House of Strangers (1949)

House of Strangers is a 1949 American film noir directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz and starring Edward G. Robinson, Susan Hayward, and Richard Conte. The screenplay by Philip Yordan and Mankiewicz (who chose to go uncredited) is the first of three film versions of Jerome Weidman’s novel I’ll Never Go There Any More, the others being the Spencer Tracy western Broken Lance (1954) and The Big Show (1961).

DirectorJoseph L. Mankiewicz

WritersPhilip Yordan (screenplay), Jerome Weidman (novel), Joseph L. Mankiewicz (writer of retakes)

Cast
Edward G. Robinson as Gino Monetti
Susan Hayward as Irene Bennett
Richard Conte as Max Monetti
Luther Adler as Joe Monetti
Paul Valentine as Pietro Monetti
Efrem Zimbalist Jr as Tony Monetti
Debra Paget as Maria Domenico
Hope Emerson as Helena Domenico
Esther Minciotti as Theresa Monetti, wife of Gino Monetti

Watch “House of Strangers” (1949)

Plot

Gino Monetti is a rags-to-riches Italian-American banker in New York City whose methods result in a number of criminal charges. Three of his four grown sons, the ambitious Joe, playboy Tony, and physically imposing Pietro, unhappy at their domineering father’s dismissive treatment of them, refuse to help Gino when he is put on trial for questionable business practices. Max, a lawyer, is the only son who stays loyal to his father, and he serves as Gino’s attorney during the trial.

When Gino signs ownership of his bank over to his wife Theresa as a temporary protective measure, Joe persuades his mother to sign it over to him and seizes control. Gino is relegated to an early retirement with a meager monthly allowance. The three brothers conspire to send Max to jail as well. When Max tries to bribe a juror to save his father, his crime is exposed; he is disbarred and sentenced to seven years in prison. Max must leave behind Maria, the girl he had been expected to marry, and Irene, a client he fell in love with after becoming her attorney. Meanwhile, humiliated by Joe’s betrayal and directionless without his bank to run, Gino’s health deteriorates and he dies shortly before Max is released.

At his father’s funeral, Max vows revenge on his brothers, but that night he has a change of heart when he realizes that his father had caused all the tension within the family. The three brothers are still worried about his quest for vengeance, however, and confront him. After a fight in which Max is incapacitated, Joe even goes so far as to order Pietro to throw Max off their house’s balcony to his death, but in doing so, Joe insults Pietro in the same way their father always had, prompting Pietro to turn on Joe instead. Max saves Joe from Pietro’s wrath by reminding Pietro that if he kills Joe, he would only be doing exactly as their father would have wanted. Max then leaves his brothers to rejoin Irene and travel to San Francisco, where they plan to start a new life together.

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