Home > Crime >

The Get-Away

The Get-Away (1941)

June. 13,1941
|
6.2
|
NR
| Crime

A jailed cop befriends a mob chieftain and stages a breakout with him.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

VeteranLight
1941/06/13

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

More
Chirphymium
1941/06/14

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

More
Sameer Callahan
1941/06/15

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

More
Aiden Melton
1941/06/16

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

More
jacobs-greenwood
1941/06/17

Jeff Crane (Robert Sterling) is a tough guy who leads with his mouth and bluster. For committing a crime, he's shown being processed into a prison run by Warden Alcott (Henry O'Neill), and given a cell with another hard case Sonny Black (Dan Dailey). There are then several typical prison flick scenes (could be from The Big House (1930), also looks similar to the sets used in Brute Force (1947)) including a food complaint riot, started by Crane, who's then put in the "hole" for 3 weeks. When he's returned to his cell, he's earned a modicum of respect from his cell mate.With help from the outside, Crane helps Black breakout of prison. The two escaped cons travel to Chicago where they stay with Moose Jones (Ernest Whitman), a con they knew in prison that was just released. However, when he gets "big eyes" over the reward being offered, Black kills him. Crane and Black then travel to Wisconsin, where Black has a home in a respectable neighborhood, with a servant Sam (Chester Gan).It is learned that Crane is really an FBI agent undercover, working for Jim Duff (Donald Douglas), assigned to freeing Black in order to bag the leader of his gang. Black was wounded in the escape, and Crane must retrieve a doctor Black knows to help. Dr. Glass (Charles Winninger) is a stereotypical physician who helps criminals, he's got a drinking problem.En route to getting Glass, Crane meets Maria Theresa 'Terry' O'Reilly (Donna Reed, in her film debut!), who he reluctantly (what, is he crazy?) helps. Crane, Glass, and O'Reilly are unavoidably delayed on their return and have to spend the night at Mrs. Higgins (Clara Blandick). Crane then learns that Terry is Black's sister, though she hasn't seen him for 3 years, and wasn't aware of his criminal activities. Her nickname for her brother is Dinky.After Black sends Crane to get Glass, he summons his gang from their hideout at Rufe Parker's (Grant Withers) and gives them instructions which distract the police for a while, so that he can recover.Meanwhile, Crane and Terry get closer to one another, even though Duff warns Crane to keep his mind on the task at hand. When Crane returns from a meeting with Duff, he witnesses Black striking his sister causing him to lose control and punch Black, who ejects him from the house and his association. Crane and Terry end up riding on a bus back to town (with noted character actor George Guhl), while Black and the gang pull their next job. She returns home and Crane is fired. But Crane has an inspiration, he uses Glass to help him find the hideout and alerts the FBI to its whereabouts. A shootout ensues and everyone in the gang is captured or killed except its leader Black, who escapes.Will the recognized hero, Crane, and the FBI figure out how to catch Black again? Will Crane be able to romantically pursue Terry, now that she knows he's with the FBI and is working against her brother? I'd expect a Hollywood ending if I were you;-)Directed by Edward Buzzell and Richard Rosson, uncredited. A remake of Public Hero #1 (1935) with a better known cast including Lionel Barrymore, Jean Arthur, Chester Morris, Joseph Calleia, and Lewis Stone. Also in this version though, Roy Gordon plays a prison board member that figures in the escape, Harry Hayden plays a train conductor, Veda Ann Borg plays a girl Black dances with later in the film; all three appear uncredited.

