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M
M

M (1951)

63% User Rating
1h 28min
Crime
Drama
Thriller

"The most gripping motion picture you've ever seen!"

Remake of the 1931 Fritz Lang original. In the city, someone is murdering children. The Police search is so intense, it is disturbing the 'normal' criminals, and the local hoods decide to help find the murderer as quickly as possible.

Joseph LoseyDirector

Cast

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David Wayne

David Wayne

Martin W. Harrow

Howard Da Silva

Howard Da Silva

Inspector Carney

Martin Gabel

Martin Gabel

Charlie Marshall

Luther Adler

Luther Adler

Dan Langley

Steve Brodie

Steve Brodie

Police Lt. Becker

Raymond Burr

Raymond Burr

Pottsy

Glenn Anders

Glenn Anders

Riggert

Norman Lloyd

Norman Lloyd

Sutro

Walter Burke

Walter Burke

MacMahan

John Miljan

John Miljan

Blind Baloon Vendor

Roy Engel

Roy Engel

Police Chief Regan

Janine Perreau

Janine Perreau

The Last Little Girl

Leonard Bremen

Leonard Bremen

Lemke (as Lennie Bremen)

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Benny Burt

Jansen

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Bernard Szold

Bradbury Bldg. Watchman

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Robin Fletcher

Elsie Coster

Karen Morley

Karen Morley

Mrs. Coster

Jim Backus

Jim Backus

The Mayor

Jorja Curtright

Jorja Curtright

Mrs. Stewart

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Frances Karath

Little Girl in Hallway

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Abdullah Abbas

Man in Mob (uncredited)

Fred Aldrich

Fred Aldrich

Sam (uncredited)

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Don Anderson

Speakeasy Patron (uncredited)

Al Bain

Al Bain

Man in Mob (uncredited)

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Benjie Bancroft

Cab Driver (uncredited)

George Barrows

George Barrows

Policeman (uncredited)

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Ivan Bell

Man in Mob (uncredited)

Madge Blake

Madge Blake

Police Station Witness (uncredited)

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Willie Bloom

Man in Mob (uncredited)

Ewing Miles Brown

Ewing Miles Brown

Minor Role (uncredited)

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Boyd Cabeen

Hood (uncredited)

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James J. Casino

Man in Mob (uncredited)

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Michael Cirillo

Bartender (uncredited)

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Bing Conley

Bartender (uncredited)

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Jane Crowley

Woman in Mob (uncredited)

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Russell Custer

Policeman (uncredited)

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Bill Welsh

Dr. Graham (uncredited)

Reviews (1)

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John Chard
John Chard
Rating 70%

June 25, 2019

It could be anyone's child, anyone's, no one is safe. M is directed by Joseph Losey and written by Norman Reilly Raine and Leo Katcher. It stars David Wayne, Howard Da Silva, Martin Gabel, Luther Adler, Steve Brodie and Raymond Burr. Music is by Michel Michelet and cinematography by Ernest Laszlo. Fritz Lang's original film from 1931 is a seriously classy classic, no doubt about it and although making a remake seems to many like birthing the devil's spawn, the 1951 version exists. How great to find that it's a very fine offering, one that was made at the right time (the film noir zeitgeist) and puts its own slant into the mix. Story here has been relocated to Los Angeles, where there's a child murderer on the loose and not only are the cops under pressure to capture the fiend, but also the criminal underworld since there's too much heat being brought into the vicinity of their operations. Narrative is structured in three ways, the operations of the police investigation, the criminal mobsters forming their own plan of seek and eradicate, and of course we follow the despicable actions of the killer, Martin W. Harrow (Wayne). Following closely from the original's template, Losey instils key haunting images and the killer's traits, whilst giving them their own identity within the grimy downtown L.A. locales. That we are in Bunker Hill and taking in such landmarks like the Angels Flight railway and the Bradbury Building, makes for some superb period flavours. Couple these with Laszlo's spell bindingly noir compliant cinematography, and Losey has got atmosphere to burn. Cast are giving good turns, with many noir favourites doing their thing, best of all, mind, is Wayne as the tormented kiddie killer. Getting more screen time than Peter Lorre does in the original, Wayne gives us a different interpretation that works for a high end portrayal of a man at the mercy of his desperate urges. None more so at pic's denoument, where he is cast to the floor and proceeds to outpour his very being. Wayne would never be this good again. It's not close to being as good as Lang's original, and the thread of the crime underworld worrying about their image is just daft. It's also safe to say that there's no deepness on show, there's some reasoning for why Harrow is as sick as he is - and a little snippet of vigilante paranoia, but this does fail to expand upon some serious themes. That said though, this is certainly a worthy entry in the file that contains remakes that hold their own. 7/10

Media

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Mmm.mpg

Mmm.mpg

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