Michael O'Keefe
Frankie Kane(John Drew Barrymore)is kicked out of a Catholic orphanage after it is found out that his mother was Jewish. Having some trouble out on his own in the neighborhood, he is befriended by Martin Cabell(Steve McQueen), who teaches him to fight. Martin's sister Julie(Lita Milan)instantly becomes Frankie's love interest. The bitter young man enters a life of crime running numbers for gangster 'Silk' Fennelli(Robert Bray)and as time passes, Martin studies law and becomes a district attorney while Frankie progresses into a mob boss heading his own successful racket. As soon as Frankie reaches a peak, he finds himself in major conflict with his old boss, as well as his old school friend. Screenplay is by Harold Robbins, who adapts his own novel. Robert Stevens directs and other players include: R.G. Armstrong, Felice Orlandi and Salem Ludwig.
writers_reign
For once I am in agreement with the majority of posters. The plot may be accurately described as a cliché's cliché since it is that old chestnut about two childhood friends who take different paths until they wind up diametrically opposite one another. Having established something of a neat twist - a mother dies in childbirth and her child, with the best of intentions, is placed in a Catholic orphanage and raised in the religion; years later an accidental discovery reveals that the mother was really Jewish. Rather than exploring the moral and other dilemmas this raises the film prefers to segue into a run-of-the-mill gangster melodrama. It may be novel to see Steve McQueen bullied to such an extent that he needs to be given lessons in self defense but novels don't necessarily make good movies not even when they are written - as this one was - by Harold Robbins. For trivia buffs only.
Lovpups
I thought this was a great movie. The different paths that it takes you down and places it takes you too. If you like gangsters, crime, love and hate this is the movie to see.It had a different ending then I was expecting, but that is what make the movie good you had no idea how the movie was going to end.I would watch the movie again if given the chance.
Michael-110
This film is painfully inept and should be avoided by all except lovers of camp. It's the oft-told story of the boyhood friends--where one goes straight and the other becomes a crook. For a vastly better version of the story, watch "Manhattan Melodrama." In "Never Love a Stranger," the dialogue is incredibly wooden and the plot contrivances both silly and obvious. Really, I don't know why I watched to the end except that I was hoping for a good courtroom scene, but none ever materialized.