| Rogue Cop | |
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Theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | Roy Rowland |
| Produced by | Nicholas Nayfack |
| Written by | Story: William P. McGivern Screenplay: Sydney Boehm |
| Starring | Robert Taylor Janet Leigh George Raft Steve Forrest Anne Francis Alan Hale, Jr. |
| Music by | Jeff Alexander |
| Cinematography | John F. Seitz |
| Editing by | James E. Newcom |
| Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| Release date(s) | September 17, 1954 |
| Running time | 92 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Rogue Cop (1954) is a film noir directed by Roy Rowland, based on the novel by William P. McGivern (1954), and starring Robert Taylor, Janet Leigh, and George Raft.[1]
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Contents
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The film tells of Christopher Kelvaney (Taylor) a crooked police officer who is not timid to take bribes and payoffs from criminals and other nefarious folk. His brother Eddie (Forrest) is a young member of the police force and is honest and uncorrupted.
In a penny arcade, a drug dealer is stabbed to death by a man who claims the territory for himself, and Eddie witnesses a gangland murder. The murderer goes to Kelvaney and asks to buy his brother off. When Christopher Kelvaney realizes that his brother won't change his testimony he tells the mob to leave his brother alone.
An out-of-town button-man is brought in to kill both brothers, but he succeeds only in killing Eddie. His conscience aroused, Kelvaney goes after the mob leaders himself.
Film critic Bosley Crowther gave the film a positive review and wrote, "This is not a new thesis. They've been making movies on it for years. And Rogue Cop is not so exceptional in its construction or performance that it is likely to cause surprise. But it is a well-done melodrama, produced and directed in a hard, crisp style, and it is very well acted by Robert Taylor in the somewhat disagreeable title role...For what it is in the line of crime pictures, there's a lot to be said for Rogue Cop."[2]
Nominations
Tony Tracy, 'Unnatural Law: William McGivern's Rogue Cops' in James Rodgers, Matthew O'Brien (eds), After the Flood: Irish America 1945-1960. Dublin, Irish Academic Press, 2009
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