The Big Combo (1955) Poster

(1955)

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8/10
Sleazy gangster-noir tale of obsession and revenge..
dcavallo4 June 2001
Now that DVD is fast becoming the medium of choice for many film enthusiasts, some lesser known, lower budget titles are finding their way to wider audiences.

Joseph Lewis's "The Big Combo" has made this trip to digital, and thankfully none of the film's captivating sleaze has been stripped away in the transfer.

What appears to be a fairly stock story of straight-arrow police detective Leonard Diamond (Cornel Wilde) obsessed with capturing a foreboding gangland chieftain, Mr. Brown, "Combo" is an unusually hardboiled, over the top tale of revenge and murder that will please and perhaps even surprise noir and crime-drama fans.

Over the course of the protracted investigation, Diamond, who has nearly lost his badge because of his stubborn determination, has fallen for the boss's dame -- a society girl gone so wrong she figures suicide is the only way out. But Mr. Brown (Richard Conte, excellent as the 'last-name only' control freak) is as omnipotent and omniscient as a head pit boss in Vegas, taunting and manipulating every one around him with an unsettling equanimity.

He tells Diamond, who is virtually powerless to do anything but temporarily hold the murderous Brown and his men on trivial charges, that "the busboys in his hotel" make more money than he does. Even Brown's right hand man, the hearing impaired McClure (Brian Donlevy)is mercilessly ridiculed for his second tier status.

And Brown is obsessed with his prowess with women as Diamond is with capturing him and wooing his moll. The film is filled with risque sexual allusions as wild as anything from director Sam Fuller.

In one scene, Brown manuevers around his girl, stopping briefly at her lips, but then dropping out of frame, seemingly down past her waist. And Diamond cavorts with a "burlesque" dancer (with a heart of gold, natch) who appears in a skimpy outfit that is titillating even by today's television standards.

But the most ribald bits to make it past the censors involve Brown's bickering henchmen, Fante and Mingo. Fante, played by the aquiline Lee Van Cleef, appears to be a typical hood, but midway through the film the lights come up in a bedroom where the two men have been sleeping in remarkably close quarters.

Later, sequestered in a mob-hideout, the two engage in thinly-veiled homoerotic banter that will leave you howling.

As will some of the other scenes -- torture by drum solo, a Casablanca inspired finale. Throughout the picture Brown and Diamond dance around one another sans gene, to the sound of gunshots and acid-tongued banter.

"The Big Combo" is taut, gutter entertainment, delivered in precise black and white. Even if you do watch it on DVD.
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6/10
And It's Back To The Gutter For Brown
strong-122-4788853 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Favourite movie quote - "You're a beautiful girl, Rita... But stupid."

This bare-knuckles, yet decidedly run-of-the-mill, 1955, crime-drama earned itself some extra points from me for these following 3 things -

(1) The opening scene where character Susan Lowell (in high heels, no less) is frantically running for her very life away from 2 toughs down a smoky, shadow-drenched corridor.

(2) The priceless scene where hottie, burlesque queen, Rita, angrily slaps one of Brown's nelly henchmen across the face with her rhinestone-encrusted handbag.

(3) And, last, but not least - Cinematographer, John Alton's first-rate camera-work, which, at times, was about the only thing that actually held my interest in this, otherwise, unintentionally laughable tale about (stud-muffin) Detective Diamond's almost neurotically obsessive crusade to bring down sadistic, self-satisfied gangster, Mr. Brown, to his knees.

*Note* - The Big Combo was directed by Joseph Lewis, who, in 1950, had directed Gun Crazy.
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7/10
Classic and fascinating gangster movie
ma-cortes24 September 2004
The storyline centers about a persistent cop(Cornel Wilde)who tracks down a mobster(Richard Conte) and his henchmen (Brian Donlevy,Lee Van Cleef and Earl Holliman). He's helped by the gangster's girlfriend and one deputy(Robert Middleton).

The movie has likeness to noir cinema of the 40s and 50s that played Robert Mitchum, Kirk Douglas and Glenn Ford but here is B series.

In the film there are action, raw drama ,suspense, murders and is very interesting.

Interpretation by Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace, marriage in real life, is magnificent, the evil racketeer Richard Conte is top notch and his underlings Donlevy, Van Cleef and Holliman are of first rate.

Cinematography by John Alton is extraordinary ,setting of lights and shades depict this type of cinema and Alton and Nicholas Musuraca are the principal photographers.

