What Price Vengeance
Cast & Crew
Del Lord
Lyle Talbot
Wendy Barrie
Marc Lawrence
Eddie Acuff
Lucille Lund
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Policeman Tom Connors lives with his sister Mary, her husband and fellow police officer Bill MacNair, and their son Sandy, who idolizes his uncle for his prize-winning target shooting abilities. Tom is enamoured of cafe owner Polly Moore, and while visiting her one morning, Davidson, the manager of the bank next door, asks him to help guard the next payroll transfer when it arrives. Tom agrees, but his helpful intentions do him no good when Pete Brower, a hardened criminal who has recently escaped from prison, leads his gang in a daring daylight heist of the payroll. Tom has a clear shot at Brower but cannot bring himself to shoot a human being. He instead chases the gang as they race through the city until their car breaks down near a park where Sandy and Mary are having a picnic. Brower uses Sandy as a shield while his henchmen, Tex McGirk and Slim Ryan, steal another car. Sandy is injured as the gang escapes, and the remorseful Tom holds himself responsible. After learning that Sandy may be blinded for life, and that Davidson has pressed charges of negligence against him, Tom resigns from the force. Soon after, using the name "Dynamite" Hogan, Tom strikes up a friendship with Tex. Tom quickly convinces Tex to become partners, and despite frequent run-ins with the police, the pair commit a string of robberies. Brower is annoyed by Tex's activities, for which the Brower gang is being blamed, and he orders Slim and Dave Green to find Tex and Tom. Brower is impressed by Tom's no-nonsense manner, however, and gives him the name of a fence to contact. While Tex and Tom are trying to sell their loot, they are shot at by the police. Tom escapes to Polly's cafe, where he meets with Inspector Blair, the only person who knows that Tom is actually working undercover to infiltrate the Brower gang. Tom tells Blair that the gang is going to rob a warehouse the next night and then leaves, only to be followed by the suspicious Polly. When Tom returns to the hideout, he finds out that the robbery is set for that night. He gets the information across to Polly, who has just arrived, but his identity is discovered by Babe Foster, Brower's moll, when she follows Polly and overhears her leaving a message for Blair about the change in plans. Babe informs Brower about Tom, and at the warehouse, Brower kills Tex for bringing Tom into the gang. A shootout ensues between Tom and the gang, and as Brower is trying to escape, Tom shoots him. The rest of the gang is apprehended by Blair's men, and Blair nods approvingly at Tom's action. With his courage proven, Tom rejoins the force and is soon happily playing with the recovered Sandy in Polly's cafe.
Director
Del Lord
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Marc Lawrence (1910-2005)
Born Max Goldsmith on February 17, 1910, in the Bronx, Lawrence had his heart set on a career in drama right out of high school. He enrolled at City College of New York to study theatre, and in 1930, he worked under famed stage actress Eva Le Gallienne. Anxious for a career in movies, Lawrence moved to Hollywood in 1932 and found work immediately as a contract player with Warner Bros. (an ideal studio for the actor since they specialized in crime dramas). He was cast as a heavy in his first film, If I Had a Million (1932). Although his first few parts were uncredited, Lawrence's roles grew more prominent: a sinister henchman in the Paul Muni vehicle in Dr. Socrates (1935); a conniving convict aiding Pat O'Brien in San Quentin (1937); a menacing thug stalking Dorothy Lamour in Johnny Apollo (1940); the shrewdly observant chauffeur in Alan Ladd's breakthrough hit This Gun For Hire (1942); and one of his most memorable roles as Ziggy, a fedora wearing mobster in the Bogart-Bacall noir classic Key Largo (1948).
Lawrence, when given the opportunity, could play against type: as the prosecuting attorney challenging Tyrone Power in Brigham Young (1940); a noble aristocrat in the Greer Garson-Walter Pidgeon period opus Blossoms in the Dust; and most impressively, as a deaf mute simpleton in the rustic drama The Shepherd of the Hills (both 1941). Better still was Lawrence's skill at comedy, where his deadpan toughness worked terrifically as a straight man against the likes of Joe E. Brown in Beware Spooks (1939); Abbott and Costello in Hit the Ice (1943); Penny Singleton in Life with Blondie (1945); and Bob Hope in My Favorite Spy (1951).
After that, Lawrence's career took a turn downward spin when he was labeled a communist sympathizer during the Hollywood witch hunts of the early '50s. He was exiled in Europe for a spell (1951-59), and when he came back, the film industry turned a blind eye to him, but television overcompensated for that. Here he played effective villains (what else?) in a series of crime caper programs: Peter Gunn, Johnny Staccato, The Untouchables, Richard Diamond, Private Detective; and eventually made a welcome return to the big screen as a returning exiled gangster in William Asher's underrated mob thriller Johnny Cool (1963).
It wasn't long before Lawrence found himself back in the fray playing in some big box-office hits over the next two decades: Diamonds Are Forever (1971), The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), Marathon Man (1976), Foul Play (1978); and The Big Easy (1987). Sure he was cast as a gangster, but nobody could play a rough and tumble mob boss with more style or conviction.
Interestingly, one of his finest performances in recent years was in television, as a severely ill old man unwilling to accept his fate in a fourth season episode of ER (1997-98). His last screen role was just two years ago, as a nimble minded VP in Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003).
In 1991, Lawrence published a memoir about his venerable career, Long Time No See: Confessions of a Hollywood Gangster that received much critical acclaim. He has also developed a cult following due to his appearances in such offbeat items as From Dusk to Dawn and Pigs aka Daddy's Deadly Darling, the 1972 horror film he directed and starred in with his daughter Toni. He is survived by his wife, Alicia; two children from a previous marriage, Toni and Michael; and a stepdaughter Marina.
by Michael T. Toole
Marc Lawrence (1910-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
This film was also known as Vengeance. According to modern sources, the picture was filmed from 8 March to March 30, 1937, and its working title was Why Let 'Em Live. Modern sources include the following in the cast: James McGrath (Sergeant); Arthur Legge-Willis (Old man); Ernie Impett (Barkeep); Douglas Flintoff (Surgeon); Margo Homer-Dickson (Molly); Larry Howard (Policeman in boat); Rebel Mouat (Bus driver); and Buster Brown and Grant MacDonald (Crooks).