Road Gang

1936 "They're Fugitives From a ROAD GANG ... and They'll Never Go Back Alive!"
6.3| 1h1m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 28 March 1936 Released
Producted By: First National Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Info

A crusading young reporter planning a series of articles about a corrupt politician is framed for a crime and sentenced to serve five years at a prison farm.

Genre

Drama, Crime

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Director

Louis King

Production Companies

First National Pictures

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Road Gang Audience Reviews

Cubussoli Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
Solemplex To me, this movie is perfection.
Fatma Suarez The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
kapelusznik18 ****SPOILERS*** Crusading investigating reported Jim Larrabie, Donald Wood, and his friend Bob Gordon,Carayle Moore Jr, are railroaded into prison by corrupt politician J.W Moett, Joe King, who for some strange reason his name-Mollet-is bleeped out everything it's mentioned in the movie? That in the end leads to a prison revolt by the inmates whom Moett ordered to be gassed to keep them from talking in what he'd been doing to them in the inhuman treatment his prison guards subject them too. That's when the incorruptible attorney general William Davidson shows up at the prison to see what's going on there.It was Jim's girlfriend Barbara Winston, Kay Linaker, who informed Davidson about the inhuman conditions and practices at the prison, especially the coal mine connected to it, that the unmentionable J.W Moett was running. In an attempt to cover up his crimes Moett orders the prison warden Grayson, Charles Middelton, to seal the mine and tear gas the inmates to death and make it look like a tragic accident. This has Jim lead a prison or mine revolt that has the "doomed" inmates break out of the mine and confront Grayson who after acting tough pi**ed his pants and spills the beans on his boss Moett as well as his #1 henchman paid off-by Moett- attorney as well as Barbara's dad George Winston! It was Jim's undercover reporting that brought Moett's reign of terror to an end. But he paid a steep price for doing it with his good friend Bob Gordon losing his life when he was electrocuted with 11,000 volts of electricity trying to escape over an, like in a Nazi concentration camp, electrified fence. That doesn't even count the dozen of inmates that ended up killed working in the coal mine that was as bad as any Soviet Gulag. What that trio of criminals Geroge Winston J.W Mott & Wardon Grayson got in being put behind bars was a lot less then what they did in their inhuman treatment of those they abused in the prison system that they ran.
mark.waltz While Donald Woods doesn't end up a fugitive from a chain gang in this similar "B" follow-up to the classic 1932 Paul Muni drama, he does fight injustice with the same fervor, in this case a powerful man who happens to be the stepfather of the woman he loves. Going against the grain of Henry Neill's desire for political power, Woods ends up being accused of grand larceny, and just as he is being put into prison, an escape attempt erupts and Woods and pal Carlyle Moore Jr. are forced into it against their will. This couldn't please O'Neill more and fake defense by the attorney he hires for them puts them on a chain gang, first on the rock pile, and later for Woods the darkened confinement of a mine which he is warned means certain death. Supportive prisoners and the determination of girlfriend Kay Linaker to get him off results in a confrontation between the prison officials under O'Neill's thumb and the men trapped in the mines with teargas surrounding them.Certainly not in the class of the earlier "A" film which was considered by some to be one of the first film noir, "Road Gang" is still pretty gripping considering its low budget and lack of "A" list stars. Woods never looks like he's been working on a chain gang, always with hair perfectly shaped and certainly no dirt on his face. There's a frightening scene of an escape attempt that results in a horrific death, and a funeral sequence of the victim repeats "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot", earlier heard being sung by unseen black members of the gang, obviously segregated from the white prisoners. So while this might not be as gripping as the film that obviously inspired it and the string of other Warner Brothers films bemoaning the fate of those forgotten men during the depression, it has some moments that are still pretty intriguing. Other than O'Neill, the villains seem pretty black and white, however, without the shades of gray that make them seem more human and thus much more realistic.
dougdoepke A reporter uncovers a network of corruption that extends to the penthouses and prisons of a southern state.MGM may have gussied up the Depression era with glamorous escapism, but not so Warner Bros. WB liked to say their stories were ripped from the headlines of the day. Their writers operated from street level and not the penthouse top, as this programmer clearly shows. Prison conditions could be abominable at a time when tax monies had dried up along with businesses. Thus prison movies like the best known one, I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (932), were popular with straitened audiences of the day.There are many good touches in Road Gang—the pin-pricked message, the tumbling coal stope, the artful safe-cracker. Note too, how the scheme reporter Larrabee (Woods) uncovers goes all the way to the top. I'm sure audiences of the day enjoyed indicting the rich and powerful. Nonetheless, the movie lacks the fire needed to lift it from the merely routine. Woods is sturdy and likable, but lacks the intensity needed to drive the plot in a memorable way. Also, that superb villain Charles Middleton (mine boss) curiously underplays his key role, such that no sparks are lit there, either. My guess is that director King was not much engaged with the material. His story direction is competent, but nothing more. Thus the narrative unfolds in interesting but not gripping fashion, which I suspect is why it's omitted from Maltin's film guide. Too bad WB didn't get Cagney for the lead role or Mike Curtiz to direct it.
Arthur Hausner The was one of many Warner Bros. movies of the 30's about abysmal prison conditions and social injustice due to political corruption. It's a B picture without any big stars, but easy to watch, with Donald Woods as the reporter framed by Joe King and Henry O'Neill for trying to expose their corruption. I had a hard time accepting O'Neill as a baddie since he almost always plays a congenial sort. The prison scenes were excellent, especially with Harry Cording (the guard with the whip) making a terrific heavy. I also enjoyed seeing Marc Lawrence uncharacteristically playing a friendly convict.Since I'm interested in credits, there were two items I noted. First, Joe King's character name is listed as Moett, but the AFI Catalogue mentioned that contemporary reviews listed his name as Metcalfe. His name is altered in the soundtrack at least a dozen times, where the "calfe" is blanked out, and it is very noticeable. Why the change was made is not known. Second, when the police radio dispatcher Frank Faylen reports about jailer Tom Manning's death, he says his name is "Bill Huber." But when you see the name in the newspaper, it is "W.B. Hefflin." Our forgetful filmmakers strike again!