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T-Men

1947

Action / Crime / Film-Noir / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

June Lockhart Photo
June Lockhart as Mary Genaro
Dennis O'Keefe Photo
Dennis O'Keefe as Dennis O'Brien - aka Vannie Harrigan
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
742.52 MB
988*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
P/S 2 / 1
1.43 GB
1472*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
P/S 0 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer7 / 10

A very good Noir film due to its realism and lack of clichés

This film is rather reminiscent of the excellent Alan Ladd Noir film, APPOINTMENT WITH DANGER (about a postal inspector infiltrating a murderous gang). In this case, the undercover work is done by two Treasury agents--Dennis O'Keefe and Alfred Ryder. I really liked these two as leads because despite being far from household names, the acting was excellent and believable. Also, true to Noir, they weren't exactly handsome guys--more like a tough average man instead of the usual non-Noir heroes.

O'Keefe and Ryder play undercover agents who are trying to infiltrate a gang of counterfeiters. It's dangerous work and they can't just arrest people because they have no idea who is in charge. Throughout the film, tough bad guys (such as Charles McGraw) and unflinching but realistic violence is present--as well as an excellent level of suspense. Unlike some Noir films, this one pulls no punches nor does it give way to sentimentality. This is a seldom-seen but exceptional film for lovers of the genre.

By the way, I had one minor complain and that was the terrible narration. My score for the film, because of this, is knocked from an 8 to 7. When the film began, a Treasury official gave an introduction that was VERY stilted and he simply couldn't read his lines well. Then, throughout the film, a different narrator spoke on occasion and just wasn't necessary to the film--it was a minor distraction.

Reviewed by bkoganbing8 / 10

The Work of the Treasury Men

The oldest federal law enforcement outfit going are the Treasury Men, those intrepid folks who see that no one avoids paying the federal duties on various items or counterfeits our money. That was the subject that Director Anthony Mann decided to tackle in the documentary style made famous over at 20th Century Fox in such films as Boomerang, The Street With No Name, and The House on 92nd Street.

Over at Fox it was done for effect. But as good as T-Men is and it is a crackling good film, let's not forget the reason for John Alton's camera work with lights and shadows is because he and Mann were working on a B picture. These guys got creative because they had to. Later on Anthony Mann in the Fifties got some real good size budgets to work with in those technicolor westerns he did with James Stewart. You'd hardly know it was the same director.

T-Men involves treasury agents Dennis O'Keefe and Alfred Ryder going undercover to get a very slick group of counterfeiters. The murder of an informer brings the Treasury Department to the decision to use undercover men. They meet all kinds of criminal types of both sexes and in good noir style the tension mounts before they too become informed on.

Our good guys blend well into the criminal world in their performances. But the outstanding acting in T-Men is done by hit man Charles McGraw and Wallace Ford who is aptly nicknamed Schemer in this film.

This is definitely a film for fans of the noir genre.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca6 / 10

Well-shot noir outing

T-MEN is a slice of film noir that benefits immensely from the direction of Anthony Mann, who crafts what can ably be described as a visual masterpiece. It's a film of shadowy corridors, striking and imposing industrial sets, and grimy streets; foggy and exaggerated, with the look of the characters almost as important as the characters themselves.

The story is nothing special, about a couple of treasury agents going undercover in a counterfeiting ring in order to break it up. But this film has style to spare, style that overcomes the shortcomings of the script to offer up something that feels fresh and engaging. The portentous Raymond Chandler-style narration helps a lot, putting this film very much in its era.

The first half of the film is a little slow, but things pick up in the second with a series of gripping set-pieces. A sauna is used for incredible atmospheric effect, and a simple street scene where a guy is forced to ignore his own wife is highly suspenseful. Inevitably the best scenes are saved for the shocks and sudden violence of the climax. The cast members give assured turns and in many ways this reminded me of a Japanese Yakuza film; it has that level of appealing toughness to it.

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