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      • Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache
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      • Incindies (2010)
      • In the Mood For Love (2000)
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    • The 1910's >
      • The Lubitsch German Silents
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      • The Odessa Steps Sequence as Continuing Film History
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      • Becky Sharp (1935)
      • Blonde Crazy
      • Bombshell ('33)
      • The Cheat
      • The Conquerors
      • The Crowd Roars
      • The Divorcee
      • Frank Capra & Barbara Stanwyck: The Evolution of a Romance
      • Heroes for Sale
      • The Invisible Man (1933)
      • L'Atalante (1934)
      • Let Us Be Gay
      • My Man Godfrey
      • No Man of Her Own (1932)
      • Platinum Blonde ('31)
      • Reckless ('35)
      • The Sign of the Cross (1932)
      • The Sin of Nora Moran (1932)
      • True Confession ('37)
      • Virtue ('32)
      • The Women
    • The 1940's >
      • Casablanca (1942)
      • The Story of Citizen Kane
      • Criss Cross (1949)
      • Double indemnity
      • Jean Arthur in A Foreign Affair
      • The Killers 1946 & 1964 Comparison
      • The Maltese Falcon Intro
      • Moonrise (1948)
      • My Gal Sal (1942)
      • Nightmare Alley
      • Notorious Intro ('46)
      • Overlooked Christmas Movies of the 1940's
      • Pursued (1947)
      • Remember the Night ('40)
      • The Red Shoes (1948)
      • The Set-Up ('49)
      • They Won't Believe Me (1947)
      • The Third Man
    • The 1950's >
      • The Asphalt Jungle Secret Cinema Intro
      • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof ('58) Intro
      • The Crimson Kimono (1959)
      • A Face in the Crowd (1957)
      • In a Lonely Place
      • A Kiss Before Dying (1956)
      • Mogambo ('53)
      • Niagara (1953)
      • The Night of The Hunter ('55)
      • Pushover Noir City
      • Rear Window (1954)
      • Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
      • Red Dust ('32 vs Mogambo ('53)
      • The Searchers ('56)
      • Singin' in the Rain Introduction
      • Some Like It Hot ('59) >
        • Some Like it Hot Intro (Beyond the Bay)
    • The 1960's >
      • The April Fools (1969)
      • Bonnie & Clyde (1967)
      • Cape Fear ('62)
      • Cool Hand Luke (1967) Intro
      • Dr Strangelove Intro
      • For a Few Dollars More (1965)
      • Fistful of Dollars (1964)
      • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1968)
      • The Hustler ('61) Intro
      • The Man With No Name Trilogy
      • The Misfits ('61)
      • The Umbrellas of Cherbourg/La La Land
    • Underworld USA ('61)
    • The 1970's >
      • Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970)
      • American Graffiti Introduction
      • Chinatown Introduction
      • The Friends of Eddie Coyle ('73)
      • Jaws Intro
    • The 1980's >
      • Blood Simple ('84)
      • A Christmas Story Intro
      • Scarface (1983)
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      • The General (1998)
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      • Belfast (2021)
      • Blonde (2022)
      • Hunger (2008)
      • In Bruges (2008)
      • Joy Division
      • Mank (2020)
      • No Man's Land (2001)
      • Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)
      • Wall-E
      • Y Tu Mama Tambien (2001)
      • The Top 10 Films I watched in 2020
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Underworld USA ('61)

Sam Fuller—I would be hard pressed to identify another filmmaker whose ouvre represents not just their world view, but their entire personality to the same extent more than Sam Fuller’s.  The iconic, if not tragically overlooked, writer/director of The Big Red One, Pickup on South Street and The Naked Kiss made films on his terms, often with miniscule budgets, studio interference, and critical apathy.  His legacy, however, is made through the patronage and respect of directors like Martin Scorsese, Jim Jarmusch, Steven Spielberg and Francois Truffaut, who have individually praised and imitated Fuller’s films in print and on screen. Fuller was a unique filmmaker and his style could be jarring to the uninitiated. , Bbut his films, each in their own way, speak in a very guttural and personal manner that reflects the filmmaker himself.  Issues as diverse as inter-racial relationships, racism, mental illness,  and pedophilia were brought are front and center in Fuller’s films and were often met with disdain by audiences of the 1950’s and ‘60’s.  His world view was decades ahead of his contemporaries, yet his shooting style and dialogue were simple and straightforward—, perfectly reflecting Fuller’s time as a newspaperman in his teens.  At his core, in fact, Fuller never strayed too far from that teenager, spinning yarns from his experiences, recasting reality from what he hoped humanity could become, but often reflecting a seedier and grittier reflection of man at his worst.

