The Angels Wash Their Faces
The Angels Wash Their Faces | |
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File:Poster of The Angels Wash Their Faces.jpg
Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Ray Enright |
Produced by | Max Siegel |
Written by | Michael Fessier Niven Busch Robert Buckner |
Starring | Ann Sheridan Billy Halop Bernard Punsly Leo Gorcey Huntz Hall Gabriel Dell Bobby Jordan Ronald Reagan Bonita Granville Frankie Thomas Henry O'Neill Eduardo Ciannelli |
Music by | Adolph Deutsch |
Cinematography | Arthur L. Todd |
Edited by | James Gibson |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release dates
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Running time
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86 minutes |
Language | English |
The Angels Wash Their Faces is a 1939 Warner Bros. film directed by Ray Enright and starring Ann Sheridan, Ronald Reagan and the Dead End Kids.
Contents
Plot
Gabe Ryan is released from reform school and is taken to a new house by his sister Joy to start a new life where no one knows of his past. However, Gabe immediately joins the Beale Street Termites gang, and meets gangster William Kroner, who accuses Gabe of starting a fire at one Kroner's his properties. Alfred Martino, the actual arsonist, uses the opportunity to frame Gabe for other fires. He torches one of his apartment complexes so that he can collect the insurance money, but one of the kids named Sleepy is killed in the fire.
Patrick Remson, the assistant district attorney, tries to prove Gabe's innocence. His motives are not only to prove Gabe's innocence but also to get closer to Gabe's sister. Joy has devoted her life to helping Gabe and neglects her other interests such as rallying against city-government corruption, which pleases Martino. However, Gabe is found guilty and sentenced to prison.
The other boys, led by Billy, try to help Gabe. Billy runs for mayor and wins. He has Kroner arrested for a small infraction and sends him to jail. Billy and the rest of the gang interrogate Kroner and try to force him to admit that Gabe is innocent, but Kroner does not budge until he is shown proof that his accomplices, Martino and the fire chief, are planning to leave the country. He confesses and Martino and the chief are arrested and sent to prison.
Cast
The Dead End Kids
- Billy Halop as Billy Shafter
- Bobby Jordan as Bernie Smith
- Leo Gorcey as Leo Finnegan
- Gabriel Dell as Luigi Batteran
- Huntz Hall as Huntz Gartman
- Bernard Punsly as Luke 'Sleepy' Arkelian
Additional cast
- Ann Sheridan as Joy Ryan
- Ronald Reagan as Patrick Remson
- Bonita Granville as Peggy Finnegan
- Frankie Thomas as Gabe Ryan
- Margaret Hamilton as Miss Hannaberry
- Marjorie Main as Mrs. Arkelian
- Grady Sutton as Gildersleeve (mayor's secretary)
- Aldrich Bowker as Turnkey
- Cy Kendell as Hynes
- Henry O'Neil as Ramson Sr.
- Eduardo Ciannelli as Martino
- Burton Churchill as Mayor Dooley
- Minor Watson as Maloney
- Jackie Searle as Alfred Goonplatz
- Bernard Nedell as Kramer
- Dick Rich as Shuffle
- William Hopper as Photographer (uncredited)
Production
The Angels Wash Their Faces was filmed under the title The Battle of the City Hall.[1] It was changed to reference the title of the unrelated film Angels with Dirty Faces,[2] which also starred Ann Sheridan and the Dead End Kids along with James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart and had been released the previous year.
Reception
Variety wrote that although Ray Enright sacrificed "plausibility for action," he had "directed with an eye for the spectacular, including a thrilling fire scene and a dramatic courtroom sequence" and never let "the swift pace ease" while the "screenplay holds no voids in the rapid-fire plot tempo."[1]
Home media
The film was released on DVD by Warner Bros. on November 10, 2010.
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Angels Wash Their Faces at IMDb
- The Angels Wash Their Faces at the TCM Movie Database
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with short description
- Pages with broken file links
- 1939 films
- English-language films
- American crime drama films
- American black-and-white films
- 1930s English-language films
- 1939 crime drama films
- Warner Bros. films
- Films directed by Ray Enright
- Films scored by Adolph Deutsch
- 1930s American films