THE PUBLIC ENEMY

Edited with an introduction by Henry Cohen

(Madison, Wisconsin): The University of Wisconsin Press, (1981).

First edition, first printing: Paperback issue.

Fine in photo-pictorial perfect bound wraps.

Wisconsin/Warner Bros. Screenplay Series.

    "The Public Enemy, a 1931 Warner Brothers gangster classic, is easily remembered as the movie in which James Cagney used Mae Clarke's nose as a grapefruit grinder. As Cagney recalls, it was just about the first time that "a woman had been treated like a broad on the screen, instead of like a delicate flower."
    The ambivalence toward women is just one of the many stylistic contradictions that make
The Public Enemy
worth studying, not only for its intrinsic merits but also as a creative expression bending under the constraints of censorship." publisher's blurb.

Octavo.

187 pages; notes.

Illustrated with stills from the film production.

Lengthy introduction, the screenplay, production credits and cast.

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