David Raskin music, being recently deceased, is nice and atmospheric.

The motion picture is well directed by Joseph H. Lewis

Rating : very good, 7,5/10. The flick will appeal to noir cinema fans. Well worth watching.
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Classic crime thriller with noir leanings and memorable scenes
bob the moo21 December 2004
Police Lieutenant Leonard Diamond is a driven man; he has seen the Organisation grow in strength daily with Mr Brown at its head. He has seen innocents being sucked into crime by the syndicate and he has had enough. With his expenses spiralling out of control, he is put under pressure to close his investigation but his anger at Brown and his love for his girl, Susan, keeps him going. A chance discovery of a mysterious woman called Alicia starts a trail of information that offers Diamond the chance to cut off the head and kill the snake if, that is, he can stay alive long enough to do it.

Although it has been many years since I first saw this film it has stayed with me ever since, a classic crime thriller with elements of noir and some very memorable moments. The basic plot is about a crime syndicate and the cop who is trying to bring it down and this is very well done throughout. The plot is a bit of a mystery in this regard as Diamond tries to build a puzzle with most of the pieces missing but the plot is only a part of this film working as well as it does. One of the main factors making it so good is the consistently tough tone of the material that can be seen in many ways. It has all the usual stuff in the tough characters spouting quotable dialogue with the rat-a-tat-tat rhythm of a tommy gun but also has many tough scenes of brutality, my favourite being the unforgettable execution that takes place in total silence – the perfect conclusion to a scene that had been built up with such tension.

The film adds to this with elements more suited to noir than gangster movies. The "hero" is a deeply flawed man driven more by hate than righteousness, unable to get Brown's girl he turns to a low rent show girl (although it is clear that she is a prostitute) meanwhile we have corruption within the authorities hinted at – it is all nicely twisted, not quite a fully blown noir but it takes elements and blends them well to produce a superb mix. The cast match this with some great performances. Conte gets the headlines because he gets the cool character and the toughest dialogue but for me it is Wilde that makes the film his own with a convincing portrayal of a man who is driven by hate as much as love until, finding neither, he uses a "lesser" woman to satisfy his lust – only for it to sink him deeper into apparent self-loathing. He is a bit wild-eyed at times but generally he gets it spot on with a complex performance that says as much with his expressions as he does with his dialogue. Donlevy is good in a small role and the female characters are well done (for different reasons) by Wallace and Stanton. Lee Van Cleef was a surprise find in a minor role but really the film belongs to Wilde and Conte who really go to town with the chance.

Overall this is not a normal crime syndicate thriller as the title suggests, but nor is it a traditional noir. Instead it is a fine blend of the two with the best elements of each working to produce a classic crime thriller with atmospheric direction, tough dialogue, brutally memorable scenes and great performances. Complex characters and a morally ambiguous hero only helps the film's impact making this one well worth hunting down (can you believe it has only had a few hundred votes on this site? I despair.)
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6/10
Detective Diamond Is A Girl's Best Friend
roddekker7 November 2015
This 1955, b&w, crime-drama had both its good points, as well as its not-so-good points.

Its best point, by far, was its overall look which consisted of many scenes shot in shadowy, partially-lit spaces. This welcome effect often gave the story a more menacing feel to it, beyond what was generally conveyed by the actions of the characters.

As well as The Big Combo having its fair share of impressive camera-work to its credit, it also contained plenty of unintentional humour in a story that clearly took itself way too seriously for its own good.

But, on the other hand - What almost ruined this picture for me was the hideously annoying performance of actress Jean Wallace who played the clueless, blond, gangster's moll, Susan Lowell. Believe me, this woman's portrayal really grated on my nerves, big-time.

Anyway - For the most part, The Big Combo was OK entertainment as far as 1950's crime-dramas go.
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9/10
Near the end of the noir cycle, one of its most stylish, innovative films
bmacv26 May 2003
The Big Combo may be the only film noir ever plugged on the I Love Lucy show (Cornel Wilde guest-starred in the episode which aired April 18, 1955). Coming late in the noir cycle and directed by Joseph Lewis, it seized a position as one of its most innovative and stylish titles. And, with the wizardly John Alton behind the camera, it kicks film noir's distinctive look up into another, rarefied dimension (Alton must have been emulating the Dutch Masters – spare traceries of light limn almost abstract patterns on the screen's primordial blackness).

