The Racket Man (1944) Poster

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8/10
Quick Crime Programmer
gordonl562 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
THE RACKET MAN - 1944

This is one of the bottom dwellers put out by the B film unit at Columbia Picture. Mostly a crime programmer but there is the odd noir flourish here and there.

Tom Neal and Hugh Beaumont are two lads from the same neighbourhood who took different paths in life. Neal is a gangster while Beaumont became a cop. They both happen to be in love with the same girl, Jeanne Bates. The two get drafted into the army the same day but Beaumont, the cop, is released because of "flat feet"! Neal learns the hard way that just because he was a big man on the outside, he is just a soldier in the army.

Neal sees the light and does the old bad guy turns good bit. The army decides that instead of sending Neal overseas he would be of more use in the States. They want him to go back on the streets as an undercover government agent. He is to pretend he is back in the "rackets" and help the government round up the black-market baddies.

Larry Parks plays a newspaper reporter who gets mixed up in the deal and blows Neal's cover. Fists, guns and Neal's death are all needed in order for the good guys to wrap this one up. Kind of slow for the first 15-20 minutes, but once it gets going, it is not a bad little programmer.

Hugh Beaumont would become "Ward Cleaver" on the LEAVE IT TO BEAVER show. Neal would end up in prison on murder charges and Larry Parks would end up being blacklisted during the 50's. Of course both Beaumont and Neal are known to fans of film noir. Neal was in DETOUR and Beaumont in, THE FALLEN SPARROW, RAILROADED, THE LADY CONFESSES, APOLOGY FOR MURDER, THE BLUE DAHLIA, BURY ME DEAD, MONEY MADNESS, THE COUNTERFEITERS and a string of films where he played Michael Shayne.

Veteran cinematographer James van Trees gives the picture a nice dark feel.

Look quick and you will see future film and television regular, Anthony Caruso.
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7/10
Tom Neal Meets Ward Cleaver and Batman
ponekingpetch22 July 2019
B Star Tough Tom Neal (in lifts) in another entertaining programmer. Former Prizefighter Neal made a lot more headlines for his offscreen activities involving Barbara Payton than any film he was ever in. Pugnacious Tom couldn't have been any taller than 5'4 and he was almost looking six footer Hugh Beaumont in the eye here so that tells you he was wearing might high lifts inside those heels. WWII era programmer quickie here - probably shot in 4 or 5 days - that also featured former "Batman" Lewis Wilson as an Army Officer (I guess the Batman serial bombed (it was really bad) so he was stuck bumping along with these other performers of the genre. What the heck, take a look if you are a Tom Neal fan - (always looked like a mini Clark Gable with that mustache) and you will get a kick out of it. I am a big fan of Neal's so I give it 7 stars.
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4/10
Fighting the enemy...right in our back yard!
mark.waltz6 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
An acquitted racketeer is drafted, and when special services are required, he is contacted to leave the army on assignment to help expose and break up newly formed rackets that have replaced his. Utilizing his old identity, Tom Neal infiltrates the mob (lead by Douglas Fowley), stirring up old issues with cop brother Hugh Beaumont. With the Army and old newspaper pal Larry Parks the only ones who know the truth about what's going on, Neal finds himself in trouble with the law when he's framed, and him must take matters into his own hands to both settle the score and to what they army or signed him to do.

This is an okay programmer, but familiar in many ways, and while having a darker theme bands similar films made a decade before, is filled with the same twist and turns and cliches as all of the others. Columbia contractee Jeanne Bates has the inconsiquential romantic interest part, with Mary Gordon as always the loving Irish mother dispensing homey advice. The ending is darker then I expected it to be which is a plus considering the majority of the film.
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