Crime in the Streets

How can you tell them to be good when their girl friends like them better when they're bad!...

6.0
19561h 31m

A social worker tries to end juvenile crime by getting involved with a street gang.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Sal Mineo - Crime in the Streets

Sal Mineo - Crime in the Streets

Cast

Photo of James Whitmore

James Whitmore

Ben Wagner

Photo of Sal Mineo

Sal Mineo

Angelo 'Baby' Gioia

Photo of John Cassavetes

John Cassavetes

Frankie Dane

Photo of Mark Rydell

Mark Rydell

Lou Macklin

Photo of Peter J. Votrian

Peter J. Votrian

Richie Dane (as Peter Votrian)

Photo of Will Kuluva

Will Kuluva

Mr. Gioia

Photo of Malcolm Atterbury

Malcolm Atterbury

Mr. McAllister

Photo of Peter Miller

Peter Miller

The Fighter

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

Sucking around is my job.

Crime in the Streets is directed by Don Siegel and written by Reginald Rose. It stars John Cassavetes, James Whitmore, Sal Mineo, Mark Rydell, Virginia Gregg, Peter J. Votrian, Will Kuluva and Malcolm Atterbury. Music is scored by Franz Waxman and cinematography by Sam Leavitt.

Social worker Ben Wagner (Whitmore) tries to help local slum gang, The Hornets, especially their troubled leader Frankie Dane (Cassavetes).

When your body hits that sidewalk nobody will even turn around to look at yah.

Decent "juve delinquent" lecture movie, Crime in the Streets boasts some mightily impressive performances and closes on a (expected) piece of dramatic worth, but the screenplay is staid and pic is claustrophobic for all the wrong reasons. There's a cramped cheapness to the production that doesn't suit the narrative and you can feel Siegel straining with every sinew to light a tinderbox with a damp match.

However, Cassavetes' intense firecracker performance is worth the time of any classic era film fan, and with Whitmore doing good and controlled earnest and Gregg (sadly underused) tugging away at the maternal heart strings, it still comes out in credit. There's a bonus, too, in the form of Waxman's blending of stabby jazz shards with momentum building percussion, it's quality, even if ultimately it deserves a better movie. 6/10

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