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1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Reception  



3.1  Critical response  







4 Radio adaptation  





5 References  





6 External links  














The People Against O'Hara: Difference between revisions






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| name = The People Against O'Hara

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| caption = Theatrical release poster

| caption = Theatrical release poster

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| gross = $1.7 million<ref name="Mannix"/>

| gross = $1.7 million<ref name="Mannix"/>

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'''''The People Against O'Hara''''' is a 1951 American [[crime film|crime]] [[film noir]] directed by [[John Sturges]] and based on [[Eleazar Lipsky]]'s novel. The film features [[Spencer Tracy]], [[Pat O'Brien (actor)|Pat O'Brien]], and [[James Arness]].<ref>{{AFI film|id=50244|title=The People Against O'Hara}}.</ref>

'''''The People Against O'Hara''''' is a 1951 American [[crime film|crime]] [[film noir]] directed by [[John Sturges]] and based on [[Eleazar Lipsky]]'s novel. The film features [[Spencer Tracy]], [[Pat O'Brien (actor)|Pat O'Brien]], [[John Hodiak]] and [[James Arness]].<ref>{{AFI film|id=50244|title=The People Against O'Hara}}.</ref>



==Plot==

==Plot==

<!--word count is 855; per [[MOS:FILMPLOT]], plot summaries should be between 400 and 700 words-->

James Curtayne (Tracy) has retired from criminal law, but when Johnny O'Hara (Arness), a boy from the neighborhood, is accused of a murder, Curtayne takes the case. The boy's parents plead for Curtayne's help, even though they are too poor to pay him a fee.

James Curtayne was once a highly successful prosecutor as a New York City [[district attorney]], driven from his job and the high pressure field of [[criminal law]] by the bottle. After a long "vacation", he has attempted to settle into less demanding [[Civil law (common law)|civil law]] to make it to an overdue but financially postponed retirement. Johnny O'Hara, a boy from the old neighborhood, is accused of a murder. His parents head straight for Curtayne. Unable to pay, they nonetheless beg "the counselor" to take the case. He accepts, knowing it will be tough, both personally and professionally.

A man Johnny knew was shot and killed during the night by two people in a passing car. The only witness, from a distance, was a man coming out of a diner. Johnny flees when the cops come to question him. Once the boy is in custody, Detective Ricks (O'Brien) and District Attorney Barra ([[John Hodiak]]) explain that a gun owned by Johnny appears to be the murder weapon. A young punk, Pete Korvac ([[William Campbell (film actor)|William Campbell]]), is claiming that he was Johnny's accomplice in the crime and is willing to testify that Johnny pulled the trigger.

Johnny's boss, Bill Sheffield, was shot and robbed during the night on the stairs of his home by two people in an older coupe. The murder is seen from a distance by a man coming out of a saloon. Police trace the car to Johnny. When detectives come to question him, Johnny flees, claiming that he believed that they were thugs after him. During his questioning, Detective Ricks and District Attorney Barra reveal the murder weapon also to have been his. Johnny claims both were stolen. A young punk, Pete Korvac, is brought in. He claims he was the driver, and fingers Johnny as the trigger man.



Johnny insistshewas working all night, but no one can verify that. Whatherefuses to tell the authorities, or even his own lawyer, is that he was with Katrina Lanzetta ([[Yvette Duguay]]), the young wife of a local gangster known as Knuckles ([[Eduardo Ciannelli]]). She has fallen in love with Johnny, butheis determinedtoprotect her honor and her safety.

Johnny admits thathehad had a beef that day with Sheffield over some overtime pay, but insists thathewas working all night. The night watchman refutes it. Instead, Johnny had been breaking up with his lover, Katrina, the young wife of "Knuckles" Lanzetti, a tough mobster who controls the waterfront. Knowing what would happen to Katrina ifhereveals the truth, Johnny liestoboth the D.A. and his own attorney.



Curtayne's daughter Ginny ([[Diana Lynn]]) didn't want her widower dad to take on such a stressful case because he is a recovering alcoholic. Ginny lives with him, putting her own future with boyfriend Jeff ([[Richard Anderson]])onhold. Curtayne expresses confidence he can handle the strain. He goestosee the Korvac family, trying to learn why young Pete, who has a criminal past, would double-cross Johnny this way. He also visits Knuckles, who knew the victim and is volunteeringtohelp Curtayne, but the lawyer neither trusts nor believes Knuckles and declines his offer.

