A classic of its genre,
Rogue Cop
ventures into new and controversial territory by blurring the moral
boundaries, implying that the police need to step outside the law
occasionally in order to do their job effectively. In its cynical
anti-hero Chris Kelvaney we see the maverick cops of future police
dramas, Dirty Harry and his rule-breaking, authority-loathing ilk.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After honest cop Eddie Kelvaney witnesses a stabbing in a penny arcade,
gangster bosses Beaumonte and Ackerman put pressure on his brother
Chris, another cop, to ensure the murderer is not brought to
justice. Eddie is outraged when Chris offers him a bribe, since
he has sworn never to end up like his brother, a rogue cop who
habitually deals with criminals. When Eddie is gunned down by a
hired hitman, Chris goes on the offensive, although his efforts to find
the killer may be thwarted by his police superiors...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.