Detective Story with Kirk Douglas: DVD Cover

    Detective Story Director: William Wyler Cast: Kirk Douglas, Eleanor Parker, William Bendix, Lee Grant

    DVD - Pan & Scan Learn more

    BUY THIS ITEM

    • $14.99 Online price
      $13.49 Member price
    • skip to cart
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=097360511147&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3

    GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

    DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

    Usually ships within 24 hours

    Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

    Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

    Enter a zip code

    • DVD Release Date: 10/25/2005
    • Original Release: 1951
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 35,892

    Viewer Rating: (1 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "The Script" See All

    Customers who bought this also bought

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Closed Caption; [None specified]

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Detective Story
    1. The Precinct [7:21]
    2. Detective McLeod [7:36]
    3. Interrogations [6:47]
    4. Detainees [5:12]
    5. Schneider Surrenders [8:03]
    6. Going for a Ride [5:33]
    7. Personal Motives [6:24]
    8. Arthur's Story [6:19]
    9. Mrs. McLeod [7:05]
    10. Digging Your Own Grave [6:43]
    11. Immaculate Wife [6:45]
    12. Booking Arthur [8:22]
    13. Compromise [4:54]
    14. Vengeful Man [8:56]
    15. Forgiveness [7:08]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Sidney Kingsley's Broadway play Detective Story was praised for its realistic view of an event-filled day in a single police precinct station. The film, directed by meticulous taskmaster William Wyler, manages to retain this realism, even allowing for the star-turn performance of Kirk Douglas. A stickler for the letter of the law, Detective James McLeod (Douglas) is not averse to using strong-arm methods on criminals and witnesses alike in bringing lawbreakers to justice. He is particularly rough on a first-time offender (Craig Hill), on whom the rest of the force is willing to go easy because of the anguish of his girlfriend (Cathy O'Donnell). But McLeod's strongest invective is reserved for shady abortion doctor Karl Schneider (George MacReady); McLeod all but ruins the case against Schneider by beating him up in the patrol wagon. When McLeod discovers that his own wife (Eleanor Parker) had many years earlier lost a baby in one of Schneider's operations, and that the baby's father was gangster Tami Giacoppetti (Gerald Mohr), it is too much for the detective to bear. Punctuating the grim proceedings with brief moments of humor is future Oscar winner Lee Grant, reprising her stage role as a timorous shoplifter; it would be her last Hollywood assignment until the early 1960s, thanks to the iniquities of the blacklist. Despite small concessions to Hollywood censorship, Detective Story largely upheld the power of its theatrical original, and it forms a clear precursor to such latter-day urban police dramas as NYPD Blue. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    • Viewer Rating:
    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    The Detective Storyby anselmus

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    August 31, 2009: This is an above-average film, well-scripted and smart, directed by William Wyler, who also directed the wonderful Desperate Hours, the first, that featured Humphrey Bogart and Spencer Tracy. This one is not quite up to that, but it's still a very good film. The banter between the policemen and the criminals is very good. This is the first and last film to feature the actress Lee Grant until she appeared In the Heat of the Night, if memory serves me, playing the wife of the murdered man. After this film, in which she does a great job playing a female shoplifter, she was blacklisted. There could be much worse ways to spend one's times then to work through Wyler's entire oeuvre, movies like Dodsworth (1936), These Three (1936), Dead End (1937), Wuthering Heights (1939), The Westerner (1940), The Letter (1941), The Little Foxes (1942) and The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). In the 1950s he directed Roman Holiday with Audrey Hepburn, The Desperate Hours, and Ben Hur, and ended the decade with The Collector. In between he managed to squeeze in this fine little drama, which foreshadowed many subsequent television police dramas.

    This review was written about the DVD edition.