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White Heat
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

In later years, James Cagney regarded White Heat with a combination of pride and regret; while satisfied with his own performance, he tended to dismiss the picture as a "cheap melodrama." Seen today, White Heat stands as one of the classic crime films of the 1940s, containing perhaps Cagney's best bad-guy portrayal. The star plays criminal mastermind Cody Jarrett, a mother-dominated psychotic who dreams of being on "top of the world." Inadvertently leaving clues behind after a railroad heist, Jarrett becomes the target of the feds, who send an undercover agent (played by Edmond O'Brien) to infiltrate the Jarrett gang. While Jarrett sits in prison on a deliberately trumped-up charge (he confesses to one crime to provide himself an alibi for the railroad robbery), he befriends O'Brien, who poses as a hero-worshipping hood who's always wanted to work with Jarrett. Busting out of prison with O'Brien, Jarrett regroups his gang to mastermind a "Trojan horse" armored-car robbery.

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Other Related Works
 Is related to:    The Roaring Twenties  (1939, Raoul Walsh)
   The Strawberry Blonde  (1941, Raoul Walsh)
   G-Men  (1935, William Keighley)
   Me, Gangster  (1928, Raoul Walsh)
 Is spoofed in:    Johnny Dangerously  (1984, Amy Heckerling)