Curtayne, a widower, is cared for by his doting but overprotective daughter, Ginny. She has put her own future with fiancé Jeff on hold for two years, keeping her fatheronthe wagon. Professing confidence that he can handle the strain, Curtayne is forcedtodo his own leg work. He visits the Korvac family, who stonewall him, loudly proclaiming that they have no use for the slippery Pete. Curtayne visits Knuckles, suspicious of his involvement but willingtohorse-trade information on accepting Knuckles's denials, yet unwilling to accept the mobster's offer to pull strings on his behalf.



The case begins to go badly for the defense. Johnny's alibi about being at work proves to be a lie. Pete's chatty testimony is convincing and Curtayne has been unable to rattle him. Curtayne confides in Ricks, his friend, that heisbecoming forgetful at inopportune times in court. Desperate, knowing that Johnny's life is on the line, Curtayne not only resumes drinking, he bribes the eyewitness with $500 after learning the man, Sven Norson ([[Jay C. Flippen]]), is willing to change his story foraprice.

At trial, Johnny's alibi about being at work all night is shattered. Pete's chatty double-talk is convincing, and Curtayne proves unable to rattle him. The counselor confides in Ricks, his old friend, that his mindisfailing him, the toll of age, drink, the stakes, and a competent younger adversary he cannot better. Desperate, he turns a sip of a "short beer" into shots of straight rye. Approached in the bar by the eyewitness, a Norwegian seaman, Sven Norson, with an offer to change his story, Curtayne caves to his demons and writes outa$500 personal check.



D.A. Barra discovers the bribe. He wins the case, convicting Johnny of murder, then must decide what to do about Curtayne's behavior, possibly seeking to have him disbarred. Curtayne, however, is tipped off by Ricks about the boy's relationship with gangster Knuckles' wife, who is willing to come forward and accept the consequences now that Johnny's been found guilty.

D.A. Barra discovers the bribe, reveals it to Curtayne, but holds it [[sub rosa]]. He still easily wins the case, leaving Johnny facing the electric chair and Curtayne disbarment. Sensing a frame, Ricks tips off his old friend about Johnny's involvement with Katrina, a relationship that began on the docks before [[World War II]], before Johnny shipped out to the Pacific for the duration and she married Knuckles. Curtayne confronts her. Grief-stricken, she tells the truth in front of the D.A., willing to accept the consequences, in hope of saving her love. Johnny continues to deny being with her, but the men see through it. Knuckles remains clueless.



On discovering that Johnny had been set up, Curtayne, Ricks and Barra revisit the crime, trying to tease out a motive. A tale planted by Pete about a "gold bar" that the victim was carrying in an empty suitcase found in Johnny’s car again fails scrutiny. Instead, lab tests reveal that the battered old bag had been impregnated with $200,000 worth of the narcotics destined for the "Chicago mob". They devise a scheme to plant a lookalike in the home and entrap whoever comes to steal it. Knuckles, who again professes a debt to Curtayne for not sending him to prison (or worse) when Curtayne had the chance, before he dissolved in drink, agrees to spread the word about the suitcase's planned return that night around town.

Curtayne tries to set up Knuckles, certain that he is the one behind the murder. He wears a wire for the police, looking for a confession. Instead, it turns out one of Pete Korvac's brothers is the man who did the fatal shooting, and Curtayne ends up at gunpoint. By the time Ricks, Barra and others tailing him can get there to make an arrest, Curtayne ends up fatally shot.


Curtayne, wired for sound, volunteers to be the pigeon to deliver it and lie in wait for whoever was behind the original killing. It turns out to be the eldest Korvac brother, who tells him Knuckles is dead, abducts Curtayne, and marches him, suitcase in hand, toward the river and certain death.


Barra orders a police dragnet to close in on the area, but it proves too late. Even a last-ditch effort of a police woman who volunteers to intercept the pair fails in a hail of gunfire, with Curtayne felled point-blank by Korvacs. Moved by Curtayne's heroism, Barra tells Ricks he will have to find someone else to press the bribery indictment against the wounded man, because he will not. Before Ricks can respond, the ambulance medic interrupts to tell them that he hopes that it was not anything important, because Curtayne is dead.



