The George Raft Story (1961) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Very Loosely Based
bkoganbing22 June 2012
I doubt that George Raft will ever get his real story out there now that he's been gone since 1980. That he grew up in the gangster culture of the teens and Roaring Twenties in New York is certainly the case and the film reveals that he never drank. Probably a good thing for his liver that he did not indulge in the bathtub liquor during Prohibition. Maybe why he lived 87 years, the last 20 or so in some dire straits.

But after losing everything he made in Hollywood and after getting with barely a change of clothes from revolutionary Havana in 1959 this man needed a stake. So he sold the story of his life to B studio Allied Artists and the result was The George Raft Story.

Unfortunately too many people were still alive and names were changed to protect some not very innocent. Owney Madden, Meyer Lansky, Lucky Luciano from the gangster world, Norma Shearer, Betty Grable, Virginia Pine, Marlene Dietrich from Hollywood.

Most of all there was George Raft's wife Grayce Mulrooney. He might have married any or all of those women whom he was linked to at times, but he married Ms. Mulrooney back in the Twenties and as she was a Catholic she would not grant him a divorce. She died in 1971 and she's most important factor missing from this film.

Frank Gorshin plays the part of another man very much alive, Mack Gray. Check his credits on this site, you'll find a lot of him in Raft films, but others as well. Gray was Raft's retainer from New York days and he was a mysterious individual. His nickname was Killer and no one ever knew how much truth there was in that nickname.

Among the women in this film that were involved with Raft are Jayne Mansfield, Julie London, and Barrie Chase. Jayne Mansfield is supposed to be Betty Grable, but a good thing she didn't use her real name or Grable would have sued.

Ray Danton played Raft and not badly, but he reminded me more of Joe Mantegna playing George Raft in the Warren Beatty classic Bugsy. As for Ben Siegel as much as could be told was in this film. The relationship is far more clearly delineated in Beatty's film.

Another 20 years we might have gotten the unvarnished version of George Raft's life. This one is real loosely based and George needed the money.
15 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Just for the music
Gerald-528 December 2001
A somewhat cardboardy and flat performance from everyone. I would have rated it less than 5 if it hadn't been for the music. But the dancing and some of the singing was excellent - a lot of effort had been put into setting the routines into the correct period. So, good marks for that, but not for anything else. And what a corny inconclusive ending.
15 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
ok biopic of George Raft - The George Raft Story
arthur_tafero7 July 2023
This film has poor production values, and actors who are miscast. How could you possibly have the best Jimmy Cagney impersonator in history in this film and not have him cast as Jimmy Cagney? Raft was in a few films with Cagney and was from the same part of the city as Cagney on the lower east side. It would have been a natural for some interesting scenes. Most of the scenes (except the well-choreographed dancing numbers - the lead actor couldn't act, but he sure could dance) were predictable and overwrought, not to mention highly unlikely. Some of it was accurate, but most of the film is lost in Hollywood fantasy. Only worth viewing for research.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Surprising
Dweezilaz27 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I had expected this film to be a standard, clichéd Hollywood On Hollywood movie and was prepared to dump it if it was as dumb as I expected.

Surprising that it had pretty exceptional entertainment value and a very good cast.

As a period piece set in the late twenties I expected the usual 6os clothes and make-up, but for the most part, the details were pretty good. Minus a couple of bouffants and a couple of women in that cast who appeared to have been teleported from 1959 with their flips. Think Laura Petrie style in Dick Van Dyke.

Poor directing showed in Jayne Mansfield's scenes. One of the key things an actor learns is to communicate his lines clearly so the audience understands what the actor is saying. While it isn't the director's job to teach a professional how to act, for the sake of the film, one would expect that slowing down Jayne's speech and diction would have been a priority.

Jayne Mansfield was a relatively toned down version of herself, but still self absorbed in trying to be sexy rather than delivering a character portrayal. As such, she really sucked at portraying a living breathing human being.Jayne Mansfield playing Jayne Mansfield playing a character named Lana.

Julie London was quite good both as an actress and singer. Her scenes were natural and sincere.

Lots of period music, rather than studio schlock, dancing and an upbeat and clever number by Barbara Nichols that was a standout.