The story, too, stays a primal one of obsession, lust and revenge. Ninety-six-fifty-a-week cop Wilde lives in a cheap flat across from a burlesque house, one of whose headliners (Helene Stanton) he occasionally `sees.' But his only passion is for nailing suave but savage crime boss Richard Conte. Iin a performance brimming with cool menace, Conte is fond of saying `First is first and second is nobody.' Wilde also harbors half-admitted fantasies of riding to the rescue of Conte's remote and unwilling mistress (Jean Wallace, Wilde's off-screen wife). Conte's so possessive that he assigns an intimate twosome of torpedoes (Lee Van Cleef and Earl Holliman) as her full-time bodyguards (since they're gay, he trusts them to serve as eunuchs). But when they fail to prevent her overdosing on pills, she falls into Wilde's hands at hospital and starts to babble about a woman called Alicia.

Another wild card is Conte's lieutenant Brian Donleavy, over the hill and hard of hearing, who chafes at playing second fiddle; he saw himself as heir to the organization when unseen capo Grazzi `retired' to Sicily. His grudge against his boss makes him reckless, placing the whole `combination,' or combo, in jeopardy. Wilde, meantime, has tracked down elusive Alicia, Conte's supposedly murdered wife (Helen Walker, the duplicitous psychiatrist in Nightmare Alley, in her last screen appearance); only she knows where the bodies are buried and can write her husband's death warrant....

The Big Combo counts as one of the more sadistic instalments in the cycle, but the mayhem and executions are played as big set-pieces, as flourishes; Lewis draws on Alton's full fetch of tricks (and in one memorable instance, on the sound editor's) to highlight but at the same time soften their nastiness. There's a streak of sadism in the casting, too: Both Wallace's attempted suicide and Walker's dissipation bring to mind the actresses' private troubles. Innovative and striking, The Big Combo comes as close as any film in the noir cycle to being an art-house triumph; it consolidates Lewis' reputation as an erratic director who was nonetheless capable – here, and with his Gun Crazy – of pulling off something unexpected yet extraordinary.
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7/10
First is first and second is nothing.
michaelRokeefe1 June 2003
A very good gangster flick and evocative film-noir directed by Joseph H. Lewis. A zealous cop(Cornel Wilde) seeks the aid of a gangster's(Richard Conte) ex-girlfriend(Jean Wallace)in bringing down a crime syndicate. Conte's character is relentless as he rules his corrupt world with murder, gunplay and torture. Lee Van Cleef and Earl Holliman are his minions and Brian Donlevy is a handicapped mentor of sorts. Supporting cast features Helen Walker and Robert Middleton. Terrific lighting and photography make this an exceptional crime drama where shades of gray makes THE BIG COMBO a notch above the ordinary. Note:off-screen Wilde and Wallace are Mr. & Mrs.
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9/10
Another "Lost" Noir Classic
Arriflex123 July 2004
Here is yet another gem from the forgotten noir vault. Director Joseph Lewis trades in the quasi-cinema verite style of his GUN CRAZY(1950) for strictly in-studio work and still hits the jackpot. Cinematographer John Alton works his customary chiaroscuro artistry on a fairly straightforward tale of one frustrated but determined police detective longing to collar one supremely confident crime boss.

