Nominated for Oscars for Best Picture and Best Actor
Cast
| Paul Muni | James Allen | |
| Glenda Farrell | Marie Woods | |
| Helen Vinson | Helen | |
| Noel Francis | Linda | |
| Preston Foster | Pete | |
| Allen Jenkins | Convict Barney Sykes | |
| Berton Churchill | The Judge | |
| Edward Ellis | Convict Bomber Wells | |
| David Landau | The Warden |
Director: Mervyn LeRoy
Based on a true story written by Robert E. Burns

Synopsis
Having returned from fighting in World War I, James Allen doesn't want to settle into a humdrum life and decides to set off to find his fortune. He travels the length and breadth of America, working as a skilled tradesman in the construction industry. When times get tough however, he finds himself living in a shelter where an acquaintance suggests they go out for a hamburger. What the friend really has in mind is to rob the diner and Allen soon finds himself working on a chain gang with a long jail sentence. Allen manages to escape however and heads to Chicago where over several years he slowly but surely works his way up the ladder to become one of the most respected construction engineers in the city. His past catches up with him and despite protestations from civic leaders and his many friends in Chicago, he finds himself again on the chain gang. Escaping for a second time, he accepts that to survive, he must lead a life of crime.
Review
By Dennis Schwartz
Based on the autobiography of Robert Elliot Burns. It's a depressing pic, but that didn't stop it from being a big box-office hit and nominated for an Oscar for Best Picture (it lost to Cavalcade) and Best Actor (Paul Muni lost to Charles Laughton for his performance in The Private Life of Henry VIII). This is a hard-hitting Warner Brothers crime drama, forcefully directed by Mervyn LeRoy ("Little Caesar"). It serves as a transitional film that differs from the usual action crime dramas of the era to one that now offers a sound social commentary on justice and the importance of social change, and though dated and heavy-handed in parts of its commentary it still stands as one of the most powerful indictments against the brutalities of the chain-gain system. Paul Muni gives a heart-wrenching performance as a good guy wrongly convicted of a crime and forced to endure the dehumanizing punishment of a Georgia chain-gang.

The scenes of the chain-gang are haunting, and still pack a powerful wallop depicting institutionalized savagery. The film was made at a time when there was the veterans' Bonus March on Washington in 1932, where the disgruntled war veterans raised the issue about their lack of benefits (which they had been doing ever since the 1920s). This film was so necessarily pessimistic because it played into that protest and used the viewers experience with the Great Depression to ground it in such a bleak fashion (though the story is set mostly during the 1920s and ends at the beginning of the Depression in the 1930s) to show how civilization was losing its humanity by not caring about how fairly its citizens were treated.
Trailer

