Thieves' Highway
directed by Jules Dassin
directed by Jules Dassin
In some respects this 1949 film is both social criticism and a morality play about the values of such concepts as love, revenge, and trust. Thieves' Highway is both a gangster and noir film, though hardly the darkest of either genre.
Whereas some noir films like Decoy had convoluted storylines and dreamy cinematography, Thieves' Highway was simple and realistic. It was mostly shot on location in San Francisco among the produce markets.
I wasn't surprised to learn that Dassin had been blacklisted shortly after this film and forced to surrender his career in his native United States and relocate to Europe.
Thieves' Highway may feature some criminals, even some organized ones, but this movie makes it clear to modern eyes, and apparently a few right wing eyes in the late forties, that the real crime was a system that made it only too rational to exploit workers and eliminate them if they protested.