MURDER, INC. (director: Burt Balaban/Stuart Rosenberg; screenwriters: Irve Tunick/Mel Barr/based on the book by Burton Turkus and Sid Feder "Murder, Incorporated"; cinematographer: Gayne Rescher; editor: Ralph Rosenblum; cast: Stuart Whitman (Joey Collins), May Britt (Eadie Collins), Henry Morgan (Burton Turkus), Peter Falk (Abe Reles), Simon Oakland (Lt. Tobin), Joseph Bernard (Mendy Weiss), Sarah Vaughan (Herself), Vincent Gardenia (Lazlo), Howard Smith (Albert Anastasia), David J. Stewart (Louis "Lepke" Buchalter), Morey Amsterdam (Walter Sage), Eli Mintz (Joe Rosen); Runtime: 103; 20th-Century Fox; 1960)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
Based on the true-life book of lawman Burton Turkus, the mob story is played against the fictional account of a showbiz couple, Eadie (Britt) and Joey Collins (Whitman), being intimidated by the mob. This weary crime story is about a national crime syndicate, headed by Louie Lepke and Albert Anastia. It is set during the 1930s and tells about mobster Lepke (Stewart) hiring hit man Abe Reles (Falk), the leader of the Brownsville gang, to handle contract killings exclusively for him and the mob.
When nightclub singer Joey can't pay back the $300 loan to Abe Reles, he's forced into working for the mobster to pay the debt back. He fingers Walter Sage (Amsterdam), a Catskill nightclub owner and comedian, who is involved with illegal slot machines and has tried to shake-down the mob for a partnership. This is Reles' first contract for the mob, as he fulfills the contract by sticking an ice pick in the comic's guts.
The story is seen through the eyes of vicious hit man Reles, who says the reason we have hands is to take things. It is also seen through the eyes of the scared showbiz couple, Joey and Eadie, who can't get rid of Reles from their life -- no matter what they do. He sets them up in an apartment where the mob stashes stolen goods, and when Lepke needs a hiding place from Special Prosecutor Thomas Dewey, he stays with the couple. In this apartment he orders his trusted henchman, Mendy Weiss (Bernard), to rub out a key witness, Joe Rosen (Mintz). Lepke stole Rosen's trucking business from him, and he has info on him that could send him away for a long time. When Mendy tells Lepke that he shot the candy store owner in the back of the head as arranged, Joey overhears that. His testimony will be used to send the crime chief to the electric chair.
The crime story comes to a climax when tough Brownsville police Lt. Tobin (Oakland) and the new Special District Attorney Burton Turkus (Morgan), crack down on the Brownsville gang and get Reles to sing against the mob in a trade for immunity.
The best thing about the film was Falk's tough-guy performance. Otherwise, everything was routine.
REVIEWED ON 7/18/2001
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ
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