The Public Pays (1936) Poster

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7/10
A great addition to the "Wife Vs. Secretary" DVD
planktonrules7 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Like so many of the classic MGM films on DVD, this one includes a couple shorts that came out the same year the feature was released. The addition of "The Public Pays" is an inspired choice because the set used in the film is also used in "Wife Vs. Secretary"--so you can see it used in both films from the same DVD.

The film is a fictionalized account of how organized crime in the form of 'protection' operates. In this example, a group forcing milk wholesalers to pay more for their product is acted out for the audience. When people don't pay, violence and intimidate are used to great effect. Ultimately, however, the cops get involved and smash the racket. This portion of the film is pretty funny--at first. Then, when the crooks counter-attack, things get deadly serious. Interestingly, this is one of the very few films of the era where blood is shown--and you'll see it in the final showdown. Overall, this is a rather entertaining short that is told in a straight-forward manner--almost like an episode of "Dragnet".
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7/10
Milk protection racketeers are after a milk distributor's business
Paularoc25 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A Crime Does Not Pay Subject. Extortion racketeers harass the Paige Creamery's delivery vehicles (including a horse drawn vehicle). The owner is working with the police to combat this and cops take the place of delivery drivers resulting in the arrest of several thugs. The gangsters then ratchet up the harassment including shooting up a milk tanker and threatening Paige's family. Although Paige is rightfully fearful, he continues to help the police. The cops plant a story in the newspaper that the tanker driver was killed and when the gangsters make a misstep, are able to capture the gang. It was nice seeing Cy Kendal playing a good guy for once as Police Chief Carney. The production values and pace of this short are very good.
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5/10
Where Are The Little Children Getting The Extra Money For Their Milk?
boblipton18 September 2020
A protection racketeer comes to a small city in the Midwest and organizes a protection racket for the milk distributors: pay them a penny a bottle, raise the price three cents or you milk has some kerosene spilled in it. Of course we know this scheme will ultimately fail because CRIME DOES NOT PAY!

It's a pretty good telling of the manner of such protection rackets, even if the gangsters all talk like well educated WASPs, even the one who speaks Italian. It's a well-paced, if rather talky short subject, with a well0deserved Oscar nomination.
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Crime Still Does Not Pay
Michael_Elliott26 February 2008
Public Pays, The (1936)

*** (out of 4)

Crime Does Not Pay

Oscar winning short from MGM's Crime Doesn't Pay series. Gangster move to small cities throughout America so that they can take over the milk business thinking the hick cops won't be able to stop them. This short will entertain anyone interesting in the gangster films that were being made at the time. There's plenty of nice action including one scene with a milk tanker being shot. There's also some nice laughs along the way.
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6/10
Though I was only five, it seems like yesterday that I knocked over my . . .
oscaralbert17 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . glass of milk when I was reaching for the ketchup at Ted's Trailer after church one Sunday. As I saw my libation soaking into the kid's menu art challenge I'd just finished coloring during the seeming hours I'd waited for my burger, I must have begun to tear up. Why else would Dad remark, "There's no use crying over spilled milk"? The memory of this traumatic childhood ordeal came flooding back to me as I watched the Millionaire Gangster Mob's tips for others of their larcenous ilk in what would have been entitled their "Crime Pays" series, had modern Truth-in-Advertising Laws existed in the 1930's. THE PUBLIC PAYS shows would-be core supporters how to avoid getting caught while running the "Protection Racket." With primers such as this live-action short, it's small wonder that the perfidious base is now running such a scam to perfection during their pandemic to insure that THE PUBLIC PAYS.
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8/10
Protection rackets-Making bullies wealthy.
mark.waltz17 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Kerosene in milk bottles, attacks on delivery trucks. All for racketeers to threaten innocent businesses and have a major impact on already struggling families. Racket movies of the 1930's were plentiful and in this action packed short, the bullies are exposed for who they are. The details are excellent here, revealing how rackets harm innocent businesses and the families who rely on them. Nothing is hidden in this Crime Does Not Pay short that shows the government fighting them with every weapon they can get their hands on. Great narration and perfect detail make this a must. Definitely one of the best of the series.
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8/10
Good portrayal of racketeering in this movie short
SimonJack29 December 2016
This is a very well dramatized short subject by MGM in 1936. Extra or bonus shorts such as this played with the main feature films of the studio theater days that ran through the 1960s. This short is on racketeering. It's very well done and won the Oscar for 1936 short subjects.

In the early decades of the 20th century, phony associations were formed in cities by gangsters who then "convinced" merchants to join them. This film shows a racketeering operation in which the phony association then could control the market and set prices to consumers. That's where the term racketeering comes from. This short gives a good example. Other types of criminal organizations didn't set prices or get involved in the marketing, but simply provided "protection" for their members. Those were organizations in name only – usually headed by a crime boss or family.
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8/10
Oscar Winner for Best Short Subject for a Two-Reeler
springfieldrental28 August 2023
During the 1930s mobsters were dipping their fingers into everything to make money: liquor, the numbers racket and-milk? Yes. The production and distribution of dairy milk was a thriving industry during the Depression, and with the immense amount of money dairy products brought in it was natural that corruption would follow. Members of the Academy Awards recognized the scandalous problem and awarded Best Short Subject (Two-Reel) winner to MGM's October 1936 "The Public Pays." The movie peels back an actual case of a racketeering ring whose strong-arming of a number of a state's milk companies forces them to raise their prices and hand over their newly-found profits to the mob.

"The Public Pays" was part of MGM's 'Crime Does Not Pay' anthology series of 20-minute shorts popular from 1935 until 1947. The studio used much of the sets within MGM's Hollywood complex to film this series. In "The Public Pays," the gangsters' city offices they used for their operation room for their enterprise were the same ones seen in Clark Gable's 1936 film "Wife vs. Secretary." MGM's B-level actors were employed to re-enact the case presented. "The Public Pays" was based on an actual trial that described one lone dairy company bucking the mobsters' threat. With the backing of undercover police posing as milkmen, the business frustrated the crime syndicate's monopoly of milk. Kicking off as a documentary, "The Public Pays" shows actor Philip Trent posing as a MGM reporter who introduces a member of the Federal Department of Justice (actor Edwin Stanley) and the police chief of a Midwestern city (actor Cy Kendall). From that introduction stating the facts of the case, the film segues into a dramatic re-enactment of the gang members laying the groundwork in their attempt to coerce the area's milk producers to raise their prices so they can skim the profits.

"The Public Pays" was the first of two Oscars the MGM 'Crime Does Not Pay' series took home while earning seven nominations before its termination in 1947. The Academy's 9th Annual Awards introduced three categories within the Short Subjects: Color, One-Reel and Two-Reel. 'Our Gang's' "Bored of Education" won the One-Reel honors while "Give Me Liberty" took home the Color Oscar. Previously, the Academy's Short Subject awards were divided into Comedy and Novelty. The Color category was dropped after 1937, with the One- and Two-Reelers awards lasting until 1957. The two Short Subjects were then merged into just one award, which continues right to this day.
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