==Cast==

==Cast==

Line 58: Line 64:


==Reception==

==Reception==

According to MGM records the film earned $1,107,000 in the US and Canada and $588,000 elsewhere, resulting in a $22,000 profit.<ref name="Mannix"/>

According to [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer|MGM]] records, the film earned $1,107,000 in the US and Canada, and $588,000 elsewhere, resulting in a $22,000 profit.<ref name="Mannix"/>



===Critical response===

===Critical response===

[[Bosley Crowther]] of ''[[The New York Times]]'' called the film "a curiously old-fashioned courtroom drama" that "moved ploddingly".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9A05E5DA1539E43BBC4E53DFBF66838A649EDE|title=THE PEOPLE AGAINST O'HARA|last=Crowther|first=Bosley|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=September 6, 1951|accessdate=January 31, 2015}}</ref> A ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' reviewer wrote, "A basically good idea for a film melodrama [from a novel by Eleazar Lipsky] is cluttered up with too many unnecessary side twists and turns, and the presentation is uncomfortably overlong."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1950/film/reviews/the-people-against-o-hara-1200416839/|title=Review: 'The People Against O'Hara'|author=<!-- Staff -->|work=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|year=1951|accessdate=January 31, 2015}}</ref>

[[Bosley Crowther]] of ''[[The New York Times]]'' called the film "a curiously old-fashioned courtroom drama" that "moved ploddingly".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9A05E5DA1539E43BBC4E53DFBF66838A649EDE|title=THE PEOPLE AGAINST O'HARA|last=Crowther|first=Bosley|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=September 6, 1951|accessdate=January 31, 2015}}</ref>

A ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' reviewer wrote, "A basically good idea for a film melodrama [from a novel by Eleazar Lipsky] is cluttered up with too many unnecessary side twists and turns, and the presentation is uncomfortably overlong."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1950/film/reviews/the-people-against-o-hara-1200416839/|title=Review: 'The People Against O'Hara'|author=<!-- Staff -->|work=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|year=1951|accessdate=January 31, 2015}}</ref>



==Radio adaptation==

==Radio adaptation==

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* {{AFI film|id=50244|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{AFI film|id=50244|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{IMDb title|id=0043914|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{IMDb title|id=0043914|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{Allmovie title|id=105867|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{AllMovie title|id=105867|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{Tcmdb title|id=86473|title=The People Against O'Hara}}

* {{TCMDb title|id=86473|title=The People Against O'Hara}}



{{John Sturges}}

{{John Sturges}}

Line 83: Line 91:

[[Category:American black-and-white films]]

[[Category:American black-and-white films]]

[[Category:American courtroom films]]

[[Category:American courtroom films]]

[[Category:American films]]

[[Category:American legal films]]

[[Category:American legal films]]

[[Category:American crime thriller films]]

[[Category:American crime thriller films]]

[[Category:English-language films]]

[[Category:Film noir]]

[[Category:Film noir]]

[[Category:Films based on American novels]]

[[Category:Films based on American novels]]

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[[Category:Films shot in New York City]]

[[Category:Films shot in New York City]]

[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films]]

[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films]]

[[Category:1950s English-language films]]

[[Category:1950s American films]]


Revision as of 09:49, 31 January 2024

The People Against O'Hara
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Sturges
Screenplay byJohn Monks Jr.
Based onthe novel The People Against O'Hara
byEleazar Lipsky
Produced byWilliam H. Wright
Starring
  • Pat O'Brien
  • James Arness
  • CinematographyJohn Alton
    Edited byGene Ruggiero
    Music byCarmen Dragon
    Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer

    Release date

    • September 1, 1951 (1951-09-01) (United States)

    Running time

    102 minutes
    CountryUnited States
    LanguageEnglish
    Budget$1 million[1][2]
    Box office$1.7 million[1]

    The People Against O'Hara is a 1951 American crime film noir directed by John Sturges and based on Eleazar Lipsky's novel. The film features Spencer Tracy, Pat O'Brien, John Hodiak and James Arness.[3]

    Plot

    James Curtayne was once a highly successful prosecutor as a New York City district attorney, driven from his job and the high pressure field of criminal law by the bottle. After a long "vacation", he has attempted to settle into less demanding civil law to make it to an overdue but financially postponed retirement. Johnny O'Hara, a boy from the old neighborhood, is accused of a murder. His parents head straight for Curtayne. Unable to pay, they nonetheless beg "the counselor" to take the case. He accepts, knowing it will be tough, both personally and professionally.

    Johnny's boss, Bill Sheffield, was shot and robbed during the night on the stairs of his home by two people in an older coupe. The murder is seen from a distance by a man coming out of a saloon. Police trace the car to Johnny. When detectives come to question him, Johnny flees, claiming that he believed that they were thugs after him. During his questioning, Detective Ricks and District Attorney Barra reveal the murder weapon also to have been his. Johnny claims both were stolen. A young punk, Pete Korvac, is brought in. He claims he was the driver, and fingers Johnny as the trigger man.

    Johnny admits that he had had a beef that day with Sheffield over some overtime pay, but insists that he was working all night. The night watchman refutes it. Instead, Johnny had been breaking up with his lover, Katrina, the young wife of "Knuckles" Lanzetti, a tough mobster who controls the waterfront. Knowing what would happen to Katrina if he reveals the truth, Johnny lies to both the D.A. and his own attorney.

