‘G’ Men (1935) – full review!
‘G’ Men (1935) – full review!
Directed by William Keighley with a screenplay by Seton I. Miller (The Criminal Code (1931)) from a story by future Academy Award winning producer Darryl F. Zanuck (who earned his first Academy recognition with a Best Writing Original Story Oscar nomination) this above average crime drama features James Cagney as a client-less lawyer turned ‘G’ (for government) man an employee of the Department of Justice’s bureau of investigation (to become the F.B.I.) for the purposes of helping to capture those responsible for killing his friend. Regis Toomey appears briefly as agent Eddie Buchanan ‘Brick’ Davis’s (Cagney) college friend who had tried to convince Davis to join the bureau before he was gunned down by (as it turns out) Brad Collins (Barton MacLane). Brick is acquainted with the culprit because he’d grown up in a rough New York neighborhood with Collins and some other hooligans before crime boss ‘Mac’ McKay (William Harrigan) had taken Brick under his wing and paid for his college education to give him opportunities he’d never had which allows Brick to go straight. Unwilling to become a mouthpiece for other gangsters when Buchanan is murdered Brick signs up with the Dept. of Justice and is assigned to work for Jeff McCord (Robert Armstrong) a tough taskmaster who refuses to admit that Brick has what it takes to succeed in the bureau and is suspicious of the lawyer’s earlier associations. Margaret Lindsay plays Jeff’s sister Kay who catches Brick’s eye and interest. Lloyd Nolan plays agent Hugh Farrell who helps Brick learn jujitsu and other self defense tactics. Mary Treen appears uncredited as a secretary.
Because Brick grew up Collins and the others and knows (for instance) that Danny Leggett (Edward Pawley) has a penchant for fresh daily gardenias he’s soon involved in trying to capture Buchanan’s killers. After Farrell is killed (Ward Bond appears uncredited as one of the culprits) Brick wins over McCord and more slowly his sister by helping to catch Leggett. Collins’s wife Jean Morgan (Ann Dvorak) who Brick also used to know (they had a ‘thing’ for one another) inadvertently spills the beans that her husband and the rest of the wanted criminals are holed up in McKay’s mid-Western lodge. This leads to a shootout during which the whole gang save Collins is shot dead or captured; McKay who’d been their prisoner is killed and Brick is injured. It takes a little longer to get Collins who catches up with Jean while he hides out at Venke’s (Harold Huber) garage inexplicably long. But you know Cagney’s character is going to get his man finally earn McCord’s respect and win the girl in the end.
The film was re-released in 1949 with a prologue and introduction (by an actor pretending to be an F.B.I. agent) that talks about the 25th anniversary of the bureau and the difficulties they had fighting crime during the gangster era because initially their agents couldn’t carry guns didn’t have adequate firepower (e.g. machine guns) relative to the hoods and couldn’t even cross state lines to chase their quarry having to work with local authorities in every state to apprehend them.