"The Untouchables" The Torpedo (TV Episode 1963) Poster

(TV Series)

(1963)

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9/10
An old torpedo has lost his nerve
planktonrules28 March 2016
This episode of "The Untouchables" was directed by Ida Lupino. It stars Charles McGraw as Holly Kester. Kester is an aging torpedo-- an enforcer who is tough and is willing and able to beat or kill someone for his boss at a moment's notice. And, he's been very good at it and his relationship with his boss, Victor Kurtz (John Anderson) is very good. Business is also very good, as Kurtz and his long-time rival, Lyselle, has finally put their grudges behind and they are working together finally.

While this situation seems dandy, Ness has made it his business to muddy up this lovey-dovey situation. How? Ness deliberately targets ONLY Kurtz's business. Again and again, Ness and his men raid Kurtz and it starts to look as if Lyselle must be friendly with the Feds-- telling them about how to hurt Kurtz most. So naturally, Kurtz begins attacking Lyselle and soon you have a war going between them*. In the process, Kester's nerves are starting to fray...and it's much worse after he's nearly killed by Lyselle's men. What's next? See the show...it's a dandy. Well done all around and well worth seeing.

By the way, at one point Kester is talking to his buddy and one of them says "Don't play Stella Dallas with me". This is a reference to the Barbara Stanwyck film "Stella Dallas"...a real tear-jerker. In other words, he's telling his friend to stop trying to make him cry.

*It is odd and a bit confusing that Ness is deliberately provoking a mob war considering how hard he worked in a few previous episodes (such as "Giant Killer") Ness works very, very hard to prevent such violence between rival gangs!
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7/10
Agents Provocateur
bkoganbing8 February 2014
The Untouchables in this episode try a new strategy in their war on crime as defined by Prohibition. They act as agents provocateur and hijack and destroy illegal booze, not as Treasury agents, but as masked heist men. The hope is that the warring gangs of John Anderson and James Griffith will get to fighting again and arrests will be made.

What Robert Stack gets is an unexpected bonus of Anderson's number one trigger man Charles McGraw just turning soft. McGraw has come to the realization that he's lived a long time in his line of work and would like to just quit, but there are no retirement plans in his company. Even his girlfriend Gail Kobe thinks he's just turned coward. The only sympathy McGraw gets is from Eliot Ness.

Charles McGraw dominates this story and it's worth seeing for an unusual portrait from tough guy McGraw.
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6/10
HARDLY AN EXAMPLE OF BLACK AND WHITE/GOOD VS BAD!
rms125a4 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Interesting but morally reprehensible. Ness's actions could easily be anticipated to directly instigate bloodshed. I don't know if Ness ever did this in real life but if he did it casts a shadow, in my opinion, over his name and his legacy. (Although the well-intentioned but misguided, wrong-headed and self-destructive experiment known as "Prohibition" has long been discredited, anyway.)
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