Cornel Wilde plays the cop with stolid righteousness (although the lawman isn't above trysting with a leggy striptease artist). But the filmmakers put the main focus on the calculating yet tortured (and torturing) mobster played by Richard Conte. Conte, spitting out many of his lines with measured bile, is brilliant: a smug, know-it-all killer backed by the ever-ready menace of Lee Van Cleef and the studied goofiness of Earl Holliman. (As written, these two bring a very special dynamic to post-World War II crime melodrama). Brian Donleavy is on hand as a washed up but still scheming mob kingpin. And Jean Wallace plays the high-falutin' moll who yearns to go back to her world of piano recitals and afternoon teas but who just can't get enough of Conte's sinister mojo. This low budget but highly effective noir makes an excellent double feature with another cheap but powerful film of the genre, BEHIND LOCKED DOORS. Both films are highly recommended.
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6/10
going after the mobster
ksf-212 March 2021
Cornel Wilde is Lieutenant Diamond, trying to get the goods on a mob boss. his boss comes down on him for spending so much money and coming up with so little. Brown the mobster (Richard Conte, probably best known for Godfather) is cruel, but he's also very smart and doesn't keep books around to be found. so Diamond goes after the girlfriend (played by Jean Wallace) when she ends up in the hospital. it's good. very serious police drama, as Diamond tries to get the goods on Brown. they have him hooked up to a lie detector, which would never be allowed today. wikipedia tells us that as early as the 1970s, there was serious doubt as to the accuracy of using a polygraph. directed by Joe Lewis, who worked at all the various studios. Wilde was nominated for his bio on Chopin about ten years before this. and he also happened to be married to co-star Jean Wallace for thirty years! they made tons of things together over the years.
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10/10
First-rate film noir
dcole-21 January 2004
This is one of the finest of film noirs, unjustly forgotten. John Alton's black-and-white cinematography is brilliant, smoothly playing with light and darkness while dazzling our eyes. This might be Joseph Lewis' best film (it's a hard choice) and the cast is amazing. Fun to see Lee Van Cleef and Earl Holliman play (probably) gay hit men; Brian Donlevy in an unusual supporting role provides heft; Richard Conte is a great, great villain. And Jean Wallace is luminous in the femme-fatale-turned-good role. Catch it if you can.
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7/10
bold film for the era
blanche-210 June 2016
Cornel Wilde stars with wife Jean Wallace, Brian Donlevy, Richard Conte, Lee van Cleef, Earl Holliman, and Robert Middleton in "The Big Combo." Wilde, who was one of the producers, had the idea of turning his wife into a serious actress. She certainly was pretty. For those who may not know it, Wallace was first married to Franchot Tone, so Wilde became their children's' stepfather.

The story concerns a police detective Diamond (Wilde) who is after the head of a far-reaching mob, Mr. Brown (Conte). He's been ordered to stop investigating because he can't find any evidence and also, he is in love with Brown's girlfriend Susan (Wallace) and the department is over budget thanks to his obsession.

When Susan attempts suicide, Diamond is allowed to follow one last lead, which is the name Alicia that Susan muttered in the hospital.

Meanwhile Brown sends his thugs, Fante and Mingo (Van Cleef and Holliman) to stop Diamond. By mistake, they murder Rita, Diamond's girlfriend. Now nothing will stop Diamond until he gets his revenge.

Good noir, with Wilde in top form a a tough guy. I admit he's never been a favorite of mine - he just does not warm up the camera at all. In order to avoid the production code, the sexual scene between Diamond and Rita is cleverly managed, and there are only subtle indications that Fante and Mingo are gay lovers - less subtle once you're aware of it and watch it again.

Helen Walker plays Brown's wife, and alas, the years weren't kind to her due to her trial and bad publicity in the 1940s. Here she's in a character role. By 1968, she would be dead, at the age of 47.

Richard Conte is fantastic as Brown, cruel and mean with no redeeming qualities. He pulls it off perfectly.

Recommended - the photography throughout is excellent, but the final shot at the end is stunning.
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9/10
A Brutal and Twisted Noir
evanston_dad18 December 2006
Cornel Wilde plays a police detective obsessed with bringing down crime lord Mr. Brown (Richard Conte), while hoping at the same time to win the affections of Conte's girl, Jean Wallace, in this tremendously atmospheric noir from 1955. The noir genre wouldn't last much longer (many contend that 1958's "Touch of Evil" is the last true noir), but it went out with a bang, giving us some of its best examples (this, "Kiss Me Deadly," "On Dangerous Ground") in its last years.

Wilde plays detective Leonard Diamond like a man coming apart at the seams. His determination to bring an end to Brown's reign feels as if it's fueled by personal motivations as much as by a sense of justice. This ambiguity in the hero's actions adds to the rotten atmosphere created by director Joseph Lewis, in which the bad guys often have more allure than the good ones. Richard Conte certainly has magnetism to spare; his monotone, machine-gun patter when belittling Diamond for being a "little man" nearly makes you forget that Wilde towers over Conte whenever they're in the frame together. And, despite his chauvinist treatment of her, one can understand why Jean Wallace's character would be drawn against her will to the more virile Conte than to the "impotent" Wilde.

Indeed, the question of manhood -- who has it and who doesn't -- is central to "The Big Combo." It's a theme common to the genre, but is given one of its most overt treatments here. In this twisted world, the ability to inflict pain -- be it mental, emotional, physical or sexual -- is a measure of one's ability to "be a man" and make it in the world. Those who aren't man enough, like Mr. Brown's gay henchmen or right-hand man, McClure (played with just the right amount of vulnerability by Brian Donlevy), are destroyed.

