Outside the Law

T-Men blast counterfeiting racket!

6.0
19561h 21m

A government agent's son wins respect and love when he challenges counterfeiters.

Production

Logo for Universal International Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Original Trailer

Original Trailer

Cast

Photo of Ray Danton

Ray Danton

John Conrad, alias Johnny Salvo

Photo of Leigh Snowden

Leigh Snowden

Maria Craven

Photo of Grant Williams

Grant Williams

Don Kastner

Photo of Onslow Stevens

Onslow Stevens

Chief Agent Alec Conrad

Photo of Raymond Bailey

Raymond Bailey

Philip Bormann

Photo of Judson Pratt

Judson Pratt

Agent Maury Saxton

Photo of Jack Kruschen

Jack Kruschen

Agent Pill Schwartz

Photo of Floyd Simmons

Floyd Simmons

Agent Harris

Photo of Kaaren Verne

Kaaren Verne

Mrs. Pulenski (as Karen Verne)

Photo of Richard H. Cutting

Richard H. Cutting

Agent Pomeroy

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

"Johnny" (Ray Danton) is an ex-soldier drafted in by the US authorities in Germany to help investigate the death of one of his old army pals. Not long out of prison, he is keen to clear his name and is soon on the trail of a clever gang who are counterfeiting cash and taking advantage of the post-WWII confusion to, quite literally, make a mint. His search is further complicated by the involvement of both his father - the policeman who gives him the gig in the first place and with whom he has a strained relationship; and with the widow of the murdered man "Maria" (Leigh Snowden) who is as keen to get to the bottom of the perilous mystery and, of course, a romance starts to blossom. There's no getting away from it. Handsome as he is, Danton is as wooden as a plank. He has precisely no charisma and that really impacts on this film that, from a criminal perspective, is actually a little bit better than a routine caper. There's far too much by way of chatter and really very little action until the last ten minutes when the threads start to pull together. A bit more creative casting could have made this more memorable, but as it is - well it's worth a watch but you'll never remember it afterwards.

You've reached the end.