One of the great films of the '30s; a classic of social protest which played a role in ending the chain gangs in the US southern states. Paul Muni plays a bum wrongly sentenced to hard labour by a corrupt and sadistic penal system. Loosely based on a true story, the message is that this isn't merely an unjust destiny for an innocent man, but for anyone.
Robert Burns (Muni) returns from WWI to penury; one of the forgotten men. A bystander in a petty crime he is sentenced to ten years on a Georgia chain gang. He escapes to become a successful engineer, but having been tracked down to Chicago he agrees to return to jail on the understanding that he will be pardoned after 90 days.
The state is offended by Burns' public criticism and sends him to the foulest chain gang in the south and withdraws its promise. I can picture Muni's face now, his pardon denied, sent back into hell. Muni is magnificent. Some of the support acting creeks like a haunted house, but most are convincing and very moving.
I Am a Fugitive... delivers a subtle appraisal of the purposes of the prison system. It's a gripping polemic about human dignity and the kindness of strangers delivered in the punchy, concise style of Warner Brothers in the thirties. There are many unforgettable scenes. And the famous ending is a heartbreaker.
I would like to see this classic film, but it’s ‘ unavailable ‘, as are many other classic films from the 1930s