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  1. The Public Enemy

    The Public Enemy

    1931 · Crime drama · 1h 24m

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  1. Awards

    • Academy Award Writing (Original Story) 1932 · Nominated

  1. A theatre in Times Square ran The Public Enemy 24 hours a day during its initial release. [18] At the 4th Academy Awards, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Story, losing to The Dawn Patrol. Teaser trailer of The Public Enemy.

  2. The Public Enemy. Jump to. 1 win & 1 nomination. Academy Awards, USA. 1931 Nominee Oscar. Best Writing, Original Story. John Bright. Kubec Glasmon. National Film Preservation Board, USA. 1998 Winner National Film Registry. Contribute to this page. Suggest an edit or add missing content. Top Gap.

  3. The Public Enemy: Directed by William A. Wellman. With James Cagney, Jean Harlow, Edward Woods, Joan Blondell. An Irish-American street punk tries to make it big in the world of organized crime.

    • (23K)
    • Crime, Drama
    • William A. Wellman
    • 1931-05-15
  4. Nominated for an Academy Award for best screenplay, The Public Enemy did very well at the box office and earned raves from the critics, and has since become one of the seminal films in the gangster genre…a classic that was acknowledged as such when it was selected for the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry in 1998.

  5. Jan 11, 2019 · Cagney grew up a poor Irish kid on New York's Lower East Side, the second of seven children, two of whom died in infancy. He had a talent for street fighting and often defended his older brother Harry, a medical student. But he wasn't a criminal and certainly never killed anybody.

  6. The Public Enemy (1931) is one of the earliest and best of the gangster films from Warner Bros. in the thirties. The film's screenplay (by John Bright and Kubec Glasmon), which received the film's only Academy Award nomination, was based upon their novel Beer and Blood .

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  8. The Public Enemy (1931) follows the lives of two kids from the tenements of Chicago's South Side, Powers and Doyle, who find a way out of desperate circumstances through a life of crime, ending with their violent deaths - not at the hands of police (who are rarely seen) but by rival criminals.

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