Film Review
The Public Enemy was Warner
Brothers' initial follow-up to
Little Caesar (1930), the first
sound gangster film which turned the virtually unknown actor Edward G.
Robinson into a star. Along with Howard Hawks's
Scarface
(1932), these two films would establish the gangster movie as a major
genre in Hollywood of the 1930s. What is significant about the
two Warner Brothers films is that they were released
before the Hollywood Production
Code came in and so the violence they depict is much starker than what
would be seen in other gangster films of the decade.
This biggest claim to fame of
The
Public Enemy is that it launched the career of a certain James
Cagney, a 31-year old actor who had just four film credits under his
belt. The irony is that Cagney wasn't cast for the role that made
him famous - he was originally intended to play the gentler character
Matt Doyle. Edward Woods was to have played the tougher part of
Tom Power. Prompted by his screenwriters, director William
Wellman persuaded producer Darryl F. Zanuck to switch the two
actors. So Woods played Matt and Cagney played Tom, and the rest,
as they say, is history.
Cinema, like real life, is full of happy coincidences and James
Cagney's casting for
The Public Enemy
is one of the happiest. The actor had that natural
charismatic hard man persona which made him perfect for the anti-hero
role he was to play in this film. Cagney's portrayal of Tom Power
is that of a vicious, conscienceless thug, but the actor also imbues
him with an engaging charm which makes it hard not to like him.
And it should be said that this is one of Cagney's most antipathetic
characters. Although he would be effectively typecast as the
tough gangster for the whole of the 1930s (and for some years beyond),
most of his subsequent roles would have a somewhat lighter, more human
side.
The Public Enemy also made the
reputation of its director, William Wellman. Ably assisted by his
cinematographer Dev Jennings, Wellman gave the film a look that was
surprisingly modern for its time. His use of high contrast
lighting and unusual camera angles, along with the inventive
composition of his shots, evokes an impression of hard-edged realism, with
an intensely sombre atmosphere, stylistically pre-empting film noir by over a decade.
Whilst the film is now regarded as one of the finest of American
gangster films, the only Academy Award nomination it received was for
its screenplay, written by John Bright and Kubec Glasmon, adapted from
Bright's novel
Beer and Blood.
The book was an account of real-life gangsterism in 1920s Chicago, with
Cagney's character based on Earl Weiss, an employee of a rival gang to
Al Capone's.
The Public Enemy has become
famous for the seemingly improvised shot in which James Cagney
violently thrusts a grapefruit half into Mae Clarke's face. It is
also known for its use of the popular music hall song "I'm forever
blowing bubbles", which plays over the opening credits, as background
music for scenes in the film, and, most effectively, to play out the
film's viscerally shocking ending.
When the film was first released, it caused controversy on account of
both its violence and its sexual explicitness. It is revealing
that when the film was reissued in 1941, after the Production Code was
in force, the three cuts that were made were to remove content of an
overt or suggestive sexual nature. (The cut sequences were
subsequently reinstated for the version that is in circulation
today.) Perhaps anxious over how explicit violence might be
received, Wellman arranges that most of the violence in the narrative
takes place out of camera shot - which somehow gives it much greater
impact (and makes it impossible to censor). The sequence in which
Tom casually walks into a stable to kill a horse is a case in
point. Just the sound of two off-camera gunshots dubbed over a
scene of everyday normality gives the sequence a horrifying brutality.
Contrary to how it was generally perceived when the film was first
released,
The Public Enemy is
actually a moral film with some very pertinent social messages.
Far from glamorising crime, the film shows us the devastating impact
that crime can have, not just on society, but on individual men and
women. It also shows us the sociological origins of gangsterism,
how the failings of society make it so easy for young men to drift into
a life of crime and provide a climate (such as that arising from
alcohol prohibition) where criminal activity is allowed to
prosper. These are messages which still strike a chord today, and
so the film remains highly relevant to our society.
The Public Enemy is far
more than just a 1930s gangster film.
© James Travers 2008
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Next William A. Wellman film:
The Star Witness (1931)