White Heat: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Police Procedural]]: The film shows in detail how police undercover operatives work, and how a vehicle tail is conducted.
* [[Police Procedural]]: The film shows in detail how police undercover operatives work, and how a vehicle tail is conducted.
* [[Psychopathic Manchild]]: Cody, again.
* [[Psychopathic Manchild]]: Cody, again.
* [[Throw It In]]: In the scene where Cody has his [[Villainous Breakdown]], he had the two biggest extras seated on both sides of him and had the camera follow him no matter what.
* [[Trojan Horse]]: The gas truck Cody's gang rides into the chemical plant. It's even lampshaded.
* [[Trojan Horse]]: The gas truck Cody's gang rides into the chemical plant. It's even lampshaded.
* [[Villainous Breakdown]]: Cody Jarrett wasn't really stable to begin with, but he really loses it when word comes that his Ma was killed.
* [[Villainous Breakdown]]: Cody Jarrett wasn't really stable to begin with, but he really loses it when word comes that his Ma was killed.

Revision as of 16:00, 19 June 2014

"Made it, Ma! Top of the world!"
Cody Jarrett

White Heat is a 1949 Warner Bros Film Noir directed by Raoul Walsh and starring James Cagney. Cagney is Cody Jarrett, the violent and emotionally unstable gang leader who still has a soft spot for his Ma. After pulling off a train heist, he gets arrested and convicted for a robbery he didn't commit (as part of an alibi he'd previously arranged). Waiting in prison until the heat is off, he's worried about Big Ed, his second-in-command, taking control of his gang and his (unfaithful) wife. When he hears Ed has killed his mom, an enraged Cody busts out, determined to rub out Ed and regain control of the gang. What he doesn't know, though, is that a trusted fellow con who escaped with him is really an undercover cop. It all comes to a spectacular finish during another heist, where Cody makes it to the top of the world...


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