Muni Back To Gangland: Angel On My Shoulder (1946)
Checked Paul Muni's filmography, and this looks
like the only occasion since Scarface that he played a gangster, which is
surprising as, despite lean toward "Great Man" parts, Muni seemed
ideally bestial for further crime parts. Like E.G. Robinson, he could have
bounced between intellectuals and thuggery, but apparently lacked the
inclination (maybe Muni felt he'd got beyond rough stuff after Pasteur). Was he
independently fixed as not to need so muchcash flow as art-collecting Eddie?
Angel On My Shoulder was independently made, slow on the draw at times, but a
grabber for opening act in Hell, Claude Rains its satanic ruler. A
Dimitri Tiomkin score adds necessary fire/brimstone. Muni gets leave from the
pit to seek vengeance on a rackets turncoat and discredit a do-gooder judge by
entering his body, per bargain with Claude. Offbeat to be sure, Angel's
fantasy element commending it to modern viewers, whose number might swell were
this PD title around in better prints; the one TCM uses is pretty good,
certainly a best I've yet seen. Also available on DVD from Alpha, VCI, and
others.
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