Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye

Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye

1950 "Unarmed… He’s dangerous. Armed… He’s lethal."
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye

Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye

7.1 | 1h43m | NR | en | Thriller

Ralph Cotter, a ruthless criminal, escapes violently from a farm prison. Then, he seduces a dead inmate’s sister, gets back quickly into the crime business, faces corrupt local cops who run the city’s underworld and meets a powerful tycoon’s whimsical daughter.

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7.1 | 1h43m | NR | en | Thriller , Crime | More Info
Released: August. 19,1950 | Released Producted By: William Cagney Productions , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Ralph Cotter, a ruthless criminal, escapes violently from a farm prison. Then, he seduces a dead inmate’s sister, gets back quickly into the crime business, faces corrupt local cops who run the city’s underworld and meets a powerful tycoon’s whimsical daughter.

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Cast

James Cagney , Barbara Payton , Helena Carter

Director

Wiard B. Ihnen

Producted By

William Cagney Productions ,

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Reviews

st-shot Free of the nagging headaches of White Heat James Cagney once again goes to his bread and butter gangster role for the second time in row after putting it on sabbatical for a decade. He's no Cody Jarret but homicidal nonetheless.Ralph Cotter (Cagney) busts out of prison with the help of an inmate's sister (Barbara Payton). Returning to his life of crime other opportunities become available when he switches his identity. Soon he has a pair of corrupt cops in his pocket while being ably assisted by a crooked lawyer and the cash begins to roll in. When he falls for a society dame matters get tenuous.Unlike Jarrett Cagney's Cotter has the intemperate rage under better control in Goodbye allowing him to convey his cocksure threatening arrogance with a degree of sanity and control. More grounded without the mother fixation it extends his reach in things both criminal and romantic.Barbara Payton in her first big role shines and shows great promise in a career that would nosedive as fast as rise while Falcon detective duo Barton McClain and Ward Bond, stretching his role more than usual, reprise their occupations but this time they are on the take. Luther Adler's corrupt lawyer 'Cherokee' Mandon gives an excellent understated performance buttressing Cagney by being a worthy adversary and advocate in attempting to keep Cotter on his game. Prolific director Gordon Douglas ( 5 features in 1950, 4 more in 51) keeps things moving along at a decent pace with straightforward storytelling and handling of subplots that clearly in comparison lacks the desperation and intensity of Heat but remains a decent follow-up worth the watch.
dglink Six men and one woman are on trial, and the prosecutor tells the jury that each one is evil. The camera slowly pans past the group, which includes several veteran character actors, while the prosecutor says that an eighth defendant should be on trial with them. The first witness is then called from that group, and as he begins to testify, the story flashes back to a prison scene. The eighth person is likely James Cagney, who reprises his iconic gangster persona in "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye." However, the film and his performance are less engaging than "White Heat" made only a year earlier. Although still a charismatic actor, Cagney is in a mid-career limbo; past his prime as a young tough and prior to his re-emergence as a distinguished elder character actor.Unlike his Cody Jarrett in "White Heat," at age 51, Cagney is visibly too old for the part of Ralph Cotter, and his age is a factor in the film's disappointment. The two young women who play Cagney's romantic interests are young enough to be his daughters, and the love scenes between them lack any chemistry, spark, or believability. Cagney's appeal to the two young women, especially the reckless young heiress, is mystifying, and, when her father addresses Cagney as "young man," viewers will question the man's eyesight. However, the tougher grittier scenes, planning heists or conspiring to entrap corrupt cops, evoke some of the early Warner Brothers gangster epics that featured Cagney, Robinson, and Muni at their best.Unfortunately, Harry Brown's screenplay, from a novel of the same title by Horace McCoy, often lacks credibility. The heists seem unplanned, casual, and even sloppy. One robbery occurs in broad daylight at a neighborhood grocery, where the criminals regularly shop; the robbers use no disguises, yet, incredibly, a witness after wards claims to have seen nothing but the guns, and other witnesses, who clearly saw the men, are not even questioned. Equally astounding, Brown evidently thinks that feigning a fever is enough to fool prison guards and successfully break out. While the supporting players include such stalwarts as Ward Bond, Luther Adler, and Barton MacLane, the plot is not worthy of their talents. Character motivations are often unexplained or non-existent. Arguably the film's worst performance is given by Barbara Payton as Holiday Carleton, a suitably pulp-fiction character name; her histrionics and mood swings are overly dramatic and unbelievable, to be polite. Produced by Cagney's brother, William, and directed by Gordon Douglas, the film has the look of a modestly budgeted programmer, the bottom half of a double bill. While not really bad, "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye," despite a great pulp-fiction title, is just not good enough; certainly not good enough to be the vehicle for a great star, even one beyond his prime. Viewers may want to revisit "White Heat" instead.
Theo Robertson Some people here are claiming that this is very similar to WHITE HEAT down to Cagney playing a violent villain in the same vein as Cody Jarrett . I disagree . Ralph Cotter is a violent anti-hero and that's what he is - an anti-hero where as Cody Jarrett is one of the most terrifying psychotic screen villains committed to celluloid which on that score alone makes WHITE HEAT an all time classic of cinema . KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE is a much lesser known film and there might be a very good reason to this The good points are that it stars Cagney . Let's be blunt and say Cagney was never an actor but he was a movie star and his idiosyncratic style can carry the most mediocre of material . The story for the most part is very engaging and what makes Ralph Cotter an anti-hero the audience can empathise with is the fact he's usually only killing and blackmailing villains , stool pigeons and corrupt officials . Do your job , don't grass on your friends , behave yourself and you'll have nothing to worry about from Ralph Where the story falls down quite badly is that there's a couple of character subplots involving dames . One involving a female called Holliday Carleton makes some sense but the other involving Margaret Dobson does not and it's impossible to believe this young woman would have any romantic attraction to Ralph . You also have to overlook the fact that Ralph is a hunted man and yet nearly everyone from traffic cops to Margaret's father fail to recognise Ralph . These two romantic subplots seem merely to exist to set up the ending . In other words the story structure is painfully contrived in order to bring the story to an end and it's this that stops KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE from being a classic crime drama instead of being a watchable thriller
nomoons11 Man if this character Cagney plays doesn't appear to have the same look, feel and over the topness of his character in White Heat, I don't know what other film does.This was a pretty good but it's not in the same breath as White Heat. Cagney plays a guy who busts outta prison and gets together with a few corrupt officials and regulars to commit robberies for fast dough. In this we meet his helper in his escape, Barbara Payton and the driver. They get involved with corrupt cops and lawyers whoever else to get ahead. The character Cagney plays so closely resembles Cody Jarrett that just by me mentioning it you'll immediately know what your in for. Cagney goes through this film doing whatever he wants to whoever without batting an eyelash. The best part is how all the people around him react. One comment on the time this film was made, late 40's early 50's, there probably wasn't an "institute for cosmic consciousness" in the south. How do we know this was in the south? Well, I know of know other place in the US that had chain gangs(like the one Cagney escapes from). In this film you see a corrupt ex-mob guy who's running this "new-age" place and I can tell ya folks, ain't know way that place would have existed in the south in that day and time. They would have run them outta the place. Another little fun nugget? Take a look at the end scene where Cagney falls after being shot. If you look close on the left hand side of the screen, you'll see a crew members foot come into the frame for just a second. LoL now that's quality editing.Looking for over-the-topness in your films? This one should suit you just fine. It was pretty obvious Cagney jumped on this one cause of how well White Heat previously. It works but don't expect White Heat.