Combining social realism, juvenile delinquency, and a gritty noir atmosphere, Basil Dearden’s Violent Playground is perhaps the only classic film noir more frightening today than the year it was released: that’s because it contains an extended sequence in which a mentally unstable young man invades an elementary school with a machine gun and takes young schoolchildren hostage, a situation all too imaginable in contemporary American culture. Set in the once famous Gerard Gardens tenements in a still war-ravaged Liverpool, the film stars Stanley Baker as Detective Sergeant Jack Truman, just re-assigned to the city’s juvenile liaison department, who begins surveilling gang leader and arson suspect Johnny Murphy (David McCallum) as he travels to and from the dilapidated apartment where he lives with his three siblings (and no parents), two little twins and older sister Cathie (Anne Heywood) with whom Truman quickly becomes infatuated. When the gang next attempts to burn down a hotel, Johnny accidentally kills his getaway driver (Michael Chow) and ends up the object of a police manhunt. Famously skilled in shooting crumbling urban environments on location, Dearden depicts Gerard Gardens, which no longer exists, almost like an amusement park of delinquency, throngs of bored children and wayward teens looking for purpose and dancing in a daze to the new rock and roll phenomenon.
By Michael Bayer
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