"The Big Combo" boasts arresting black and white images, and a number of thrillingly memorable set pieces (let's just say that imaginative and recurring use is made of a hearing aid). It doesn't beat its kissing cousin from the same year, "Kiss Me Deadly," in my book, but it's an awfully fun ride.

Grade: A
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6/10
John Alton's cinematography is a classic noir example of what can be done with limited means
Terrell-42 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
When the two most interesting scenes involve a hearing aid pulled from Brian Donlevy's ear, I think a good assumption would be that The Big Combo lacks a little something. The plot is simplicity itself. An obsessive cop is determined to bring down a crime boss, come what may. As the cop collects witnesses, the crime boss' two goons turn them into corpses. Eventually, the cop prevails...and maybe even makes a friend of the crime boss' innocent, blond and zaftig girlfriend. In fact, however, I think the Big Combo lacks two big somethings.

First, the movie has a giant, dull center because the two leads, Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace, are two of the most limited actors Hollywood ever gave star roles to. While Wilde might generously be called a limited actor, Wallace, with her little girl voice and intonations, simply isn't an actor at all. For my money, almost all the actors lack any inherent interest. The implied relationship between the two killers, amusingly played by Lee Van Cleef and Earl Holiman, might have been an inside joke in the Fifties, but it now seems simply an excuse for excessive analysis on Turner Classic Movies. Donlevy, in fact, saddened me. It was disconcerting to see this actor, who had earned major stature in Hollywood in his prime, reduced to playing a broken-down, aging, useless crime boss in a movie of this quickie, low- budget quality.

Second, the dialogue is as flat and stale as yesterday's fried egg. It doesn't power the plot. It doesn't make us sit up because of cleverness or pungency. It's as lifeless as the delivery most of the actors give it, especially Wilde and Wallace. Richard Conte never quite made the A list in Hollywood, but he was always a dynamic and forceful actor, and a good one, too. He's the most animated of any of the actors. His role as the ruthless and smooth Mr. Big, always referred to and addressed as Mr. Brown, gives him more latitude to be interesting than the other players. Yet the silly device of having everyone refer to him only as Mr. Brown brings Conte perilously close to being nothing more than a screenwriter's idea of iconic menace.

What's to like about the movie? Well, the plot is hardly original, yet the idea of a Mr. Big eventually brought down by an obsessed cop while people fall by the wayside is usually satisfying. Most impressively, John Alton, the cinematographer, pulled out all the tricks in his bag to give The Big Combo a great noir look. From dramatic spotlights pinning the bad guy against a wall to the flashes of silent machine guns, from Lee Van Cleef's face looking stark and scary to the opening shots of a woman pursued by two killers through dark shadows and blinding lights, The Big Combo is a pleasure to look at. But if all you can say about a noir is that the lighting was great, that might be faint praise.
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5/10
A late arrival in the Genre
krocheav17 December 2012
Having mostly enjoyed Cornel Wilde films, I was anxious to catch up with this rarely screened title. While it kept my interest throughout, I was surprised that by the end, I did not want to keep my recording.

Following a nice main title, the film gets off to an interesting start, but this actually promises more than it delivers. The great 40's noir films had tight pacing, sharp dialog and a multi layered look and feel ~ all this is lacking here. Obviously the producers recognized this, as they themselves dropped scenes from the final cut. Whit Bisel remains on the cast, but not in the film! Even with some segments reduced the film feels much longer than it's 80+ Min's running time. I quite like slow films, but they should never feel longer than they are, and must have strong lines and situations.

Its a good time filler, but don't think it will stay with too many after it's over. Wildes wife Jean Wallace is lovely to look at in the Grace Kelly school of cool blonds. The Black and White print I caught on local ABC TV was very good quality (far better than many of the soft image, and poor quality sound prints pushed out on TCM!~ when will they get it right?)