Underworld U.S.A. was made towards the end of Fuller’s run of theatrical films that started in 1949 with I Shot Jesse James,  and before he started splitting his time with television projects in the 1960’s.  However, tThe film, does however, have Fuller’s full DNA all throughout its 99-minute running time.  Based on a Boston newspaper account of a nationwide criminal organization, the story had all the elements Fuller enjoyed , but without lacked a central throughline to connect the its greater impact on society:; it didn’t have a protagonist.  Never one short for ideas, Fuller settled on revenge as the driving forceer of the story and proceeded to introduce protagonist Tolly Devlin as a teenager who witnesses the brutal slaying of his father at the hands of local crime bosses. Revenge was a not uncommon theme in Fuller’s films, with both The Naked Kiss and House of Bamboo dealing with the issue. In Underworld U.S.A.,, but Tolly is singularly focused, biding his time for 15 years before fully enacting his plan. 
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Finding the Real Sam Fuller:  Underworld U.S.A.

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The film itself came at a time of great struggle for Fuller due to the death of his beloved mother, his divorce from his first wife,  and the collapse of his lifelong goal of telling his story as an infantryman in World War II, a film he eventually made 20 years later called The Big Red One. What the film draws from Fuller’s life, however, is his unwavering belief in the outsider who is making a difference through a relentless patience in [OT1] what they believe to be right and just.  In Fuller’s case, it was telling the stories of people outside the margins of society, prostitutes, pickpockets, the poor, and the desperate.  and Tolly is just such a character.  Fuller’s script never apologizes for Tolly’s criminal activities, even his exploitation of a gangster’s moll who loves him, but it also paints him sympathetically as someone with a code of honors of sorts.  Describing Tolly, Fuller writes,
                  “Ever since my characters were born, their lives have been harsh and unfair.  They’re going to have to learn how to fight to survive.  They are anarchists, turned
                  against a system that has betrayed them.  That’s why they end up taking the law into their own hands. Tolly goes one step further, exploiting the hateful system
                   to get his enemies eliminated.” ( Fuller, p. 386)
Tolly eventually becomes the ultimate informant insider as he wheedles his way into the criminal organization while sharing information with the federal crime committee.  Because he pits gangster against gangster and the feds against the gangsters, he is able to play both sides without ever being party to a crime or a killing.  He is an equal opportunity exploiter, lying, stealing and tricking everyone in equal measure—, all in the name of righteous revenge.  Fuller’s dialogue is as simple and focused as Tolly’s goal with no wasted words or flowery sentiments.  In what would become the norm more than a decade later, the criminal organization is set up to a reflection of corporate America, with a defined hierarchy, corporate perks, as well asnd a reliance on profit margins and steady growth.  Given the antiseptic moniker, National Projects, the cynical operation foreshadows criminal corporations in films like Point Blank and comments on the similarities between lawful and unlawful capitalistic greed.
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As the dominoes begin to fall into place for Tolly’s plan, his focus become ruthless, and yet at the same time righteous at the same time[OT1] .  Like Barbara Stanwyck’s character in Fuller’s  Forty Guns (, made four4 years earlier), the director isn’t afraid to challenge the viewer’s expectations of a protagonist. B, but here, he balances Tolly’s instincts with the Federal investigators’ integrity to create a gravitation force toward good.  His interaction with Driscoll, the lead investigator, is more fatherly, while National Projects head Connors is more sinisterly manipulative.  He is being pulled toward the good, but never cracks until his revenge is complete.  Then— and only then,— does Tolly imagine a life of quiet happiness with Cuddles[OT2] .  Much like Detective Kojaku and Christine, in The Crimson Kimono, Fuller unites two damaged souls at the conclusion of the story in a makeshift hopeful ending—, not quite ensured, but soothing.
