White Heat (1949)

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Country: US
Technical: bw 114m
Director: Raoul Walsh
Cast: James Cagney, Edmond O'Brien, Margaret Wycherly, Virginia Mayo

Synopsis:

A mother-fixated psychopath robs a train and embarks on a crime spree that lands him in jail. He comes out more out of control than ever.

Review:

The legendary Cagney comes full circle back to a version of his Public Enemy character, with fashionable psychological addition. As would later be explored in Peckinpah's films, whereas patriarchal oppression breeds repressed and unfulfilled puritanical sons, over-exposure to the maternal gives rise to licentiousness, self-absorption and misogyny towards any other females. (The casting of an unknown as Ma Jarrett was inspired.) This is rip-roaring stuff in Walsh's best idiom, with a famously explosive finale.

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Country: US
Technical: bw 114m
Director: Raoul Walsh
Cast: James Cagney, Edmond O'Brien, Margaret Wycherly, Virginia Mayo

Synopsis:

A mother-fixated psychopath robs a train and embarks on a crime spree that lands him in jail. He comes out more out of control than ever.

Review:

The legendary Cagney comes full circle back to a version of his Public Enemy character, with fashionable psychological addition. As would later be explored in Peckinpah's films, whereas patriarchal oppression breeds repressed and unfulfilled puritanical sons, over-exposure to the maternal gives rise to licentiousness, self-absorption and misogyny towards any other females. (The casting of an unknown as Ma Jarrett was inspired.) This is rip-roaring stuff in Walsh's best idiom, with a famously explosive finale.


Country: US
Technical: bw 114m
Director: Raoul Walsh
Cast: James Cagney, Edmond O'Brien, Margaret Wycherly, Virginia Mayo

Synopsis:

A mother-fixated psychopath robs a train and embarks on a crime spree that lands him in jail. He comes out more out of control than ever.

Review:

The legendary Cagney comes full circle back to a version of his Public Enemy character, with fashionable psychological addition. As would later be explored in Peckinpah's films, whereas patriarchal oppression breeds repressed and unfulfilled puritanical sons, over-exposure to the maternal gives rise to licentiousness, self-absorption and misogyny towards any other females. (The casting of an unknown as Ma Jarrett was inspired.) This is rip-roaring stuff in Walsh's best idiom, with a famously explosive finale.