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Kansas City Confidential
Kansas City Confidential
An ex-convict sets out to uncover who framed him for an armored car robbery.
rating
7.1
runtime
100 min

Release

1952-11-11

Genres

Cast

John Payne
John Payne
as Joe Rolfe
Coleen Gray
Coleen Gray
as Helen Foster
Preston Foster
Preston Foster
as Tim Foster
Neville Brand
Neville Brand
as Boyd Kane
Lee Van Cleef
Lee Van Cleef
as Tony Romano
Jack Elam
Jack Elam
as Pete Harris
Dona Drake
Dona Drake
as Teresa
Mario Siletti
Mario Siletti
as Tomaso
Howard Negley
Howard Negley
as Andrews
Carleton Young
Carleton Young
as Martin
Don Orlando
Don Orlando
as Diaz
Ted Ryan
Ted Ryan
as Morelli
Orlando Beltran
Orlando Beltran
as Porter (uncredited)
Ray Bennett
Ray Bennett
as Prisoner (uncredited)
Chet Brandenburg
Chet Brandenburg
as Robbery Spectator (uncredited)
Barry Brooks
Barry Brooks
as Player (uncredited)
Charles Cane
Charles Cane
as Detective Barney (uncredited)
Edward Coch
Edward Coch
as Airline Clerk (uncredited)
James Conaty
James Conaty
as Man at Craps Table (uncredited)
Tom Dillon
Tom Dillon
as Policeman (uncredited)
George Dockstader
George Dockstader
as Policeman (uncredited)
Paul Dubov
Paul Dubov
as Eddie (uncredited)
Paul Fierro
Paul Fierro
as Paul Garcia (uncredited)
Eddie Foster
Eddie Foster
as Shooter (uncredited)
Dick Gordon
Dick Gordon
as Casino Patron (uncredited)
Tom Greenway
Tom Greenway
as Policeman (uncredited)
William Haade
William Haade
as Detective Mullins (uncredited)
Al Hill
Al Hill
as Stickman (uncredited)
Harry Hines
Harry Hines
as News Vendor (uncredited)
Paul Hogan
Paul Hogan
as Bouncer (uncredited)
Don House
Don House
as Policeman (uncredited)
Vivi Janiss
Vivi Janiss
as Mrs. Rogers (uncredited)
Helen Kleeb
Helen Kleeb
as Mrs. Crane (uncredited)
Paul Kruger
Paul Kruger
as Tough Detective (uncredited)
Mike Lally
Mike Lally
as Stickman (uncredited)
Roger Moore
Roger Moore
as News Vendor's Customer (uncredited)
House Peters Jr.
House Peters Jr.
as Policeman (uncredited)
Lee Phelps
Lee Phelps
as Jailer (uncredited)
Sam Pierce
Sam Pierce
as Workman (uncredited)
Paul Ravel
Paul Ravel
as Casino Patron (uncredited)
Joey Ray
Joey Ray
as Houseman (uncredited)
Carlos Rivero
Carlos Rivero
as Shooter (uncredited)
Ric Roman
Ric Roman
as Rick (uncredited)
Frank J. Scannell
Frank J. Scannell
as Stickman (uncredited)
Sam Scar
Sam Scar
as Player (uncredited)
Jack Shea
Jack Shea
as Policeman (uncredited)
Charles Sherlock
Charles Sherlock
as Stickman (uncredited)
Brick Sullivan
Brick Sullivan
as Policeman (uncredited)
Charles Sullivan
Charles Sullivan
as Player (uncredited)
Phil Tead
Phil Tead
as Mr. Collins (uncredited)
Archie Twitchell
Archie Twitchell
as Police Dispatcher (uncredited)
George D. Wallace
George D. Wallace
as Olson (uncredited)
Kay Wiley
Kay Wiley
as Woman (uncredited)
Jeff York
Jeff York
as Capt. McBride (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

John Chard

Unlucky Joe And The Torn In Half Kings. Kansas City Confidential (AKA: The Secret Four) is directed by Phil Karlson and written by George Bruce and Harry Essex. It stars John Payne, Preston Foster, Coleen Gray, Neville Brand, Jack Elam and Lee Van Cleef. Music is by Paul Sawtell and cinematography by George E. Diskant. Plot sees four robbers hold up an armoured truck and get away with over a million dollars. Sadly for everyday and ordinary Joe Rolfe (Payne), he's set up and accused of being involved in the robbery. But he wont go down without a fight, and promptly calls upon his dark half to seek out the actual culprits himself. "In the police annals of Kansas City are written lurid chapters concerning the exploits of criminals apprehended and brought to punishment. But it is the purpose of this picture to expose the amazing operations of a man who conceived and executed a "perfect" crime, the true solution of which is "not" entered in "any" case history, and could well be entitled "Kansas City Confidential". Produced by Edward Small, Kansas City Confidential is believed to be the only film released out of Small's own Associated Players and Producers studio. Still, if you are going to only have one film on your studio résumé, you have to be thankful that it's a little cracker. More "B" movie grit than film noir flecked nastiness, Karlson's movie is lean, mean and structured with knowing skill by the director. From the tremendous tension fuelled opening of the heist planning and execution, through to the deadly payoff at the finale, film is awash with knuckle slappings, shifting identities and the turning of the protagonist's psychological make up. Were it not for one of "those" endings, and the telegraphing of optimism slightly shunting the pessimistic atmosphere out of the headlights, this would undoubtedly be far more revered and better known in film noir/crime movie circles. First thing to note of worth is the cast assembled for the picture. Payne was already leaving behind his formative acting years in family fare like Miracle On 34th Street and Footlight Serenade, reinventing himself as a dramatic actor in films such as The Crooked Way. He's a perfect fit for Joe Rolfe, an ex-con war veteran down on his luck, he has his every man qualities pummelled out of him by the police, so much so he has to turn bad to prove that he's good. The change is believable in Payne's hands, his face that of normality in the beginning, but latterly icy cold and untrustworthy. A trio of "B" movie stalwarts make up the thugs gallery, Jack Elam is sweaty and worm like, Lee Van Cleef is snake faced and pulsing bad attitude, while Neville Brand exudes borderline psychotic menace. Unfortunately Preston Foster as the "boss" man is not altogether convincing, but in a film where characters are not always what they seem, this doesn't hurt the film. Coleen Gray shows a nice pair of legs for the boys, but with Karlson not bothered about fleshing out the romantic and flirting aspects of her relationship with Payne, she exists only as a secondary cog between Payne and Foster's characters. This is no femme fatale character, sadly, no sir. Music is standard fare and Diskant's photography only fleetingly shows some noir flourishes. However, with two fists full of grit from which to punch, and some boldness in the narrative involving police brutality, Kansas City Confidential comes out as one of the better "B" ranked crime movies of the 50's. 8/10

NA

Geronimo1967

This is quite a clever, well paced crime-noir with a really rather good performance from John Payne as "Joe", a former soldier/ex-con who, whilst on his routine flower-delivery rounds - ends up getting framed for a massive armed robbery. Luckily for him, the police can't press charges - all the robbers wore masks - and so he decides to track down the thugs and claim a share of the cash for himself. You get where this is going early on, but when you see Jack Elam and Lee Van Cleef on the cast list, you know that you are in for a bumpy ride. There are plenty of crosses and double-crosses as he and the gang (none of whom know the identity of their criminal mastermind) try to get to Mexico and to the loot. It's a good end-to-end action adventure, with a taut, eery score from Paul Sawtell adding much to the sinister lighting effects that give this film a much better than average sense of suspense.