 
Fuller was an optimist in the face of many life experiences that would have left a lesser man broken. T The horrors on the streets of New York, covering the crime beat or, to the Nazi internment camps that he helped liberate in World War II, could have crushed him, but by returning to storytelling, he was able to offer something positive to take away from his movies.  They were all are rough-hewn, often featuring the dregs of humanity, but there was always a simple, momentary beauty captured somewhere. It is  In those moments , then,  is where that Fuller’s personal world view dwelled—take, for instance, t, the smalltime snitch Moe, played by Thelma Ritter in Pickup on South Street, for instance, or Cuddles, because . these characters overtly display a longing for something better, a humanity missing from almost every other character.  Fuller’s Underworld U.S.A.A may not be one of Fuller’s most memorable films, but to see and enjoy anything he made is a unique experience.
top 10 samuel fuller films
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Written for Perisphere.org, the blog for Minneapolis based indy theatre Trylon Cinema.  Here is a direct link to article on site.  https://www.perisphere.org/2023/06/16/finding-the-real-sam-fuller-underworld-u-s-a/
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  • Home
  • Top 10 Lists
    • My Top 10 Favorite Movies
    • Top 10 Heist Movies
    • Top 10 Neo-Noir Films
    • The Top 10 Films of the Troubles (1969-1998) >
      • The Troubles Selected Timeline
    • Top 10 Films from 2001
    • Director Top 10's >
      • Top 10 Film Noir Directors
      • Top 10 Coen Brothers Films
      • Top 10 John Ford Films
      • Top 10 Samuel Fuller Films
      • Top 10 Alfred Hitchcock Films
      • Top 10 John Huston Films
      • Top 10 Fritz Lang Films (American)
      • Val Lewton Top 10
      • Top 10 Ernst Lubitsch Films
      • Top 10 Jean-Pierre Melville Films
      • Top 10 Nicholas Ray Films
      • Top 10 Preston Sturges Films
      • Top 10 Robert Siodmak Films
      • Top 10 William Wellman Films
      • Top 10 Billy Wilder Films
    • Actor/Actress Top 10's >
      • Top 10 Joan Blondell Movies
      • Top 10 Clark Gable Movies
      • Top 10 Ava Gardner Films
      • Top 10 Gloria Grahame Films
      • Top 10 Jean Harlow Movies
      • Top 10 Miriam Hopkins Films
      • Top 10 Grace Kelly Films
      • Top 10 Burt Lancaster Films
      • Top 10 Carole Lombard Movies
      • Top 10 Myrna Loy Films
      • Top 10 Marilyn Monroe Films
      • Top 10 Robert Mitchum Noir Movies
      • Top 10 Paul Newman Films
      • Top 10 Robert Ryan Movies
      • Top 10 Norma Shearer Movies
      • Top 10 Barbara Stanwyck Films
    • Top 10 Noir Films (Classic Era)
    • Top 10 Pre-Code Films
    • Top 10 Actresses of the 1930's
  • Reviews
    • Quick Hits: Short Takes on Recent Viewing >
      • Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache
      • Elevator to the Gallows ('58)
      • Days of Heaven
      • Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986)
      • Incindies (2010)
      • In the Mood For Love (2000)
      • Last Picture Show Teaser Intro
      • Le Silence De La Mer ('49)
      • The Princess Bride ('87) Intro
      • Pulp Fiction ('94) Intro
    • The 1910's >
      • The Lubitsch German Silents
    • The 1920's >
      • The Odessa Steps Sequence as Continuing Film History
      • Sunrise (1927)
      • Wild Orchids ('29)
    • The 1930's >
      • Becky Sharp (1935)
      • Blonde Crazy
      • Bombshell ('33)
      • The Cheat
      • The Conquerors
      • The Crowd Roars
      • The Divorcee
      • Frank Capra & Barbara Stanwyck: The Evolution of a Romance
      • Heroes for Sale
      • The Invisible Man (1933)
      • L'Atalante (1934)
      • Let Us Be Gay
      • My Man Godfrey