    Curtayne, a widower, is cared for by his doting but overprotective daughter, Ginny. She has put her own future with fiancé Jeff on hold for two years, keeping her father on the wagon. Professing confidence that he can handle the strain, Curtayne is forced to do his own leg work. He visits the Korvac family, who stonewall him, loudly proclaiming that they have no use for the slippery Pete. Curtayne visits Knuckles, suspicious of his involvement but willing to horse-trade information on accepting Knuckles's denials, yet unwilling to accept the mobster's offer to pull strings on his behalf.

    At trial, Johnny's alibi about being at work all night is shattered. Pete's chatty double-talk is convincing, and Curtayne proves unable to rattle him. The counselor confides in Ricks, his old friend, that his mind is failing him, the toll of age, drink, the stakes, and a competent younger adversary he cannot better. Desperate, he turns a sip of a "short beer" into shots of straight rye. Approached in the bar by the eyewitness, a Norwegian seaman, Sven Norson, with an offer to change his story, Curtayne caves to his demons and writes out a $500 personal check.

    D.A. Barra discovers the bribe, reveals it to Curtayne, but holds it sub rosa. He still easily wins the case, leaving Johnny facing the electric chair and Curtayne disbarment. Sensing a frame, Ricks tips off his old friend about Johnny's involvement with Katrina, a relationship that began on the docks before World War II, before Johnny shipped out to the Pacific for the duration and she married Knuckles. Curtayne confronts her. Grief-stricken, she tells the truth in front of the D.A., willing to accept the consequences, in hope of saving her love. Johnny continues to deny being with her, but the men see through it. Knuckles remains clueless.

    On discovering that Johnny had been set up, Curtayne, Ricks and Barra revisit the crime, trying to tease out a motive. A tale planted by Pete about a "gold bar" that the victim was carrying in an empty suitcase found in Johnny’s car again fails scrutiny. Instead, lab tests reveal that the battered old bag had been impregnated with $200,000 worth of the narcotics destined for the "Chicago mob". They devise a scheme to plant a lookalike in the home and entrap whoever comes to steal it. Knuckles, who again professes a debt to Curtayne for not sending him to prison (or worse) when Curtayne had the chance, before he dissolved in drink, agrees to spread the word about the suitcase's planned return that night around town.

    Curtayne, wired for sound, volunteers to be the pigeon to deliver it and lie in wait for whoever was behind the original killing. It turns out to be the eldest Korvac brother, who tells him Knuckles is dead, abducts Curtayne, and marches him, suitcase in hand, toward the river and certain death.

    Barra orders a police dragnet to close in on the area, but it proves too late. Even a last-ditch effort of a police woman who volunteers to intercept the pair fails in a hail of gunfire, with Curtayne felled point-blank by Korvacs. Moved by Curtayne's heroism, Barra tells Ricks he will have to find someone else to press the bribery indictment against the wounded man, because he will not. Before Ricks can respond, the ambulance medic interrupts to tell them that he hopes that it was not anything important, because Curtayne is dead.

    Cast

    Reception

    According to MGM records, the film earned $1,107,000 in the US and Canada, and $588,000 elsewhere, resulting in a $22,000 profit.[1]

    Critical response

    Bosley CrowtherofThe New York Times called the film "a curiously old-fashioned courtroom drama" that "moved ploddingly".[4]

    AVariety reviewer wrote, "A basically good idea for a film melodrama [from a novel by Eleazar Lipsky] is cluttered up with too many unnecessary side twists and turns, and the presentation is uncomfortably overlong."[5]

    Radio adaptation

    The People Against O'Hara was presented on Lux Radio Theatre March 9, 1953. The one-hour adaptation starred Walter Pidgeon.[6]

    References

    1. ^ a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  • ^ Glenn Lovell, Escape Artist: The Life and Films of John Sturges, University of Wisconsin Press, 2008, p. 69.
  • ^ The People Against O'Hara at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films.
  • ^ Crowther, Bosley (September 6, 1951). "THE PEOPLE AGAINST O'HARA". The New York Times. Retrieved January 31, 2015.
  • ^ "Review: 'The People Against O'Hara'". Variety. 1951. Retrieved January 31, 2015.
  • ^ Kirby, Walter (March 8, 1953). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 46. Retrieved June 23, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • External links


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_People_Against_O%27Hara&oldid=1201305171"

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    This page was last edited on 31 January 2024, at 09:49 (UTC).

    This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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