Poster
Watch

The Asphalt Jungle

The Asphalt Jungle

  • Status: Released
  • 12-05-1950
  • Runtime: 112 min
  • Score: 7.504
  • Vote count: 508

Recently paroled from prison, legendary burglar "Doc" Riedenschneider, with funding from Alonzo Emmerich, a crooked lawyer, gathers a small group of veteran criminals together in the Midwest for a big jewel heist.

Sterling Hayden

Dix Handley

Louis Calhern

Alonzo D. Emmerich

Sam Jaffe

Doc Erwin Riedenschneider

Jean Hagen

Doll Conovan

James Whitmore

Gus Minissi

John McIntire

Police Commissioner Hardy

Marc Lawrence

Cobby

Barry Kelley

Lt. Ditrich

Anthony Caruso

Louis Ciavelli

Marilyn Monroe

Angela Phinlay

Teresa Celli

Maria Ciavelli

William 'Wee Willie' Davis

Timmons

Dorothy Tree

May Emmerich

Brad Dexter

Bob Brannom

John Maxwell

Dr. Swanson

Mary Anderson

Police Broadcaster (voice) (uncredited)

Ray Bennett

Detective in Hardy's Office (uncredited)

David Bond

Father Sortine (uncredited)

Chet Brandenburg

Man at Line-Up (uncredited)

Benny Burt

Taxi Driver (uncredited)

Frank Cady

Night Clerk (uncredited)

Jean Carter

Woman (uncredited)

Mack Chandler

Gambler (uncredited)

David Clarke

Mr. Atkinson (Railroad Man) (uncredited)

John Cliff

Policeman (uncredited)

Harry Cody

Gambler (uncredited)

Gene Coogan

Reporter (uncredited)

Henry Corden

Karl Anton Smith (uncredited)

Chuck Courtney

Red (Boy in Diner) (uncredited)

John Crawford

Reporter (uncredited)

Ralph Dunn

Policeman (uncredited)

Gene Evans

Policeman at Ciavelli's Apartment (uncredited)

Pat Flaherty

Policeman (uncredited)

Alex Gerry

Maxwell (uncredited)

Sol Gorss

Policeman (uncredited)

Fred Graham

Truck Driver (uncredited)

Don Haggerty

Det. Andrews (uncredited)

Eloise Hardt

Vivian (uncredited)

Thomas Browne Henry

James X. Connery (uncredited)

Wesley Hopper

Policeman (uncredited)

George Lynn

Detective at Ciavelli's Apartment (uncredited)

Fred Marlow

Reporter (uncredited)

Strother Martin

William Doldy (uncredited)

Patricia Miller

Girl (uncredited)

Howard M. Mitchell

Secretary (uncredited)

Ralph Montgomery

Counterman (uncredited)

Alberto Morin

Eddie Donato (uncredited)

Kerry O'Day

Girl (uncredited)

Raymond Roe

Tallboy (uncredited)

Henry Rowland

Frank Schurz (Doc's Taxi Driver) (uncredited)

Tim Ryan

Jack (Police Clerk) (uncredited)

James Seay

Officer Janocek (uncredited)

Jack Shea

Policeman (uncredited)

Charles Sherlock

Gambler (uncredited)

J. Lewis Smith

Gambler (uncredited)

J.J. Smith

Police Broadcaster (voice) (uncredited)

Joseph Darr Smith

Reporter (uncredited)

Helene Stanley

Jeannie (Girl in Diner) (uncredited)

Ray Teal

Cop in Car Barn Slugged by Dix (uncredited)

Leah Wakefield

Girl (uncredited)

Harlan Warde

Reporter (uncredited)

Jack Warden

Man (uncredited)

William Washington

Suspect (uncredited)

Constance Weiler

Woman (uncredited)

Judith Wood

Woman (uncredited)

Victor Wood

Evans (uncredited)

Wilson Wood

Man (uncredited)

Jeff York

Policeman (uncredited)

John Chard

Experience has taught me never to trust a policeman. Just when you think one's all right, he turns legit. Out of MGM, The Asphalt Jungle is directed by John Huston and based on the novel of the same name by W.R. Burnett. It stars Sterling Hayden, Jean Hagen, Sam Jaffe, Louis Calhern, James Whitmore, Teresa Celli, and in a minor but important role, Marilyn Monroe. Miklós Rózsa scores the music and Harold Rosson photographs it in black & white. Plot sees Erwin "Doc" Riedenschneider (Jaffe) leave prison and quickly assemble a gang to execute a long in gestation jewellery heist. However, with suspicion rife and fate waiting to take a hand, the carefully constructed caper starts to come apart at the seams. John Huston liked a tough movie, having given film noir in America a jump start with The Maltese Falcon in 1941, he also that same year adapted W.R. Burnett's novel High Sierra. Burnett also had on his CV crime classic stories Little Caesar & Scarface, so it's no surprise that Huston was drawn to The Asphalt Jungle. As it turned out, it was a match made in gritty urban heaven. The Asphalt Jungle was one of the first crime films to break with convention and tell the story from the actual side of the criminals. Where once it was the pursuing law officers or private detectives that were the heavy part of the plotting, now under Huston's crafty guidance we have a study in crime and a daring for us to empathise with a bunch of criminals, villains and anti-heroes. As a group the gang consists of very differing characters, and yet they have a common bond, for they each strive for a better life. Be it Hayden's luggish Dix, who dreams of buying back his father's horse ranch back in Kentucky, or Jaffe's Doc, who wants to retire to Mexico and surround himself with girls - it's greed and yearning that binds them all together - With alienation and bleakness, in true film noir traditions, featuring heavily as the plot (and gang) unravels. With gritty dialogue and atmospherically oozing a naturalistic feel, it's also no surprise to note that Huston's movie would go on to influence a ream of similar type films. Some good, some bad, but very few of them have been able to capture the suspense that is wrung out for the actual heist sequence in this. Fabulous in its authenticity, and with that out of the way, it then sets the decaying tone for the rest of the piece. Interesting to note that although we are now firmly in the lives of the "gang", including their respective women (Hagen, Monroe & Celli all shining in what is a very macho movie), we still know that the society outside of their circle is hardly nice either! This is stripped down brutalistic film noir. Merciless to its characters and thriving on ill fate, and closing with a finale that is as perfect as it gets, this is a top line entry in what is the most wonderful of film making styles. 9.5/10