Vice Squad

1953 "Holds you... like a gold diggin' woman!"
6.7| 1h27m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 31 July 1953 Released
Producted By: Sol Lesser Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A Los Angeles police captain (Edward G. Robinson) ties the case of a slain policeman to a bank robbery, all in a day.

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Sol Lesser Productions

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Reviews

Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
Steineded How sad is this?
Baseshment I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
ThedevilChoose When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
mark.waltz When a police officer is shot and killed after apprehending a suspect in a car theft, all hell breaks loose in the Los Angeles police department. Commander Edward G. Robinson is hellbent on apprehending the killer, and finds that the one key witness (Porter Hall) won't talk. He is under the advisement of his attorney to keep his mouth shut, but it is clear to Robinson that Hall is hiding something. That something is a blonde mistress which the portly Hall fears that a revelation of will end up being revealed to his unseen wife. In the meantime, Robinson also utilizes a local madam (Paulette Goddard) for clues as to the identity of the people involved in this case, while also investigating the claim of an aging conman that a Beverly Hills bank is about to be held up.Poor Hall can't get a break. When his shady lawyer gets him off on a rift, Robinson has him accused of being a masher. Later, he's a public drunk, and more charges follow suit in Robinson's efforts to keep Hall detained. He knows that once Hall and his mistress (Joan Vohs) come upon each other, he'll get Hall to co-operate, and the way he goes about this is very clever. There's a very amusing sequence with Vohs, a fur model, being escorted away from work after modeling a fur for a client where the law-abiding police officer grabs the stoll off of her to hand back to the department store supervisor. Another amusing sequence has Goddard (basically underused but amusing in her few scenes) being taken in by the police while interviewing a "client". She has a very amusing exchange with Robinson in regards to "pick-ups", and you can see that Robinson, the victim in this wisecrack, is very amused by it.Yet, as light-hearted as Robinson's character is, he ain't no sap, and when he does come across the man he believes to be the cop killer, he leaves no detail unexposed as he reveals what will happen to any cop killer as they head to the electric chair. His tongue may be in his cheek as he deals with getting the information he needs from witnesses, but when it comes to protecting his own, he is very serious. K.T. Stevens has little to do as his devoted secretary, but having had an interesting film career up to this time, I thought that it was very important to mention her, as she receives third billing. Unbilled Percy Helton is also memorable as a paranoid visitor to the precinct who has a fear of television. Several great shots of mid 1950's Los Angeles locations (going from downtown to Beverly Hills to Santa Monica Beach) give it a period look that adds to the reality of the drama.
Gavno ...as a police force with no discernible ethical standards or scruples.There's NOTHING the cops here won't do; burglary (to search the records of a mortuary business without obtaining a warrant), false arrest (for jailing the undertaker multiple times to pressure him into telling what he knows), blackmail (for hinting that the undertaker's wife will find out he has a lover), downright police corruption (releasing busted call girls in exchange for information), not to mention knowingly consorting with a known prostitute and operator of a call girl service (the call girl's madam) and not tossing her in the jug! On Robinson's suggestions and orders, policemen commit acts that should be rewarded with 5 years in San Quentin. They should have called this film "Cops Gone Wild"! If this is the LAPD Vice Squad, I'd hate to see what sort of schtick goes on down in Homicide.On the other hand, it's a fun romp through the world of 1950s film noire, with Robinson playing the cool, laid back leader of the Vice Squad. I don't think Eddie EVER put in a bad performance.Lee Van Cleef puts in an appearance at his beady eyed, sinister best. He was a natural born villain even this early in his career.The script is a lot of fun... but it's enough to make Rodney King flinch.Welcome to the corrupt Police State.
ChanRobt If you're old enough to remember L.A. in the early fifties, this is particularly fun. Lot's of location stuff, downtown, Long Beach or San Pedro. And the bank robbery takes place in Beverly Hills on Camden or Roxbury Drive, just below Little Santa Monica Blvd. Edgar G. Robinson is great as always. It's a cousin to Noir, lots of great faces and character acting. They couldn't afford a lot of sets, or any star beyond E.G.R., which is part of the charm of the movie. And if you like Detroit when it still had character, you'll love the great early fifties cars.
basketballpete Excellent cast. Paulette Goddard, basic minor role but still has the oomph. E.G. Robinson never ceases to amaze me, he is always the main force in all the movies he is in, I never tire of seeing him on film. The film did a very good job of developing the day to day business of a major city police station without making the police to appear as super human beings.