(1975)
Directed by Menahem Golan
Screenplay by Wesley Lau, Tamar Hoffs
Starring Tony Curtis, Anajanette Cromer, Michael Callan, Vic Tayback, Vaughn Meader
IMDB Entry
I can't believe it took me so long to get around to Lepke. I like gangster films, and this one was special for me. I had sat in the electric chair prop used in the movie, but now that I got a chance* I discovered that it was an interesting depiction, and a fine role for Tony Curtis.
The movie is a biography of the gangster Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, a petty thief who eventually becomes the head of Murder Incorporated. Lepke is ruthless and a stone killer, starting out in the protection racket. He eventually becomes the head of it, and starts to branch out. If someone gets in the way, they don't last for very long.
But Buchalter is a loving family man, kind to his wife Bernice Meyer (Anajanette Comer) and friends with the lawyer Robert Kane (Michael Callan), who is completely honest and goes to work for the FBI. Eventually, through the work of J. Edgar Hoover and Thomas Dewey, Buchalter is sent to the electric chair in Sing Sing.
This is a strong role for Tony Curtis. He originally was just considered a pretty boy who couldn't act,** but managed to confound the critics and pick up roles now considered classic. Here he gets to play a psychopath, and is fascinating. Though the attempts so soften him by making him a loving husband and father don't really ring true. Anajanette Comer manages to sell the idea that she loves him despite his flaws. Milton Berle has a small role as Bernice's father, who doesn't trust Lepke.
An interesting member of the cast was Vaughan Meader as reporter Walter Winchell. Meader was the man behind the smash record hit, The First Family, a series of skits parodying John F. Kennedy. After the assassination, Meader had no career. This was his only real film role, as he imitated Whichell, a famous reporter in his day.
Screenwriter Wesley Lau is well known to fans of Perry Mason. He played Lt. Anderson, the main homicide detective when Ray Collins couldn't continue.
The movie was produced by director Menaham Golan with his cousin Yoram Globus. This was an attempt to do a prestige film and he was willing to take on people who were pariahs in Hollywood, which is why Curtis (who was having trouble getting roles) and Meader took part. The film was supposed to be the first in a series of gangster films, but the genre's day had passed. One more was made -- a comedy -- but Golan and Globus's Cannon Films did a lot of schlock in the 70s and 80s*** and the occasional prestige film.
The reason the movie connects with me is that Lepke was a distant relative of mine. The connection added much to my enjoyment.
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*No thanks to Youtube, who interrupted it for ads every sixty seconds (literally; I kept track).
**"Yonda lies the castle of my fadder."
***Breaking 2: Electric Boogaloo
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