One More Johnny Blake, More Or Less, Is Not Worth Dying
Over…With Edward G. Robinson and Humphrey Bogart’s “Bullets Or Ballots” (1936)
In Mind
DVD Review-of sorts
By Josh Breslin who re-enters the film review wars after a
long-term assignment working through the effect on cultural workers who went
through World War I which will be published in this space in November during
the 100th anniversary commemorations of Armistice Day which ended
that war on November 11, 1918.
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The only thing as far as the law went worse that a crooked
cop was an honest one. That was the familiar ring around my growing up
neighborhood in the heavily French-Canadian Ocean View section of Olde Saco up in
coastal old-time mill country Maine. That sentiment came to mind the other day
when I watched the 1936 classic Bullets
or Ballots where an honest cop, a public cop, tried to break up the rackets
and got nothing but a diet of lead and maybe a big sent-off funeral from cop
departments around the country.
(This saying obviously applied only to the very visible
public coppers who ruined our young man-hoods although I will draw a
distinction between the corrupt and honest a bit below after I mention that this
only applies to civil servant coppers. Definitely not to private coppers,
private eyes who we held in high regard off of the movie screen come Saturday
afternoon at the Majestic in downtown Olde Saco. Although some of them might
like Sam Spade, Nick Charles, Phil Larkin, and Phillip Marlowe have started out
as public coppers they soon came up against that “go along, to get along” idea
that most cop departments worked under and split that scene when they were
looking for a little rough justice in this evil world. Tilted at windmills for
a living although none of us every came in contact with any real P.I.s so that
might be all hooey.)
Since this screed is as much about the cops, corrupt and
honest, in that growing up town up in Maine let me give a short overview of
that situation before going to the “what is what” of this film. Ocean View was
heavily F-C as we used to say (F-C on my Le Blanc mother’s side with relatives
who still live up there). There was always a tension between the Down-East
Maine Yankee mill-owners and their hangers-on and the immigrant F-Cers from
Quebec who came down to get off the dead-ass farms and make a little money when
the mills were thriving mostly in my great-grandparents and my grandparents’
generations before and during World War II. In my parents’ generation those
mills started to go south, to the low-wage non-union southern states before
heading off-shore altogether. That did not stop the mill-owners and their
hangers-on from lording it over the F-C community every way that they could.
This included direct harassment of my crowd of guys who hung around Jimmy
Jack’s Diner (owned by Jean-Jacques Renan who Anglicized his diner’s name to
draw the old swamp Yankees in for lunch breaks and after work) mainly wishing
and maybe a little thought of larceny which I will keep silent about.
Any given Friday or Saturday night during the school year,
any given night in the ocean spray summer, Billy Babcock and William Smith,
public coppers, and so crooked they needed a corkscrew to get into their
respective uniforms would move us along even though Jimmy Jack could have cared
less about us hanging around, at least outside in summer since this was peak
tourist season when the place was jammed between mill-workers and “foreigners.” During the winter, during the school year
especially when we were in high school we could be inside o or outside since
Jimmy Jack (sorry for not using his F-C name but we were so used to called him
by his English moniker it is hard to change up even now) thought we added
“class” to the place. By that he meant our hanging around brought guys with
cars-and girls around. Girls to endlessly play his jukebox to perdition and
back.
This is where a small example of how crooked Billy and Will
were comes into play. They got a cut of the jukebox money, got a cut of the
waitresses’ tips and a bunch of other small-time hoods hustles that even we
from hunger kids would not stoop to do. They also make dough on their
“protection” racket for small shop owners who didn’t want hoods hanging around
their stores. Like I said crooked like pretzels. Which did not stop them from
trying to shake us down as well to keep us out of jail when we were doing those
un-said larcenies, or to just try to run us in as vagrants. A few groin kicks
and police batons to the knees, front and back, were also part of their
arsenal. Naturally every once in a while, the Yankee brethren who ran the mills
and town would get in a reform mood and guys like Billy and Will would be
bounced out. Replaced by a copper, an honest copper as far I know, like Officer
Baker, that is what we called him, that is what he wanted to be called by guys
like us. This guy wanted to be our friend, tried to get us to play basketball,
Jesus, tried to wean us from jailbreak rock and roll whenever he came into
Jimmy Jack’s’ to tell him to keep the jukebox music lower. (Like he couldn’t
see that we had girls to die for who wanted louder music and no fucking
basketball bozos hanging around them.) Like I said, and will say again, the
only thing worse that a corrupt cop is an honest one.
Which brings us to one Johnny Blake, one honest copper in the
red hot corrupt big urban city of New York in the film under review. This
Johnny Blake, played by Edward G. Robinson who would later in one of his
gangster films, Key Largo, play
another Johnny, Johnny Rocco, who also fell down in a hail of bullets from a
guy who didn’t like him much, made me feel the same way I had about the latter
Johnny. As somebody said in that film “one Johnny Rocco, more or less, is not
worth dying over.” You can figure six, two and even that nobody is going to cry
much over this honest cop after he gets that big cop send-off. And they don’t
except maybe some small-time hooker, bar girl, whatever, Clara, who was running a small numbers racket while
Johnny looked the other way. Yeah, she was sweet on Johnny boy but he was all
cop, bled blue, although red when the deal went down.
As Sam Lowell, my dear friend with his own public copper
stories from down in the Acre section in North Adamsville south of Boston to
tell, used to say here is the skinny. Gotham, or the do-gooder reform element
in it were in one of their periodic “tired of the rackets” moods so they
grabbed a head cop who they thought would clean up the town. Fat chance but
they were trying anyway. This commissioner grabbed Johnny as a guy who knew the
guys running the rackets, or who they thought were running the rackets. Brought
him in to go palsy with Big Al Kruger the front man for whoever was really
running the operations, the guys who were getting the big pay-offs. Some of Big
Al’s underlings, especially one dope named Bugs, played by Humphrey Bogart who
turned out to be the guy who said that remark about the Johnny Roccos of the
world in Key Largo, and who liked to
use his phallic symbol weapon, his gun, regularly or he got nervous suspected
that Johnny Blake, ex-cop, was a stoolie, was working undercover.
Although Bugs, the guy with the itchy trigger finger, wasted
a few too many people he shouldn’t have, was right about Johnny Big Al wouldn’t
hear a word against Johnny once he conned him into doing the numbers racket
big-time. Of course there had to be tension between “shoot and loot” old time
Bugs and what he had represented back during Prohibition when a handy gun was a
necessity and “businessman” low over-head Big Al. Johnny played to those
irreconcilable tensions, played as well once he got in Big Al’s confidence the
info-wars to find out who Mister Big really was. Well Johnny found out, found
out the hard way after confronting Bugs after Bugs had wasted Big Al in a fit
of hubris and was ready to take over the rackets himself. Johnny figured he was
the guy the big boys would want to run things and he was right. Dead right once
Bugs was tipped that Johnny was a stoolie. And the big boys-guess what-this
ending is maybe something out of Bertolt Brecht’s Three Penny Opera the big boys were the biggest robbers of all-the
leading town bankers. That didn’t mean much to Johnny though as he fell down
with the life draining out of him on Wall Street. I wonder if he heard the
noise of wings before the end-or Bugs’ ironic laugh.