History of Crime films
Crime stories in this genre often highlight the life of a
crime figure or a crime's victim(s). Or they glorify the rise and fall of a
particular criminal(s), gang, bank robber, murderer or lawbreakers in personal
power struggles or conflict with law and order figures, an underling or
competitive colleague, or a rival gang. Headline-grabbing situations, real-life
gangsters, or crime reports have often been used in crime films. Gangster/crime
films are usually set in large, crowded cities, to provide a view of the secret
world of the criminal: dark nightclubs or streets with lurid neon signs, fast
cars, sleazy bars, contraband, seedy living quarters or rooming houses and
piles of cash. Exotic locales for crimes often add an element of adventure and
wealth. Writers dreamed up appropriate gangland jargon for the tales, such as
"tommy guns" or "molls."
Criminal/gangster films are one of the most enduring and
popular film genres. They date back to the early days of film during the silent
era. In fact, even Edwin S. Porter's silent short western The
Great Train Robbery (1903) has often considered a classic hold-up
story and chase film - a movie about crime.
Perhaps the earliest 'crime' film was Sherlock Holmes Baffled
(1900), a 45 seconds long short (released in 1903) that was shown one-person at
a time in hand-cranked Mutoscope machines or nickelodeons in amusement arcades.
It was also the earliest known film featuring Sherlock Holmes. The plot was
about how the famed Arthur Conan Doyle detective, a cigar-smoking gentleman,
was 'baffled' when a black-clothed thief magically disappeared (through
trick-photography) with a sack of stolen goods. Also, The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes (1905), released by Vitagraph (although now a lost film) has
been considered the first Sherlock Holmes film since it was created for a
theatrical audience rather than as a one-person Mutoscope production.
One of the first films to officially mark the start of the
gangster/crime genre was D. W. Griffith's The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912)
about organized crime. It wasn't the first gangster movie ever made, but it was
the first significant gangster film that has survived. Outdoor scenes were shot
in the gangland territory of NYC's Lower East Side with its slum tenements, and
cast members included possible gang members. The story was about a poor,
virtuous, and vulnerable Little Lady (Lillian Gish) who was threatened,
victimized and terrorized by Snapper Kid (Elmer Booth) - the gangster leader
of a gang known as the Musketeers.
Scarface: The Shame of a Nation (1932), directed
by Howard Hawks, a Howard Hughes' produced film from UA, starred Paul Muni as a
power-mad, vicious, immature and beastly hood in Prohibition-Era Chicago (the
characterization of Tony Camonte was loosely based on the brutal, murderous
racketeer Al Capone). Other stars were George Raft (as his coin-flipping
emotion-less, right-hand killer) and Ann Dvorak (as Tony's incestuous sister
Cesca).
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