Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Gang War

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Director
  
Bert Glennon

Music director
  
Al Sherman

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Drama

Cinematography
  
Virgil Miller

Country
  
United States


Release date
  
September 2, 1928 (1928-09-02)

Writer
  
Randolph Bartlett (titles), James Ashmore Creelman (story), Fred Myton, Edgar Allan Woolf (dialogue)

Cast
  
Jack Pickford, Olive Borden

Similar movies
  
Gabriel Over the White House (1933), The Gallopin Gaucho (1928), Steamboat Bill Jr (1928), Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), Dive Bomber (1941)

Gang War (released as All Square in the UK) is a 1928 part-talking gangster film, best known for being the main feature attached to Steamboat Willie, the debut of Mickey Mouse in sound. The film starred Jack Pickford in his last major role, as "Clyde", a saxophone player whose love for a dancer named Flowers (Olive Borden) traps him in the middle of a gang war. Despite the all-star cast and advanced effects, including synchronised sound, the film is largely unknown in its own right and is now a lost film, being overshadowed by its far more famous preceding short.

Contents

Plot

The film follows the saxophone player Clyde, who busks on the San Francisco Bay waterfront. One night, he meets Flowers, and teaches her to dance, but finds that "Blackjack" (Eddie Gribbon), the leader of a ruthless gang, is also in love with her. Despite the intense turf war between "Blackjack" and a rival gangster named Mike Luego (Walter Long), "Blackjack" wins the heart of Flowers and marries her, but without consummating the marriage. Clyde is eventually able to win "Blackjack" over however, and "Blackjack" sacrifices himself to protect Clyde and Flowers from Luego. Gang War was produced in black and white on Academy ratio 35 mm film, and was originally to be a silent film. However, a spoken prologue was added, in which a group of reporters (including one played by Mabel Albertson) discuss the events that are to come.

Reception

Reception to the movie was rather muted; while The New York Times called it "better than the majority of its ilk", the paper still dismissed it as "More Gang Fights". In particular, the paper found the movie to be rather cliche — it balked at the sentimentality of "Blackjack"s death scene and claimed the writers "would confer a favor upon a patient public if they mutinied against the use of some words, especially that simple monosyllable, well ". The Allmovie rated the film just 1.5 stars out of 5, calling the prologue "irrelevant", but praising Longs performance as being "brutish" but "right in his element".

References

Gang War Wikipedia
Gang War IMDb