Road Gang

1936 "They're Fugitives From a ROAD GANG ... and They'll Never Go Back Alive!"
6.3| 1h1m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 28 March 1936 Released
Producted By: First National Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A crusading young reporter planning a series of articles about a corrupt politician is framed for a crime and sentenced to serve five years at a prison farm.

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Reviews

Diagonaldi Very well executed
Inclubabu Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Mischa Redfern I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.
kapelusznik18 ****SPOILERS*** Crusading investigating reported Jim Larrabie, Donald Wood, and his friend Bob Gordon,Carayle Moore Jr, are railroaded into prison by corrupt politician J.W Moett, Joe King, who for some strange reason his name-Mollet-is bleeped out everything it's mentioned in the movie? That in the end leads to a prison revolt by the inmates whom Moett ordered to be gassed to keep them from talking in what he'd been doing to them in the inhuman treatment his prison guards subject them too. That's when the incorruptible attorney general William Davidson shows up at the prison to see what's going on there.It was Jim's girlfriend Barbara Winston, Kay Linaker, who informed Davidson about the inhuman conditions and practices at the prison, especially the coal mine connected to it, that the unmentionable J.W Moett was running. In an attempt to cover up his crimes Moett orders the prison warden Grayson, Charles Middelton, to seal the mine and tear gas the inmates to death and make it look like a tragic accident. This has Jim lead a prison or mine revolt that has the "doomed" inmates break out of the mine and confront Grayson who after acting tough pi**ed his pants and spills the beans on his boss Moett as well as his #1 henchman paid off-by Moett- attorney as well as Barbara's dad George Winston! It was Jim's undercover reporting that brought Moett's reign of terror to an end. But he paid a steep price for doing it with his good friend Bob Gordon losing his life when he was electrocuted with 11,000 volts of electricity trying to escape over an, like in a Nazi concentration camp, electrified fence. That doesn't even count the dozen of inmates that ended up killed working in the coal mine that was as bad as any Soviet Gulag. What that trio of criminals Geroge Winston J.W Mott & Wardon Grayson got in being put behind bars was a lot less then what they did in their inhuman treatment of those they abused in the prison system that they ran.
MartinHafer This film was made by the B-movie unit at First National/Warner Brothers. Because it's a B, it only lasts about an hour and stars a relative unknown, Donald Woods. However, although many folks normally assume that a B-movie is synonymous with a 'bad movie', this is DEFINITELY not the case with this movie. Thanks to exceptional writing and direction, the film sure satisfies.This film is from the social reform era in Hollywood. Many films were made by this studio which questioned the penal system--such as "I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang", "Mayor of Hell", "20,000 Years in Sing Sing" and "Angels With Dirty Faces". In this same tradition is "Road Gang"--a film not just about government corruption but corruption in the chain gang system.A crusading reporter has gotten on the wrong side of a bunch of crooked politicians. They try to bribe him to keep his mouth shut but he vows to bring down the corrupt officials. So, shortly after this meeting with the crooks, this reporter (Woods) is convicted on trumped up charges along with his friend. They are sent to a brutal chain gang--one that is run by people working for the same crooked machine. The plan is to work the two to death so that they never can have a chance to publish anything. And, when the newspaper man tries to smuggle out a story about the brutality, he's sent to an even worse place--a place where they have no intention of allowing anyone to see him again. What's next? See the film.This film works on so many levels. The dialog is great, the plot works very well and the film really gets its point across. On top of that, it has a really good ending. This film has it all--and is better than you'd ever expect from a tiny-budgeted movie.
Ron Oliver Framed for crimes they did not commit, two young men are sentenced to five years at hard labor on a Southern prison's brutal ROAD GANG.Here is a fine example of the type of crime film which Warner Bros. produced so well. Although there are no big stars in the film, the acting is generally good, the stifling atmosphere is well maintained and the production values - especially in the prison camp/mine sequences - are of a high standard.Donald Woods makes a sturdy, stalwart hero; made to endure various humiliations & punishments, he never wavers in his fight for justice. This is quite typical of the fine performances Woods gave during his career. Kay Linaker is enjoyable as his courageous fiancée.The film is sparked by a handful of noteworthy performances among the large cast: Carlyle Moore Jr. as Woods faithful, tragic buddy; Henry O'Neill as a slick, utterly corrupt politician; Edward Van Sloan as a shyster lawyer; Olin Howlin as the lethargic prison doctor; and Charles Middleton as the Blackfoot Mine's vile warden.ROAD GANG was a partial re-make of Warner's' hit film from four years earlier, I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG (1932), starring Paul Muni. In the days of the studio factory system, when churning out one picture after another in an almost endless supply was vitally important, it was not at all unusual to recycle the plots of successful A movies. The B pictures department would change elements here & there (ROAD GANG has a much happier ending than the Muni film), and release an entirely new picture, hoping for another winner. This was the first film scripted by the young Dalton Trumbo, destined to be famous for more than just his celebrated screenwriting abilities.
Bucs1960 This is one of those "B" films that doesn't get much airplay but show up periodically to my delight as an avid aficionado of "B" movies. A solid cast of second leads and character actors....Donald Woods, Henry O'Neil, Charles Middleton and a very young Marc Lawrence. It mirrors "I Was A Fugitive From a Chain Gang", the Paul Muni "A" list movie of that time in that it deals with the conditions of southern prisons in the 20's and 30's An interesting sidelight to this movie which was mentioned by the preceding reviewer....the post-dubbing of the character Moett's name. In the film,it is obviously "Metcalf" but has been post-dubbed to "Moett". I have searched extensively for the reason but can't find out why this was done. I would recommend it to anyone who loves the "B" movies....low budget, hackneyed dialogue and last minute reprieves....it's the stuff "B"'s were made of!