Murder, Inc. (1960)
7/10
Sordid true crime story brought to grim life by good cast
8 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
For anyone who has read the book by Burton Turkus that the screenplay was based on, the movie is a considerably watered-down version of the ugly events depicted. But the movie succeeds at evoking the grimy environment of Brooklyn hoodlums in the late Thirties and early Forties very well. The leads are adequate and the basic story telling is okay. But what makes this movie worth seeing is the astounding performance by Peter Falk as the hit man Abe Reles. He manages to be incongruously funny, in a way that can genuinely make you laugh, but is absolutely terrifying at the same time. He plays a hoodlum with a grotesquely logical sense of values, who sees life and people through such a distorted lens, that he seems like a creature from another planet. His performance is so uncannily convincing, you feel as if you need to take a shower after watching the movie. The only performance I've seen that comes close is that of Joe Pesci in Goodfellas.Definitely worth seeing for true crime buffs and gangster movie fans, though not totally reliable as history.
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