Rogue Cop

Temptation is a thing called money and a red-lipped blonde !

5.3
19541h 32m

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

A police detective on the take tries to catch his brother's killer.

Cast

Photo of Robert Taylor

Robert Taylor

Det. Sgt. Christopher Kelvaney

Photo of Janet Leigh

Janet Leigh

Karen Stephanson

Photo of George Raft

George Raft

Dan Beaumonte

Photo of Steve Forrest

Steve Forrest

Eddie Kelvaney

Photo of Anne Francis

Anne Francis

Nancy Corlane

Photo of Robert Ellenstein

Robert Ellenstein

Det. Sidney Y. Myers

Photo of Anthony Ross

Anthony Ross

Father Ahearn

Photo of Alan Hale Jr.

Alan Hale Jr.

Johnny Stark

Photo of Peter Brocco

Peter Brocco

George 'Wrinkles' Fallon

Photo of Vince Edwards

Vince Edwards

Joey Langley

Photo of Roy Barcroft

Roy Barcroft

Lt. Vince D. Bardeman

Photo of Ray Teal

Ray Teal

Patrolman Mullins

Photo of Connie Marshall

Connie Marshall

Frances (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Little men begging for a break.

Rogue Cop is directed by Roy Rowland and adapted to screenplay by Sydney Boehm from the novel written by William P. McGivern. It stars Robert Taylor, Janet Leigh, George Raft, Steve Forrest and Anne Francis. Music is by Jeff Alexander and cinematography by John F. Seitz.

Christopher Kelvaney (Taylor) is a cop on the take from the mob that's fronted by Dan Beaumont (Raft). When his brother and fellow cop, Eddie (Forrest), is requested to withdraw testimony about a crook covered by Beaumont, Chris is compromised and danger lurks for all involved.

A face wrinkled like Venetian blinds.

Out of MGM, Rogue Cop is a better than average venture into film noir territories. Characters are standard fare for such plottings, but the moral quagmire at Kelvaney's core lifts things considerably. Helps also that Kelvaney is a cop with a quip, the script affording the character some hard boiled edges. With Seitz on photography duties, Rowland is able to fill out the pic with usual noir trappings, where shadows and dim lights exude a doom ambiance.

Stoolies Incorporated.

Scenes are staged in noir funky locations such as a penny arcade (scene of the vicious crime that kicks everything off), a race track and of course shimmering streets, the latter of which plays host to the gun laden finale. Colourful characters such as Francis' (excellent) lush moll and Olive Carey's wise old news stand operator (info for sale) add some side-bar female essence to the moody tale. The ending could have been bolder as per outcome, but it sits OK, and since the story has its share of emotional wallops for some of the players, it ultimately ends up as a comfortable recommendation to noir fans. 7/10

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