Duff
wants to suspend Duryea's three-year stay in Alcatraz to become the
title character. Not surprisingly, the movie perks up with Duryea's
first appearance. To convince him he desperately needs
his help, Duff wants him to identify a corpse at the morgue. Duryea
is sickened to see that it is his estranged wife, a victim of drug
pushers. Though still holding out hope of revenge, he agrees to train
Duff to become a tough-talking drug dealer with substantial
connections.
Shelly Winters has already met Duff and Duryea. During this era, she was ensconced in “high school dropout” roles, here as a helpless pawn to mob boss, John McIntire, who could play genial or despicable, but rarely in the same film. One of his operatives is a junior hitman played by Tony Curtis, who appears to be puzzled about something during his scenes. The climax provides the other bookend of “thrills” as Duff's undercover is blown—never saw that coming. In the end, Duryea is deserving of a reduced sentence, and Winters. Duff's final voice-over wraps the film.
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