Glad I didn't dump it before I gave it a chance. Lots of fun.Maybe because I didn't expect it to be some sort of serious and definitive biography of George Raft made it the harmless entertainment I found it to be.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Paint by the numbers Hollywood biography of a controversial star.
mark.waltz7 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Several months ago, I watched the gangster movie "The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond" starring Ray Danton as the 20's gangster involved in the murder of NY top don Arnold Rothstein, and was surprised by how artificial it felt, with its early 60's hairstyles and atmosphere pretending to be roaring 20's New York. That same feeling came over me with "The George Raft Story" (also starring Danton), which takes place right around the same era through the late 50's. Once again, women avoid permanent waves and go for beehives, which at once is an indication that details have been avoided. The story follows Raft's rise from dancer to underworld trainee to movie extra who ends up landing a small part, then rises to stardom after a supporting role in "Scarface". His career falls apart after his friendship with Bugsy Siegel is revealed, he ends up in Cuba during a rebellion, and comes back to Hollywood as a character actor, offered a supporting part as a gangster in "Some Like It Hot". No real plot, just basic facts, and nothing exciting. Ray Danton isn't an actor I find very appealing. His characters tend to come off as slimy rather than likable, sort of a sleazy gigolo feeling. Brief appearances by such gangsters as Bugsy Siegel and Al Capone don't really capture enough credibility. Only a brief appearance by Barbara Nichols as Texas Guinan shows any excitement. I didn't really care for the character of a fictional starlet played by Jayne Mansfield. As an actor, the real George Raft was a lot more exciting than what Danton makes him out to be, and the whole film seems pointless.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Bad
valstone5226 February 2020
George raft was only 5 feet 7 ray Danton 6 feet. How was he chosen for this part?? Also raft was stocky. He must have been friends with the producers.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Women's costumes and hairstyles
gelashe31 May 2016
I was intrigued to learn about George Raft's life so I watched it.

I Googled him while I was watching. I learned about him turning down major Warner Brother roles and thought they could have focused on that a little more. It was quite sad that for an actor who did great gangster stuff from the 30's to the 40's that his last great movie was Some Like it Hot where he played a parody of himself and that he was relegated to a greeter at a Havana casino which went down south due to Castro's overthrow of the government.

Similar to Hogan's Heroes as far as the wrong era being used for the female actors, Why were behives and long flowing hair as well as sixties style dresses and shoes used? I was so focused on that that the movie was actually distracting.

That was the only thing I got out of the movie.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Superb ensemble cast
hilljayne16 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I don't understand why 1. this film is not more popular today and 2. it got negative reviews. It is a great ensemble piece with particularly superb performances by Ray Danton as George Raft and Jayne Mansfield as Lisa (a fictionalized character based on Betty Grable). Also noteworthy are Julie London and Barbara Nichols in an amusing musical number. The fact is that Raft sold the rights to his life story because he needed the money, throughout his life he was plagued by financial problems and this film does a good job of explaining why. So naturally Hollywood uses its "poetic license" and adds a bit of its own illusion to his story. The movie has some great dancing in it and every effort was put into the choreography and it pays off. I can only hope a long awaited DVD will be released as I have a third rate VHS copy of this film. Jayne and Ray have a lot of good chemistry together and a nice "featured role" is Frank Gorshin as Raft's sidekick.
9 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
It IS a story...
JasparLamarCrabb23 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
1000% inaccurate but still wildly entertaining. It's a standard Hollywood biopic (albeit one whose subject was still very much alive) that sticks closer to feel good fiction than anything approaching reality. Ray Danton is George Raft and he's terrific in the film's first half, fighting and hoofing his way to the top of the New York rackets. When the film shifts to Hollywood, it skirts camp as it attempts to portray Raft as some sort of acting wunderkind when in fact his talents were pretty much limited...to fighting and hoofing. The direction by Joseph M. Newman is pretty pedestrian, but the colorful supporting cast really livens things up: Julie London; Frank Gorshin; Robert Strauss; Barrie Chase. Jayne Mansfield steals her scenes as a sort of wise-cracking Greek chorus, calling out Danton on his inflated ego and meager talents. She's priceless. Neville Brand pops up briefly as Al Capone.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed