Contract on Cherry Street

1977
6.3| 2h25m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 19 November 1977 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures Television
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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A policeman devises an unorthodox plan for bringing criminals to justice after his partner is brutally gunned down.

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Director

William A. Graham

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures Television

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Contract on Cherry Street Audience Reviews

Wordiezett So much average
BelSports This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Deanna There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Walter Sloane Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
Charles McGrew In the 1970s, the TV networks put a lot of money into creating their own collection of original films. The rationale was that they were about as cheap as a series pilot (indeed some, like "Marcus Nelson Murders" did become exactly that -- for "Kojak"; "The Night Stalker/Strangler" for the Kolchak series), and did not entail open-ended commitments like a series would.This flick is certainly at the high-end of these (the low-end was things like "The Hard Ride" - - motorcycle-gang members with machine guns in Vietnam, in a low budget, low brow version of "Missing in Action"; the immortal "Killdozer"). Frank Sinatra shows his acting chops again (nearly for the last time, from here on there was only one episode of Magnum PI to be proud of), surrounded by the usual suspects of series TV and made-for-TV-movies (notably Harry Guardino, good as always.) The soundtrack is certainly movie-quality (as were most of this era's TV-movies.)The movie suffers from having an enforced length -- 145 minutes to fill a 3-hour timeslot -- and thus there is painfully unnecessary padding of scenes and dialog, and long traveling shots with the obligatory shoe-leather-sound-effects. But there's a cracking good 90-100 minute movie in here.
bkoganbing Frank Sinatra clearly did not want Dirty Dingus Magee to be his movie career swan song. Seven years after that was released Sinatra did this made for television film Contract On Cherry Street which was good enough to have been a theatrically released film. Sad that the producers did not have enough faith in it. It's also good in that Sinatra turned in a real acting performance and did not rely on his hipster personality to walk through the part.The Chairman Of The Board plays an NYPD police inspector who is in charge of an organized crime unit in the department. His problem is that no one really wants him to succeed because the wise guys have way too much juice and there are too many layers of underlings to wade through before the big guys could ever face justice.Two Mafia families are currently rivals over a stolen car and chop shop racket and after a raid on a chop shop that one of them has, Sinatra's second in command Martin Balsam is killed by Johnny Barnes who is one mean psychotic button man. Sinatra then just blows him away even though Barnes wants to surrender.No witnesses who would have talked would have blamed Sinatra or squealed on him, but Sinatra decides the only way to eliminate these people is for the cops to do their own hit on one of the Family heads and hope that starts a war. Then Murphy's law takes over and anything that can go wrong does.Best performance in the film running slightly ahead of Sinatra is that of Harry Guardino who is one of Sinatra's cops and who hates Mafiosa from when he was a kid and saw his father forking over tribute to these people. He gets a real liking for the idea of being his own hit squad. Also Steve Inwood gets a real nice part and makes the most of it as a junkie informant that one of Sinatra's cops Michael Nouri has.Contract On Cherry Street was filmed entirely in New York City and there are some real nice looks at the Big Apple at the time. I've heard it said that this film plays like an extended episode of Kojak. But I like Kojak.
tigervoice Was this movie ever released on a DVD or even VHS? I'd love to get a copy. I liked it better than "The Detective". I'd enjoy hearing from any body who may know. I thought Frank and Harry Guardino were terrific together. Then again, I have a bunch of friends or were and are in the NYPD. He's gritty (Sinatra) and the plot was "metaphoric" cause we all know there are no vigilante's with badges, right. Nevertheless, being a NYC product I really enjoyed the flick. Perfect? No. But what flick is? I know, the original "Twelve Angry Men". I might add some 60+ year old NYPD Detectives might surprise you with their physical "outwardness". All in all, I'd love to locate a copy of the movie. Thank you in advance.
sore_throat Thoroughly average TV film has Sinatra and fellow cops resorting to murder of gangsters to alleve their frustrations.Early on I thought this would be an above average time, but it soon descends into the routine. Its main problem is that it's inconsistent in its pacing. Plus it is ridiculously overlong.Only recommended to Sinatra fans; personally I got tired of viewing his tough cop bit.