They Made Me a Criminal

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'They Made Me a Criminal'

They Made Me a Criminal Theatrical Poster
Directed by Busby Berkeley
Produced by Benjamin Glazer
Hal B. Wallis
Written by Sig Herzig
Bertram Millhauser (uncredited)
Beulah Marie Dix (uncredited)
Starring John Garfield
Claude Rains
Ann Sheridan
Dead End Kids
Music by Max Steiner
Cinematography James Wong Howe
Editing by Jack Killifer
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date(s) January 28 1939
Running time 92 min
Language English
Preceded by Angels with Dirty Faces (1938)
Followed by Hell's Kitchen (1939)
IMDb profile

They Made Me a Criminal is a 1939 Warner Bros. film directed by Busby Berkeley and starring John Garfield, Claude Rains, and The Dead End Kids.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Johnnie Bradfield (John Garfield) is a world champion boxer convicted of murder. He disappeared and is presumed dead. The only witnesses who could have exonerated him were his manager and girlfriend, both of whom have died in an automobile accident. Detective Monthy Phalen (Claude Rains) believes that Johnnie is still alive and hasn't given up the search for him. Johnnie, meanwhile, is hiding out on Grandma Rafferty's (May Robson) farm in Arizona. It is there that Johnnie meets up with some juvenile delinquents, Tommy (Billy Halop), Angel (Bobby Jordan), Spit (Leo Gorcey), Dippy (Huntz Hall), T.B. (Gabriel Dell), and Milty (Bernard Punsly), who are under the guardianship of Tommy's sister Peggy (Gloria Dickson).

Johnnie, using the fake name of Jack Dorney takes Tommy under his wing and encourages him to go in business for himself by buying a gas pump for the farm. He helps the kids raise money by returing to the boxing ring for a match against an up-and-coming boxer. Johnnie sees Phalen arriving at the fight and decides to hide who he really is by not using his trademark stance in the ring. However his determination to help the kids overcomes him and he reveals who he really is, although he is defeated in the fourth round. He surrenders to Phalen, but the detective allows him to remain in Arizona instead of returning to New York.

  • When Dippy is operating the shower controls for Jack, who is showering, he serenades him with the song, By a Waterfall, which was a hit song from the director's earlier film, Footlight Parade.
  • This film also contains the first malapropism of the Dead End Kids/East Side Kids/Bowery Boys series when Halop says Regenerate, ya dope when Hall used the word degenerate. Malapropisms became a staple of these films, with Gorcey using them on a regular basis throughout the series.

As this film is in the public domain, there have been several DVD releases from a variety of companies over the years. The image below is the cover to the Alpha Video DVD release.

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