      • No Man of Her Own (1932)
      • Platinum Blonde ('31)
      • Reckless ('35)
      • The Sign of the Cross (1932)
      • The Sin of Nora Moran (1932)
      • True Confession ('37)
      • Virtue ('32)
      • The Women
    • The 1940's >
      • Casablanca (1942)
      • The Story of Citizen Kane
      • Criss Cross (1949)
      • Double indemnity
      • Jean Arthur in A Foreign Affair
      • The Killers 1946 & 1964 Comparison
      • The Maltese Falcon Intro
      • Moonrise (1948)
      • My Gal Sal (1942)
      • Nightmare Alley
      • Notorious Intro ('46)
      • Overlooked Christmas Movies of the 1940's
      • Pursued (1947)
      • Remember the Night ('40)
      • The Red Shoes (1948)
      • The Set-Up ('49)
      • They Won't Believe Me (1947)
      • The Third Man
    • The 1950's >
      • The Asphalt Jungle Secret Cinema Intro
      • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof ('58) Intro
      • The Crimson Kimono (1959)
      • A Face in the Crowd (1957)
      • In a Lonely Place
      • A Kiss Before Dying (1956)
      • Mogambo ('53)
      • Niagara (1953)
      • The Night of The Hunter ('55)
      • Pushover Noir City
      • Rear Window (1954)
      • Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
      • Red Dust ('32 vs Mogambo ('53)
      • The Searchers ('56)
      • Singin' in the Rain Introduction
      • Some Like It Hot ('59) >
        • Some Like it Hot Intro (Beyond the Bay)
    • The 1960's >
      • The April Fools (1969)
      • Bonnie & Clyde (1967)
      • Cape Fear ('62)
      • Cool Hand Luke (1967) Intro
      • Dr Strangelove Intro
      • For a Few Dollars More (1965)
      • Fistful of Dollars (1964)
      • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1968)
      • The Hustler ('61) Intro
      • The Man With No Name Trilogy
      • The Misfits ('61)
      • The Umbrellas of Cherbourg/La La Land
    • Underworld USA ('61)
    • The 1970's >
      • Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970)
      • American Graffiti Introduction
      • Chinatown Introduction
      • The Friends of Eddie Coyle ('73)
      • Jaws Intro
    • The 1980's >
      • Blood Simple ('84)
      • A Christmas Story Intro
      • Scarface (1983)
    • The 1990's >
      • The General (1998)
    • 2000's >
      • Belfast (2021)
      • Blonde (2022)
      • Hunger (2008)
      • In Bruges (2008)
      • Joy Division
      • Mank (2020)
      • No Man's Land (2001)
      • Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)
      • Wall-E
      • Y Tu Mama Tambien (2001)
      • The Top 10 Films I watched in 2020
  • Artists
    • Actors/Actresses >
      • Joan Blondell
      • Faye Dunaway: 1967-1976
      • The Noir Villainy of Dan Duryea
      • Clark Gable Bio
      • Jean Harlow Bio
      • Veronica Lake
      • Norma Shearer
    • Directors/Producers/Cinematographers >
      • Founders Series: Alice Guy-Blache
      • John Alton
      • Joan Harrison-Producer/Writer
      • Hitchcock & Cary Grant
      • Paul Verhoeven
      • William Wellman
    • Books >
      • Book Reviews >
        • Book Review: Clark Gable by D. Bret
      • Pre-Code
      • Actor Bios
      • Film Noir
      • Director Bios
      • Studio Head Bios
      • Hollywood History
    • Studio
  • Resources
    • Sight & Sound Top 100 2022
    • NOTES >
      • American Graffiti Notes
      • Anatomy of a Murder Notes
      • The Asphalt Jungle Outline
      • Breakfast Club Notes
      • Citizen Kane Notes
      • It's A Wonderful Life Notes
      • Rebel Without a Cause Notes
      • Singin' in the Rain Notes
    • CMBA Interview/Profile
    • Bay Cinema Society Press
    • Hollywood History >
      • Production Code
      • Film Noir
  • Video Introductions
    • Video Introductions
  • Last Picture Show Notes