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City for Conquest

City for Conquest (1940)

September. 21,1940
|
7.2
|
NR
| Drama Crime Music

The heartbreaking but hopeful tale of Danny Kenny and Peggy Nash, two sweethearts who meet and struggle through their impoverished lives in New York City. When Peggy, hoping for something better in life for both of them, breaks off her engagement to Danny, he sets out to be a championship boxer, while she becomes a dancer paired with a sleazy partner. Will tragedy reunite the former lovers?

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Cebalord
1940/09/21

Very best movie i ever watch

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MamaGravity
1940/09/22

good back-story, and good acting

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Merolliv
1940/09/23

I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.

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FirstWitch
1940/09/24

A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.

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AaronCapenBanner
1940/09/25

Anatole Litvak directed this drama that begins with actor Frank Craven talking directly to the audience, saying how there are lots of stories in New York City, and he presents one of them: James Cagney plays Danny Kenny, a truck driver who is also a prize fighter, though has little interest in it. His brother Eddie(played by Arthur Kennedy) has dreams of being a concert pianist, which lead Danny to enter the fight racket to pay for his brother's tuition, though there will be tragic consequences...Ann Sheridan plays Peggy Nash, Danny's girlfriend who has dreams of becoming a professional dancer, but must put up with her lecherous male partner(played by Anthony Quinn). All three of them will have their fates intertwine in this interesting and well-acted film, especially Cagney, who does a fine job convincing the viewer he is blind... New Yorkers in particular will like this.

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Bill Slocum
1940/09/26

Late in the film, our hero Danny Kenny (James Cagney) tells us he "don't like that tear-jerking sob stuff." No doubt he would have winced sitting through "City Of Conquest." I did, a lot of the time.A tough but amiable West Side kid, Danny is a skilled amateur boxer who doesn't like fighting. He cares more about his love for the girl who lives up the stairs from his apartment. But when she grows up, Peg (Ann Sheridan) wants more out of life than to be the wife of a truck driver. She has aspirations to be a big-time dancer. To keep up, Danny takes his chances in the professional ring, with hard results."City For Conquest" is a film that wants to hit a home run every inning. To the extent it relies on Cagney, it delivers more than it fails. Cagney is in great form, dialing down on his trademark bantam ambition and commanding the screen in his unaffected way. Other pictures make you fear or admire Cagney; here you just really like him and enjoy his easy charm.Alas, the film uses this to shoehorn a lot of melodrama. In addition to Danny, you get the story of his musical brother Eddie (Arthur Kennedy) and Peg's struggle for success as the partner of headcase-on-the-make Murray Burns (Anthony Quinn). Quinn and Kennedy would go on to score nine Oscar nominations between them and co-star in "Lawrence Of Arabia," a film as epically ambitious as "City For Conquest" but much more successful.There's a lot of talent in evidence here, both on screen and behind the camera. Maybe too much. Elia Kazan's performance as Danny's loyal gangster pal Googi is rightly praised for its naturalism, which is easy to notice in a film where so much of the supporting cast plays their one-note parts with such over-revved gusto. Googi is an interesting character, but his scenes, like Kennedy's, too often stretch the narrative more than it can afford. Third-billed Frank Craven jumps in and out of the movie as the same kind of narrator he played in "Our Town," offering a lot of folky, overwritten nonsense he insists is true because "I got clothes on my back."I guess they wanted to make a point about Manhattan as dream-weaver and back-breaker, but instead of just letting the characters breathe and develop in a natural way you get a kind of big-studio meat-grinder effect, a pushed-up drama with tears and big speeches of the kind Holden Caulfield complained about in "Catcher In The Rye." I like that artificiality in other movies, but here the emotions are played a little too strong and too quick. Poor Sheridan seems lost alternately playing a hustling heel and a loyal girlfriend.Director Anatole Litvak delivers some interesting setpieces, and he is handsomely supported by the cinematography of Sol Polito and James Wong Howe, wizards of black-and-white and the best thing about "City For Conquest" after Cagney. One amazing shot of a street dance zooms out from Cagney watching Sheridan to swoop under a line of lights and up over the adoring crowd. How they did that I have no idea. You get shots like that throughout the film, pieces of artistry that call no attention to themselves.Most everything else does, though. Sometimes it works, like the Max Steiner score. Sure, it's Gershwin-lite and played up too much, stopping the film dead near the end when Eddie introduces his "Magic Isle Symphony." Still, it's a great number.Too often, though, you get another close-up of Sheridan in tears, or Craven smirking up a storm as he grandiloquently lights into another quandary posed by the big city. A better script, with a tighter focus on Danny the fighter, and "City For Conquest" could have been up there with Cagney's best. Instead, it's a worthy depiction of how well Cagney could hold up a lesser film with sheer acting power and finesse, something to see for his many fans but a missed opportunity for the rest of us.

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Michael O'Keefe
1940/09/27

A very memorable role for James Cagney. As a youngster he makes Ann Sheridan his girl and they promise to be together forever. Cagney grows to be a hard working truck driver that has to turn to boxing to make real dough. Another reason for quick bucks is that his girl has grown to be an award winning dancer, but with a scoundrel for a partner(Anthony Quinn). Cagney ends up blind from a beating in the ring; and to make ends meet he operates a newspaper stand. His girl gives up her dancing to take care of him. Elia Kazan turns in a marvelous death scene; my favorite of the movie. Also in the cast: Donald Crisp, George Tobias, Arthur Kennedy and Frank McHugh.

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wes-connors
1940/09/28

James Cagney (as Danny) is a New York City truck driver who takes up boxing in order to finance his brother Arthur Kennedy (as Eddie)'s musical career. Ann Sheridan (as Peggy) is Danny's childhood girlfriend - she gives up their romance for a dancing career, and ends up weeping profusely for it.The film begins as the "City for Conquest" characters are children, living in New York city's lower East Side. Each child mirrors his/her adult development; for example, "Danny" fights, "Peggy" dances, and "Eddie" squeezes his music box. These opening scenes are well-done, and effectively introduce the characters. However, the switch from children to adult actors fails because the "Danny" boy is so unlike actor James Cagney - it's very startling when Cagney appears. The other children are very well-cast; the boy playing Elia Kazan's "Googi" character looks especially like the adult "Googi". The boy playing Mr. Cagney looks so different, you have to wonder if another actor might have been planned to star in this film.Additionally, the children are depicted as being about the same age, but the adult Cagney appears much older when they are adults; he goes from being about Ms. Sheridan's age to looking like her father! He looks too out-of-shape for the role, also, of the "Young Samson". Frank Craven appears as "Old Timer"; he seems to have great knowledge, but his role is confusing. Anthony Quinn is Ms. Sheridan's greasy dancing partner (and abductor?) Murray Burns. For some reason, Mr. Quinn spent way too long in the make-up chair - his eye make-up is the film's heaviest. Yet, the cast is worth watching. James Cagney is, after all, still Cagney. Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Kazan perform their parts very well. The structurally flawed story does move - and, Sheridan's profuse weeping could squeeze one out of you. ***** City for Conquest (9/21/40) Anatole Litvak ~ James Cagney, Ann Sheridan, Arthur Kennedy, Anthony Quinn

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