NFR Project: “Force of Evil”
Dir: Abraham Polonsky
Scr: Abraham Polonsky, Ira Wolfert
Pho: George Barnes
Ed: Art Seid
Premiere: Dec. 25, 1947
76 min.
It turns out the
film noir could bear the weight of social commentary. Abraham Polonsky (1910-1999)
wrote the screenplay for Body and Soul (1947), a popular prize-fighting
picture starring John Garfield. He was then given the chance to direct as well
as write. The result was Force of Evil, a thinly disguised critique of
capitalism that later got its director and star in hot water with the House
Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC).
The story is simple:
Garfield plays a crooked lawyer, Joe Morse, who protects a crime combine that
runs the numbers racket in New York City. One of the smaller “banks” that run
the numbers is owned by his older brother Leo (Thomas Gomez in his greatest
role).
Joe and his gangster
boss Tucker (Roy Roberts) come up with a scheme to bankrupt the smaller betting
parlors so that everyone has to do their gambling through them. This ruthless corporate
consolidation means that all the little players squeezed out, including Leo.
Joe tries to get Leo to take a position in Tucker’s organization, but Leo
refuses.
The scheme works,
and soon the police and a rival gang come down hard on Leo. Meanwhile, it
becomes apparent that Joe is being surveilled by the government. Joe packs up
some cash and a gun and prepares to leave town. Meanwhile, Leo is tricked into
meeting an informant at a restaurant, where a rival gang swoops in and kidnaps
him, killing his bookkeeper at the same time.
Joe finds out, and
rushes to Tucker’s, where he finds Tucker making a deal with the gangster that
kidnapped Leo. The rival gangster Ficco reveals that Leo has been murdered and
dumped under the George Washington Bridge. Joe lifts the receiver on a tapped
phone, allowing the law to hear Ficco confess that his men killed Leo and the
bookkeeper. A gun battle breaks out; Tucker and Ficco are killed. Joe leaves
and goes to find his brother’s body, then turns himself in to the police.
There is a slight
romantic plot between Joe and a young secretary, Doris, but the film is
concerned with the mechanics of what is basically a hostile corporate takeover.
Crooks will fix the numbers game to get their way; nothing matters but the
expansion and domination of the primary criminal enterprise in the city.
Garfield is stellar
as Joe, as the film tracks his disillusionment to the bitter end. Joe’s world
is nasty, dark, and bristling with hidden weapons that come into play at the
end of the film. Crooks are merely shadows of the ruthlessness and disregard
for human feeling of the stock market. Money and the system of its distribution
inherently corrupt anyone involved with it.
There is a lot of
location shooting in New York; Joe’s office is close to Wall Street and the
parallels between legitimate banks and numbers banks is made clear. The
gangsters are after the cash flow and nothing human is factored into their
machinations. Joe gets wise to himself – but too late to save his brother.
In 1951, Polonsky and
Garfield were summoned before HUAC but refused to “name names” of American Communists;
both were blacklisted. Garfield died of a heart attack at the age f 39 in 1952.
Polonsky wrote under pseudonyms until 1959. Never again would Hollywood let someone
with anti-capitalist sentiments get behind a movie camera.
The NFR is one writer’s attempt to review all
the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: In the Street.