Sat 21 Dec 2024
A Movie Review by Jonathan Lewis: CHICAGO CONFIDENTIAL (1957).
Posted by Steve under Crime Films , Reviews[14] Comments

CHICAGO CONFIDENTIAL. United Artists, 1957. Brian Keith, Beverly Garland, Dick Foran, Douglas Kennedy, Paul Langton, Elisha Cook Jr. Based on the book by Jack Lait & Lee Mortimer. Director: Sidney Salkow.
This one’s for Brian Keith fans. In Chicago Confidential, Keith portrays intrepid and noble minded District Attorney Jim Fremont who is tasked with both prosecuting union leader Artie Blane (Dick Foran) and later working to prove his innocence. Pivotal to the case are a forged tape recording, the testimony of a local drunk named Candymouth Duggan (Elisha Cook Jr.), and a perjuring witness.
The movie relies on semi-documentary filmmaking (complete with a rather unnecessary voiceover by an unseen narrator) and police procedural tropes to create a suspense-filled motion picture. The themes: unions, racketeering, and the miscarriage of justice.

Although he’s not the movie’s prime star by a long shot, Cook’s character does play a pivotal role in how the story unfolds. His portrayal of a down and out alcoholic in Chicago Confidential reminded me how talented a character actor he truly was. There’s a harrowing scene in which he is taken by mob thugs to an overpass and is thrown to his death. It’s memorable not only for its violence, but for the manner in which Cook carries himself throughout the grim proceedings.

Another character actor of note in the movie is Jack Lambert who portrays one of the mob enforcers. He was in a lot of movies and TV shows, often playing a tough guy. He has memorable features and there’s a pretty good chance you’ve seen him in something you’ve watched.
Final verdict: Overall, it’s not exceptional by any means, but it nevertheless works well enough for a 1950s crime film about union corruption. Recommended for those who find that sub-genre particularly compelling and, as I mentioned above, for Brian Keith fans. He’s good here.

December 21st, 2024 at 11:57 pm
Agreed, good little docu noir wanna be elevated by the cast beyond its means.
Lambert gets a memorable death scene in Aldrich’s KISS ME DEADLY, probably his most iconic of these hench heavies roles.
December 22nd, 2024 at 9:04 am
Director Salkow and producer Robert E Kent were not exactly names to conjure with, but Salkow was a tireless plodder, and Kent showed a predilection for the blatantly trashy, as witness his involvement with movies like THE FASTEST GUITAR ALIVE and THE CHRISTINE JORGENSEN STORY.
December 22nd, 2024 at 9:11 am
As one pf the great heavies of 1950s Noir and Westerns, Jack Lambert ranks with Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson, Jack Elam, Leo Gordon, Lee Van Cleef, and Robert J. Wilke. We’ll never see their like again.
December 22nd, 2024 at 12:30 pm
Someone believes that Jack Lambert’s work and career ranks with Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson, and others is wrong. Not a chance.
December 22nd, 2024 at 6:56 pm
I have a confession to make. Until Jon brought up his name in relation to his role in this film, I do not remember ever knowing him before.
Looking him up online, he had quite a long list of tough guy roles (and a face to go with them), and that ought to be worth quite a bit.
On the other hand (and I could be as wrong as I could be about this), he never had anything close to a starring role in any of them.
So, not a Borgnine or Bronson perhaps, but maybe the equal of a Leo Gordon or Robert Wilke? That’s good company too.
December 22nd, 2024 at 8:25 pm
Not Leo Gordon. And playing less than tertiary parts may be a career, but not one when you see someone’s name and your heart thumps. Gotta see that.
December 22nd, 2024 at 11:22 pm
I could be msitaken about Jack Lambert, especially as there is no place he fits other than as a weird-looking and effective working actor.
December 22nd, 2024 at 11:41 pm
True, Bronson and Borgnine went on to bigger things (so did Lee Van Cleef for awhile), so, no, Lambert doesn’t rival them in that respect, but if you wanted tough guys for an early 1950s movie, Lambert was as sinister as any of them.
December 23rd, 2024 at 12:51 am
Much love for all those great heavies and henchmen. The troopers of US cinema.
Ted De Corsia, Edgar Barrier, Thomas Tessier, Steve Cochran, Frank Faylen, Ken Lynch, Jerome Cowan, Leon Belasco, Harry C. Bradley, Warren Hymer, Jack Warner, Dick Davalos, Mickey Finn, Robert Douglas, Charles C. Wilson, Harry Bellaver, …
All these type of guys constantly getting pushed, shoved around, beaten out, pummeled by ‘the good guys’. No one ever wants to see ’em win. Their brows are too simian, their jaws too prognathic, their skin too swarthy.
It was indeed a different world when great everyday, ‘everymen’ like this could power a Hollywood story on brawn alone. No Bel-Air primadonnas. Most of the time, just ordinary American working men who drifted into cinema.
December 23rd, 2024 at 4:22 am
The Bad Guys in movies had their own odd hierarchy. Some went on to mega-stardom, which was a tragic waste. Back in the 1950s-60s, Actors like Lee Marvin and Walter Matthau would make 3 or 4 movies a year, plus some Television, and steal the show more often than not. Then they became Big Stars, made only one movie a year, and it was usually HELLO DOLLY.
December 23rd, 2024 at 4:54 pm
@ #10, I certainly agree. Imagine what a treat it must have been, seeing someone like Lee Marvin in four different roles per year.
December 23rd, 2024 at 6:10 pm
There is not a chance Lee Marvin or any other gifted professional settles for ‘failure’ as opposed to great success. Thi sis wishful, naive, thinking. Same with Walter, or Clark Gable for that matter.
December 25th, 2024 at 11:18 pm
Lambert fit well in a niche and had a fairly successful minor career in it. I’m not sure you could really even compare him to a Robert Wilkie who had more range and more important roles in bigger films, but Lambert was one of those faces that got work whether he ever shined in anything or not. Western and Crime film fans recognized his face and put a name with it.
I wouldn’t rank him with a John Doucette in terms of success, but he had facial recognition. When the highlight of your lead villain career is “the Claw” in DICK TRACY’S DILEMMA there’s not a lot to say, but he got a lot of work in movies and television and even did 23 out of 42 episodes of RIVERBOAT with Darren McGavin and Burt Reynolds.
His face is at least memorable in THE KILLERS, VERA CRUZ, THE ENFORCER, BEND OF THE RIVER, and KISS ME DEADLY, where, as I mentioned, he meets a memorably nasty end.
Obviously, you can’t compare him to anyone who went on to leading roles in films or broader character parts, but among the multitude of familiar screen villain faces he was sort of middle ground, no Robert Wilkie but no Bob Cason either.
December 26th, 2024 at 4:08 am
#12 Barry Lane: “Wishful, naive” That’s me all over, Barry.