The Crooked Way
The Crooked Way is a 1949 American film noir starring John Payne, Sonny Tufts and Ellen Drew. Directed by Robert Florey and shot by John Alton, the film has a similar plot to another film noir, Somewhere in [the Night |Somewhere in the Night].
Plot
After sustaining a head wound in combat, decorated World War II veteran Eddie Rice is treated at a San Francisco military hospital for a permanent form of amnesia. This leaves him with no knowledge of his life, family and friends prior to his enlistment. Army intelligence is unable to fill this void, as all they know about his past is that he enlisted in Los Angeles. Doctors tell him that no medical cure exists for his condition, but suggest that returning to L.A. might allow him to run into people who know him and might help fill in the blanks.Rice does so, and promptly runs into some folks who recognize him. However, they know him as Eddie Riccardi, a dangerous gangster gone missing, whose past record generates mistrust both among the police and all those who formerly knew him. A woman, Nina Martin, appears to help him, but instead turns him over to ruthless crime boss Vince Alexander, who was betrayed by Eddie before leaving town, and is now out for revenge. Vince tries to frame Eddie for the murder of a policeman, but Nina, who reveals to Eddie that she used to be his wife in a stormy marriage, finds her bitterness towards him changing to tenderness, and decides to help him genuinely.
Cast
- John Payne as Eddie Rice/Eddie Riccardi
- Sonny Tufts as Vince Alexander
- Ellen Drew as Nina Martin
- Rhys Williams as Lieutenant Joe Williams
- Percy Helton as Petey
- John Doucette as Sgt. Barrett
- Charles Evans as Captain Anderson
- Greta Granstedt as Hazel Downs
- Raymond Largay as Arthur Stacey, M.D.
- Harry Bronson as Danny
- Hal Baylor as Coke
- Don Haggerty as Hood
- Jack Overman as Hood
- Crane Whitley as Doctor Kemble/Off-Screen Narrator
- John Harmon as Kelly
- Garry Owen as Man from Green Acres Mortuary
Reception