Watched: 04/06/2026
Format: Amazon Prime
Viewing: Second
Director: Robert Wise
So, this is the second time I watched this particular film. Here's the first. Apparently just before COVID hit.
A lot of what I'd say is in that first write-up. But to recap:
The story is about an editor at a small-ish town newspaper figuring out that (a) the mob has moved in on his town and taken over the penny ante gambling operation bringing it into a combination and (b) the people of his town are maybe way more invested in a bit of low-stakes gambling than who gets the house cut.
Our hero, John Forsythe, is pulled in when a private detective who tired to tell him about the racketeers is killed. Then, a key witness is murdered and its made to look like a suicide.
The power of the press is quashed when local business interests pull their advertising, threatening the paper's financial stability.
However, good 'ol real-life Senator Estes Kefauver has established an anti-mob task force, and Our Hero sees this as his salvation. Kefauver, a ridiculous publicity hound, signed on *after* the movie had been shot, and added himself to the movie.
I think in 2026, the movie is a curious artifact, and not just because it reminds you Kefauver may be remembered beyond his expiration date thanks to his publicity stunts. But also, in the past decade apparently we have up on making gambling illegal and sports books exist very profitably online. There's even sports books right inside many professional sports facilities.
Anyway, really excited about the epidemic of sports betting that's out there ruining lives. (We really need to take a hard look at our weirdo culture of 24/7 sports talk and sports books available at the touch of a button.)
As a Robert Wise movie, first - it's from his production company, Aspen Pictures. The budget isn't what Wise was playing with at the major studios, but his talent is still absolutely there. He's getting the most out of the talent on hand (most of whom you won't know) and there's some great cinematography that really leans into the tension.
It really is interesting as it sort of refuses to have a single heavy at the center of the story, and instead is more of a crippling realization that when crime gets its hands into the right places and everyone wins, rooting out the problem is incredibly hard. Who do you even go for? If even the clergy thinks it's impossible to get their parishioners to quit the gambling or turn away from what they make on book? Seems bad. And I'm not sure if the Federal Government really is the magic bullet solution the movie presents.

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