I, Mobster

Bullet by Bullet Expose!

6.5
19591h 21m

The rise and fall of gang lord Joe Sante. A crime boss appears before a Senate subcommittee. A flashbacks tell his story.

Cast

Photo of Steve Cochran

Steve Cochran

Joe Sante

Photo of Lita Milan

Lita Milan

Teresa Porter

Photo of Robert Strauss

Robert Strauss

Black Frankie Udino

Photo of Celia Lovsky

Celia Lovsky

Mrs. Sante

Photo of Lili St. Cyr

Lili St. Cyr

Herself, Lili St. Cyr

Photo of John Brinkley

John Brinkley

Ernie Porter

Photo of Grant Withers

Grant Withers

Paul Moran

Photo of Yvette Vickers

Yvette Vickers

The Blonde

Photo of Frank Gerstle

Frank Gerstle

District Attorney

Photo of Wally Cassell

Wally Cassell

Cherry Nose Sirago (adult)

Photo of Eddie Baker

Eddie Baker

Labor Union Boss (uncredited)

Photo of Stephen Chase

Stephen Chase

Mr. Stephens (uncredited)

Photo of George Cisar

George Cisar

Cab Driver (uncredited)

Photo of John Dennis

John Dennis

Murder Inc. Man (uncredited)

Photo of Charles Evans

Charles Evans

Committee Chairman (uncredited)

Photo of Thomas Browne Henry

Thomas Browne Henry

Udino's Attorney (uncredited)

Photo of Michael Jeffers

Michael Jeffers

Syndicate Member (uncredited)

Photo of Kenner G. Kemp

Kenner G. Kemp

Nightclub Patron (uncredited)

Photo of Harold Miller

Harold Miller

Senator at Hearing (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

The Life of a Gangster!

I Mobster is directed by Roger Corman and adapted to screenplay by Steve Fisher from the novel written by Joseph Hilton Smyth. It stars Steve Cochran, Lita Milan, Robert Strauss, Celia Lovsky and John Brinkley. A CinemaScope production, music is by Gerald Fried and Edward L. Alperson Junior and cinematography by Floyd Crosby.

Roger Corman was late in coming to the film noir/crime splinter of film making, but in 1958 he manufactured two very accomplished gangster pictures. Machine Gun Kelly starring Charles Bronson was something of a success, so it was hardly surprising to see Corman serve up another helping of gangster cinema with I Mobster.

Pic charts the rise of Joe Sante (Cochran), from a boy running bets for a local hood, to being the leader of all illegal and violent operations in the city. There’s nothing remotely new here as per the genre scheme of things, it is what it is, a straight forward tale of a bad man who finds himself getting deeper in the mire the higher up the hoodlum ladder he gets. On the side of this normal trajectory is how his climb affects those closest to him, notably the two ladies of his life, Ma Sante and Teresa Porter.

Come the resolution of the tale, Joe Sante is hit with the stark realisation of the life he has led. But is it too late for him? Along the way there’s some sexy sizzle by way of a show put on by burlesque queen Lili St. Cyr, while Corman even inserts a sex metaphor that’s so unsubtle that Hitchcock himself would doubtless have approved.

Corman re-teams from “Kelly” with Crosby and Fried, who once again provide crisp black and white images and furious jazz strains respectively. He is well served by his cast, Cochran is too old for the role as written, but he has a magnetic presence. Milan impacts strongly as the one time honest girl turned moll in the name of love, while Lovsky as Joe’s weary mother is hugely effective in conveying a parent with a broken heart. Best of the bunch is Strauss as Black Frankie, he’s a larger than life henchman and with the writers affording the character some telling passages in the play, Strauss responds in kind.

Recommended fare for genre fans after a quick fix of gangster shenanigans. 7/10

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