More
mark.waltz
1941/06/18

The "Crime Does Not Pay" series at MGM was a fast-moving collection of shorts, a variety of different situations of the law battling less than law-abiding citizens. Graff, murder, robbery, jail breaks and even an illegal baby racket were amongst the plot lines in this long-running part of MGM's shorts division. What is noticeable about these shorts is the fact that many of them couldn't be expanded past their 20 minute running time, and when MGM did get on the crime racket in their feature films, they weren't as successful as what Warner Brothers had done the decade before with Cagney and Robinson. Even then, Warners was the king of the gangster film, with those two still in the running and Bogart, John Garfield and George Raft more adept than the second stringers at MGM who were given on-screen screen tests in "B" features like this in order to prove their meddle.Here, it is young Robert Sterling playing the lead, and he tries to prove his toughness in prison by kicking his seemingly tired bunkmate out of the lower berth. A violent but comical scene follows, but there's more to Sterling than meets the machine gun. Before you know it, he's on the run after a prison escape with a very young (and non-dancing) Dan Dailey and by some accident encounters Dailey's worried sister (Donna Reed) who has been searching for him. Charles Winninger offers comic relief as a doctor who appears to be bedridden and dying but is most likely recovering from cirrhosis of the liver.Typical plot twists include one of the characters actually a federal investigator in disguise and another character being revealed to be "Mister Big" even though they have been providing comedy all along. "Auntie Em" Clara Blandick shows up briefly as a comic landlady, and there's some amusing dialog exchanges between Sterling and Reed. But a lot of the script features lines of speech which are senseless, as if the whole thing was rushed together. A lot longer than most "B" crime movies which MGM made during this time, and being six times longer than one of the "Crime Doesn't Pay Series" makes this seem stretched out to a needless length, ultimately making this one a major disappointment.

More
sol1218
1941/06/19

****SPOILERS**** Re-make of the 1935 gangster movie "Public Hero" this new and updated version has a 20 year old Donna Reed in her film debut as Terry O'Reilly-a fine Irish lass-who's brother Johnny "Dinkie" Black played by future song & dance man Dan Dailey had crashed out of prison. With a bullet in his chest and fellow convict Jeff Crane, Robert Sterling,the two head out to Chicago to lay low until the heat, law, cools off. Its then that we learn that convict Crane is really an undercover FBI Agent who got into prison and close to Dinkie so he can lead him to the notorious "River Gang" that he's the leader of. Hold out at a flophouse run by fellow but now released convict Moose Jones, Ernie Whitman, Dinkie makes more trouble for himself when in a spur of the moment he guns Moose down when he shows some interest in the $5,000.00 reward he can earn for himself in turning Dinkie in.It's when Dinkie together with Crane get back to his home, a mansion with a Chinese butler, in Scottsford Wisconsin that Crane runs into Terry who at first he didn't know was Dinkie's kid sister, small world isn't it, and falls in love with her. With Dinkie on the mend due to him being treated by part time mob doctor and full time drunk Josiah Glass, Charles Winninger, he now plans to reunite with his gang and get back into business of payrolls robberies which the gang specializes in. That's unless Crane get the word out to his boss in the FBI Jim Duff, Donald Douglas, the gangs future plans and where their hideout is located!Not all the believable in that Doc. Glass who's drunk every minute he's on the screen being able to preform a delicate and dangerous as well as successful, without anesthetic, operation on the near dead Dinkie and bring him back to health better then he ever was before he got shot. What also wasn't at all convincing is Terry who loved her gangster brother would fall and still be in love with Crane even after she find out that he's out to get Dinkie and put him behind bars or, in Dinkie knocking off Moose, even strapped into the state of Illinois electric chair!***SPOILERS*** In the end it was Terry who lead the Feds, or FBI, straight to Dinkie by having him,in disguise, meet her at her job as as a cashier at the Place Ballroom to get some hard needed cash. With the place staked out by some 30 G-Men and Dinkie taking time to have a last dance with a hot looking blond, Vanda, Ann Borg that he met there it didn't take that long for the Boys in the FBI to get the drop on him.***MAJOR SPOILER*** The ultra surgery Hollywood type ending spoiled the entire movie with Terry smooching with Crane after him breaking into her passenger train compartment just moments before she, outraged at him for setting up and having Dinkie gunned down, was going to have him thrown out of it!

More
reve-2
1941/06/20

This is a good little crime movie that is often overlooked. It is not even rated in the Maltin book. But, if you enjoy movies with a nice simple plot about prisons, break-outs, federal agents chasing crime gangs, sister trying to save wayward brother, etc. you will like this film. Robert Sterling does a fine job and interacts well with Dan Dailey and Donna Reed. Dailey's role is that of a hard and tough criminal who resists all efforts to go straight. Donna Reed, as his long suffering sister does her best to reform him. There's a great shoot-out scene that will please action fans and the final ending is handled very well and contains real suspense.

More