My Six Convicts
My Six Convicts is a 1952 American film noir crime drama directed by Hugo Fregonese. The screenplay was adapted by Michael Blankfort from the autobiographical book My Six Convicts: A Psychologist's Three Years in Fort Leavenworth, written by Donald Powell Wilson.
The film stars Millard Mitchell, Gilbert Roland, John Beal and Marshall Thompson. Mitchell won a Golden Globe Award for his performance.
Plot
Prison psychologist Doc attempts to help his incarcerated patients.Cast
- Millard Mitchell as James Connie
- Gilbert Roland as Punch Pinero
- John Beal as "Doc"
- Marshall Thompson as Blivens Scott
- Alf Kjellin as Clem Randall
- Henry Morgan as Dawson
- Jay Adler as Steve Kopac
- Regis Toomey as Dr. Gordon
- Fay Roope as the Warden
- Carleton Young as Captain Haggerty
- John Marley as Knotty Johnson
- Russ Conway as Dr. Hughes
- Byron Foulger as Dr. Brint
- Charles Bronson as Jocko
- Wesley Addy as Convict
- Jack Carr as Harry Higgins
- Dick Curtis as Guard
- George Eldredge as Convict #3
- Fred Kelsey as Store detective
- Shirley Mills as Blonde Tilly
- Frank Mitchell as Convict #3007
- Billy Nelson as Guard
- Joe Palma as Convict driver
- Eddie Parker as Guard on dump trunk
- Barney Phillips as Baker, the foreman
- Carol Savage as Mrs. Randall
- Charles Sullivan as Driscoll
Style
Production
The film was shot on location at San Quentin State Prison, where warden Clinton Duffy had implemented reforms that sought to rehabilitate prisoners much in the same way as does the Doc character.Because of San Quentin's strict policy prohibiting women from entering the inner prison area, a short prison guard was asked to impersonate the Mrs. Randall character in long shots. Actress Carol Savage portrayed the character in closeup studio shots.
Musical director Dimitri Tiomkin visited Sing Sing prison to hear the prisoners' band and songs sung by the prisoners in preparation for his film score.
Reception
In a contemporary review for The [New York Times], critic A. H. Weiler wrote: "... enology, psychology and crime have been blended into a compassionate, thoughtful, incisive and, above all, genuinely humorous account of life behind prison walls.... There may be doubters who will scoff at the possibility of a convict such as Connie being permitted to leave the penitentiary to open a bank safe but as played by Millard Mitchell, who runs off with the acting honors, the facts are not particularly important."Director Hugo Fregonese received fan letters from prison inmates and said, "I'm flattered. After all, these are the first fan letters I've ever received."