Many have mentioned enjoying the films use of light and shadow, but this too is obvious and forced, looking more like cheap TV lighting, not the true 'style' of great cinema. The cast tries hard but the lines are just not there for them (substitutes violence for good dialog) OK for the easily pleased, others, don't expect too much. A decade later Wilds 'Naked Prey' while a total departure, is a far better effort.
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7/10
The Big Combo
CinemaSerf14 November 2022
Cornel Wilde is quite good as the detective charged with investigating a local crime boss (Richard Conte) who thus far has proved a bit Teflon. After a few years of this relentless pursuit, he has managed to fall for the hoodlum's lady (Susan Wallace) and his captain deduces that he has become too close to remain objective and so the case is to be stopped. That all changes when Conte's thugs accidentally kill the woman (instead of him) and it all becomes truly personal! It's a well directed, pacy and, at times, suspenseful crime drama from the pen of Philip Yordan that could perhaps have been just ten minutes shorter to tighten it up.
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8/10
dynamite script
chrislawuk28 June 2021
Couldn't help but notice the very similar beginning to Pulp Fiction. Tarintino shamelessly takes from other movies all the time. The boxing match, the girl being looked after by other gangsters for the boss, the girl overdose; ring a bell? Anyway, looks great and has a fantastic script. Ahead of its time in many respects. Its kind of grittier than most other genre entries of the time, but also has all the ingredients of a classic film noire.
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7/10
A Syndicate Coup d'Etat
bkoganbing12 June 2007
Allied Artists which was Monogram Studios and mostly noted for the Bowery Boys gave us The Big Combo and they put together a stylish cast for this noir thriller. The cast is so good they cover up a lot of holes in the story.

The antagonists in this film are honest police lieutenant Cornel Wilde against ruthless syndicate chief Richard Conte. Wilde is doggedly determined to get Conte who's an article as slick as they come. His persistence reminds me a lot of Columbo without the humor.

Conte took over from a former syndicate chief who took a Johnny Torrio like 'retirement' to Sicily. Or what exactly is the real story there and who's this mysterious Alicia that throws a scare into the normally unflappable Conte?

Wilde also has a personal interest in another way as he's kind of crushing out on Jean Wallace who's Conte's main squeeze. There's a club stripper played by Carolyn Jones who's sweet on Wilde and pays for it with her life.

The Big Combo has made the list for cinema of gay interest because of the roles of Earl Holliman and Lee Van Cleef as a pair of gay trigger men who work for Conte. It's something that during the Fifties only a small studio like Allied Artists would have on screen. Today their relationship is rather obvious.

The parts are much greater than the whole and basically what Conte has done is pull a syndicate coup d'etat. But personally as the story unfolds he did a rather sloppy job in covering it up.

Rounding out the cast is syndicate banker Brian Donlevy and Wilde's police superior Robert Middleton. It's a nice noir thriller, but it should have had a much tighter story.
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9/10
Noir and much out of line
NewInMunich2 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I read about this movie from professional reviews long before i could ever lay my hands on it. If it is a rights or license issue i don't know, i would even assume, that as we deal with "mature subject matters", broadcasters felt their discretion was advised in a way, as to keep it in the library instead of showing it. What do we have here : A policemen with a fanatic chase of a seemingly untouchable Mobster, who finds no better way then to chase the unsuspecting girlfriend of the gang lord to get to him, later on pulling the mobsters forgotten wife out of an insane asylum, where she hides and going for her also. A mobster, who is vain, relentless and does not hesitate to kill his 2nd in command and his killer duo, once they pose a risk for him. A special treatment for the cop, whom he gets into his hands involving a hearing aid and hair water. The killer duo, not only being brothers in arms, but also brothers of the intimate kind in life. This is as much, as needs to be told on the story, as i don't want to tick the spoiler mark. Get it, on TV, DVD or whatever available and watch it. Film noir had gone a long way from the likes of Big Sleep or Maltese Falcon to get there. But it was worth the travel and worth for anybody with an interest in this genre to view and enjoy it.
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7/10
A gold medalist in the film noir race
BruceCorneil21 August 2003
A solid entry in the film noir genre.

The major players all do a grand job but keep an eye peeled for John Hoyt as antique shop proprietor Nils Dryer. I always enjoyed this much underrated and sadly over looked actor. The psychological warfare that unfolds between Cornel Wilde as the dedicated but under paid cop and Richard Conte as the thoroughly repulsive hoodlum kingpin 'Mr Brown' makes for an interesting character study.

The title theme of this movie is just SO "Big City U.S.A" circa 1950s and very evocative of the era.

