The Untouchables (1959) - Season 1: Volume 2 (4 Disc Set)

Parental Guidance Recommended. Contains violence

DVD (1960)

(avg. of 2 ratings)
 
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The Untouchables (1959) - Season 1: Volume 2 (4 Disc Set) DVD + The Untouchables (1959) - Season 1: Volume 1 (4 Disc Set) DVD
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93.33% of people buy The Untouchables (1959) - Season 1: Volume 2 (4 Disc Set) and The Untouchables (1959) - Season 1: Volume 1 (4 Disc Set) ~ DVD.

Details

Re-released on
April 27th, 2010
DVD Region
Region 4
Length (Minutes)
768
Aspect Ratio
  • 1.33 : 1
Languages
English
Supported Audio
  • Dolby Digital Mono
Director
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Product ID
1563254

Description

In this second volume of episodes from the classic crime drama's first season, Robert Stack continues his work as legendary Prohibition agent Eliot Ness. After a seemingly reformed mobster is released from prison (having been sent there by Ness), the Untouchables discover that he's spearheading a scheme involving slot machines. Later, they follow a trail of clues to area of downstate Illinois known as "Little Egypt."

Review

"Prohibition is over. Al Capone is in jail. "Are we gonna be out of work?" one of Eliot Ness's Untouchables asks in "The Unhired Assassin," one of the 14 episodes that completes this vintage series' killer first season. Not to worry; from armored car heists and assassination attempts to bank robberies and extortion rackets, there is plenty to keep Ness (Robert Stack) and his elite mob-busting squad busy. Ness and company are the heroes of this series, but it's the criminals (and the great character actors who portray them) who maintain as tight a grip on our imagination as the mob had on the city of Chicago in the 1930s, when these episodes take place. Bruce Gordon's Frank Nitti, Capone's impulsive enforcer, is a particular piece of work, as witness his ordered hit on incorruptible Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak in the two-part "The Unhired Assassin," and the season-finale, "The Frank Nitti Story," which chronicles Nitti's own finale. A homina-homina Anne Francis guest stars in "The Doreen Maney Story" as Maney, a Tennessee girl gone bad as one half of "The Lovebirds," responsible for a series of deadly armored car heists. We don't get as up close and personal with Ness or his Untouchables, although we do learn that he is 35 and has a son. And the straight-arrow Fed is not above double-crossing a mob goon for information, or, in "Head of Fire, Feet of Clay," refusing to call an ambulance as one lies bleeding ("You got no damn heart!" he screams). Nearly five decades later, these episodes still play like gangbusters, with Walter Winchell's rat-a-tat narration, gritty language, blunt violence, and great hard-boiled dialogue ("Everybody's yellow except Johnny Fortunata"). The Untouchables was produced by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball's Desilu Studios. A fun extra on this four-disc set is "Lucy the Gun Moll," an episode from The Lucy Show, featuring Stack, very much in character, as a federal agent who recruits Lucy to impersonate a gangster's girlfriend. "You know who you look like?" Lucy asks him. "They kid me about it all the time down at headquarters," he replies." --Donald Liebenson

Episodes:
Star Witness
The St. Louis Story
One-Armed Bandits
Little Egypt
The Big Squeeze
The Unhired Assassin: Part 1
The Unhired Assassin: Part 2
The White Slavers
Three Thousand Suspects
The Doreen Maney Story
Portrait of a Thief
The Underworld Bank
Head of Fire: Feet of Clay
The Frank Nitti Story

 

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Customer reviews

 
Review by Kevin on 4th July, 2011
4 stars "Classic TV"

I have bought this series twice for different people. Both are in the 60–70year age bracket. They both loved this show when it first aired and it still holds itself in high regard watching the show now. My dad loved it and so did my friends.

 
 
Review by Maurie on 26th July, 2010
5 stars "TV trip down memory lane, reminds one of how good this series wa"

I remember watching this many years ago on old B&W TV and was enthralled by each episode, and now 45 years on again it is real value for money.

 

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