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5.0 out of 5 stars
Cagney is bad to the bone!, July 17 2004
I've always loved watching film noirs & of course I'm a huge James Cagney fan. I must confess that when I bought this the other day I'd never even heard of it. Along with White Heat, Cagney proved he was truly a screen villian to be feared. He had already established his reputation with his great gangster roles of the 30's, but never did he play a more evil character than in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. A comparison to Al Pacino's "Tony Montana" character in Scarface is not far off, believe me! Other reviewers have gone over the plot, so I won't waste your time. Without a doubt this is one of Cagney's finest performances, & no Cagney fan should be without this classic or White Heat, his only other film noir role.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Cagney: A Hood Who Rules With Personality Not Logic, Aug 10 2003
When James Cagney was offered the role of criminal Bruce Cutter in KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE, he thought that he had long since finished playing gangsters. He changed his mind though, and his role as the psychopathic killer was the last that he would play. What stamps his performance as the opportunistic killer in this film is that he hearkens back to the sort of prohibition type thugs that he immortalized in the 30's, but unlike those roles in which he combined immorality with a certain likeableness, here he is totally feral. More than a few supporting characters note that he insane with ambition. KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE is not the kind of crime film in which believability ranks highly. The impetus of audience reaction is carried solely through the kinetic force of Cagney's over the top performance. From the opening scene in which he escapes a prison work farm with the help of girlfriend Holliday (Barbara Payton) to every scene that ought to drown in illogic, the flow of plot runs so smoothly that the audience can't help but overlook the extraordinary concatenation of coincidence. As soon as Cutter rolls into town, no cops recognize him, even when he strolls leisurely into and out of the town's police station. He pulls a stickup and when apprehended by the police, he is let go by a crooked cop (Ward Bond), who promptly implicates himself on a recording device. To further complicate matters, Cutter starts an affair with Margaret (Helena Carter), the daughter of the town's most powerful citizen. Considering that Cagney was 50 years old at the time, the implausibility of a pair of pretty twenty somethings falling for him is breathtaking. Finally, the blatant use of police corruption adds to the feeling that you have seen this movie at least 20 years before. Several critics have pointed to it by paying homage to its origins as a 30's type gangster B movie. This, I think, is being a little too kind. It is no such thing. Instead, it stands as the swan song of a gifted actor who tried once too often to reprise the role of a ruthless thug that made him famous in the first place.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Original Tough Guy, Feb 17 2003
This review is from: NEW Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (DVD) (DVD)
Cagney along with a fine cast of co-stars portrays a mentally disturbed, escaped convict with high aspirations. Betrayal, greed and unrestrained ambition are the key ingredients to this underated film noir masterpiece. The DVD plays clean and clear with good sound quality.
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