Seems to have got lost in the system over the years. Make it your business to find a copy and you won't be disappointed. A bone fide gold medalist in the film noir race.
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9/10
" I live in a maze...A strange, blind and backward maze". This is a MUST-SEE movie for noir - balancing grittiness and art. Everything comes together here.
declancooley23 February 2023
I titled this with a quote, and there are many such lines throughout; this somehow manages to be a bleak noir with almost Shakespearean overtones, inky black shadows, completely dark in places but shining with memorable silhouettes and unique scenes seen nowhere else. It blends the mundane with the profound in such a skillful way that there is no seam between the two. It packs into its running time the amount a TV series might pack into a full season in terms of dramatic events and turns of event. The cinematography recalls classical painting here and there at a time when the most gruesome exchanges and terrible things are happening. There are reversals and reversals of reversals - but without becoming convoluted. This is a battle of wills between men and equally a battle of women - and of justice - so exquisitely weaving the personal with the universal. And what of the plot - no spoilers but the Big Combo is a criminal organisation swimming in cash while the investigations of the police deplete their budget with zero arrests to show for it - such is the untouchable mastermind at the centre of it. There are moving scenes - and truly shocking scenes - as well as scenes of intelligently scripted moments of intimacy - plus shootouts - all you need - a noir top 10 movie for sure.
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7/10
Richard Conte steals the show as the quintessential tough guy hoodlum.
RJBurke194227 December 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I've always liked Conte in most movies I've seen him. Only rarely does he disappoint. Who can forget him in The Godfather (1972) as the crime boss, Barzini? Well, The Big Combo is a warm up for that later role, it would seem – one that shows just how devious and cold a character he can play as the crime boss, Mr Brown (what's interesting also, is the fact that we never learn Brown's first name).

Arguably, he and Cornel Wilde (as the cop, Leonard Diamond) share equal screen time, although I didn't go the trouble of timing it. So, it's toss up as to whether you think Wilde or Conte is the real star. From my perspective, Conte wins hands down but I think that's because, as a truly evil tough guy, he is able to present a truly stark contrast to the apparent ineffectiveness and frustration portrayed by Wilde with his increasingly desperate attempts to bring Brown to justice – the last point being the whole basis for the main narrative. But there's no doubt: Conte had the juicier role to play with, and he did in spades.

There are film noir overtones with the very effective, very sharp shadows and keyed lighting – to faces, in doorways, in silhouettes and such like. Perhaps, it's a bit overdone, but put it down to the director's enthusiasm, I guess. Where it lacks is with the femme fatales – both of whom don't appear to be of that type at all: Jean Wallace as Susan Lowell is competent but subdued; she's supposed to be scared of Brown but appears to be simply bored most of the time. Helen Walker as Alicia Brown (Mr Brown's long-suffering wife) doesn't appear until late in the movie and resolves one of the two mysteries in this narrative: the one concerning her name. The other mystery concerns the disappearance of Mr Brown's boss, Grazzi, seven years earlier.

The dialog is good, but it's only Conte who makes it great from time to time. The action is also well done – although by 2006 standards, it's stilted – and again it's Conte who gets all the meatier scenes: when he tortures Diamond with McClure's (Brian Donlevy) hearing aid, when he evades McClure's trap and, most deliciously, when he brings his tough hit men (very youthful Lee van Cleef and Earl Holliman) their pay off for a job well done. It's worth seeing the movie just for those scenes alone. And, while on the subject of those two hit men, it's fascinating to see the homosexual innuendo play out between them; it's not usually seen in gangster movies, especially in the fifties.

The main characters are further supported by Robert Middleton (always good to see in drama); Brian Donlevy (a consummate actor and well-known face in many crime thrillers); and the ubiquitous Jay Adler (the character actor's actor, I think) as Wilde's side-kick.

Overall, however, I regard this film as a curiosity more than a successful mystery/thriller like The Maltese Falcon (1941) or The Big Sleep (1946 and 1978), perhaps. But, I'm glad I saw it. And, like I said, it's worth seeing for Conte's performance alone...
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10/10
Late-noir masterpiece
Roman-pc10 January 2023
"The Big Combo" is a lesser-known late noir masterpiece--after trying to finish watching it for nearly two years, I just now got done seeing it finally. And I was glad I did. (Every time I started watching in the past, something or other would come up and I'd never get around to it again--nothing to do with the movie though, as I always found the beginning super intriguing.)

So the beginning: we start with the mob boss's girl, Susan and her attempt to go out/leave on her own. We find out that Brown--the mob boss--likes to keep an eye on her at all times. Seeing her, I wouldn't blame him. She is a looker indeed--but in a robust, kind of able-bodied way--played to a T by Jean Wallace. Wallace is emblematic of the movie in many ways--not big-budget, not super iconic, not well known enough--but that is her and the movie's charm. While better known actresses and movies tend to have smoother operations attached to them-including co-stars and movie sets, both the female lead here and the movie are much more modest. In other words, Jean Wallace is stunning but no Audrey Hepburn--thankfully so. I am sick and tired of watching pencil-thin leading ladies on film. Jean Wallace--and other women in the movie--have hips and shoulders and it was so nice to see that.

Anyway, the movie has many memorable scenes, some of them brutal--including a murder scene of total silence--that at no moment do we feel like we're watching anything extraneous or unnecessary. A nearly pitch-perfect noir.
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6/10
First Is First And Second Is Nobody
ShootingShark30 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Leonard Diamond is a world-weary cop with a big chip on his shoulder about Mr Brown, the city syndicate boss. Determined to bring in this overblown hoodlum, Diamond seems oblivious to his self-destructive behaviour and the risks to those around him.

What's perhaps most striking about this low-budget fifties film noir minor classic is how unremittingly bleak it is. Its hero is a loser of a cop who can't really unearth any evidence and who hangs out with strippers, its villain is a chilling psychopath who takes pleasure in beating and belittling everyone around him, it's populated almost entirely with seedy and cynical characters, and pretty much everyone winds up either dead or irrevocably tarnished. It was made at a time when Blackboard Jungle seemed daring, yet it plays much more like Goodfellas, or the films of Abel Ferrara. It has a few limitations - some of the acting is a bit stiff and the production design is pretty threadbare - but it's flashy stuff with plenty of sourball dialogue and shocking moments. The cast are an interesting bunch of misfits; Wilde was a big star in his day and his company (Theodora) funded the film, Conte (who made several great noir pictures) steals the movie as the Nietzschean head hoodlum, blondie Wallace was Wilde's real-life wife, Donlevy was another gangster pro as well as being the first Professor Quatermass, Stanton really perks up the picture as Diamond's sultry girl Rita, and Van Cleef and Holliman as killers Fante and Mingo are probably more famous than anyone, from movies like Escape From New York and Forbidden Planet. Shot by the extremely talented John Alton (Elmer Gantry), this film doesn't quite make it into the top pantheon of crime classics for me; it comes too late for the classic early-forties period, and it's not quite as stylish or dramatic as the best films of the late fifties (such as Edge Of The City or Ascenseur Pour L'Échafaud). It is a terrific thriller though, and a great timepiece of independent American cinema.
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review for The Big Combo
dfiscaletti816 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The Big Combo was nothing extraordinary, the run of the mill Film Nior/ Gangster flick with dark lighting (this film actually played with lighting which made it enjoyable and is one of its stronger points), harsh noises, and quick movement. It was no surprise to me that this film lacked depth or interest in the story as it followed a predictable format. There were a few interesting parts throughout the film, but it was the acting that kept my attention. Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace do not break character once despite their many roles as they try to please the others and deal with the conflicting relationship they share. These two may have been impressive, but it was Richard Conte who rose above and beyond portraying his character with perfection, convincing the audience he was a true mobster. Although I got a little lost throughout the film the thrilling sexual and actions scenes kept me tuned in. The ending especially grabbed my attention with the combination of lighting, film work, and excitement. However I would not particularly recommend this film to anyone unless the film would fulfill some type of requirement or guideline they were searching for.
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5/10
Mediocre, overrated flm noir
cherold26 July 2020
This decidedly lesser film noir is about a cop pursuing criminal while lusting after Conte's girlfriend.

Cornel Wilde is bland and miscast as the cop, while the girlfriend Jean Wallace cannot act at all. The most interesting character is the criminal, who believes the world is fueled by anger; Richard Conte is good in the role though not great.

The story isn't that interesting, the dialogue is weak and often dumb, and most of the filming isn't especially striking outside of a couple of scenes at a foggy airport. I thought the most notable performance was Helene Stanton as the cop's stripper girlfriend. She had some personality and depth, yet the actress apparently only appeared in a handful of movies in the 50s and then retired.

I'm always trying to find those few good film noirs that I haven't seen yet. This turned out to not be one of them.
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