Directed by Edward Montagne; produced by Jay Bonafield
The discovery of a woman’s corpse in a New York park begins a police inquiry that leads investigators Corrigan and Tobin (Walter Kinsella, John Miles) into the mean streets and crumbling buildings of the city’s slums. They must discover not only who killed the woman and why, but who she is. All they seem to have to go on is a tattoo on the victim’s wrist.
The Tattooed Stranger is an interesting movie with a glaring flaw that, while puzzling, nonetheless doesn’t eliminate the entertainment value of the film. That flaw is the terrible continuity in the movie. To be more accurate, the terrible discontinuity. Aside from the visual faults - when the detectives enter a diner a man is seen eating a meal; when they leave, though no one else had arrived or departed, it is clearly a different man, eating ice cream - the writing ignores itself.
The victim is supposedly shot in the face with a shotgun. One policeman says grimly, “Shotgun? It looks more like a bazooka!” Yet a photograph of the dead woman, obviously taken at the morgue, shows her face completely undamaged. The photo cannot have been an editing problem, since it is used repeatedly to question witnesses about the woman’s identity. There is also the fact that the victim’s tattoo is mentioned by Corrigan before he and Tobin are told that she had one.
If one skips over the intimation at the beginning that the cause of death also disfigured the victim, the rest of the screenplay makes more sense. But even so, how can The Tattooed Stranger be recommended? The setting, direction and supporting players make this movie worth watching.
The movie makes excellent use of real-life New York of the day. It is shot on-location. In many movies, even as late as the 1950s, the slummy districts of a city would be artificial constructs on a sound-stage. Here, we see parts of Brooklyn and the Bronx that probably disappeared in urban renewal within a decade of The Tattooed Stranger’s release. Corrigan and Tobin visit clapboard terrace-houses and chase villains through hard-scrabble back gardens that I’ve not seen in movies previously. The tattoo-parlours of The Bowery are featured prominently.
Secondly, though the principal actors are adequate, it is the supporting players, the witnesses, the business-owners, who add to the authenticity suggested by the locations. Tattoo-shop managers, diner-owners, passers-by, all have the feel of people who lived in the ramshackle districts the police visit; it’s as if the casting director saw an interesting face in the crowd and offered $10 for a few lines. Yet these realistic bit-players are credible actors.
Added to this is the detail of the investigation. The writing, for all its mistakes, does a good job of combining the two elements of modern detective work: science and leg-work. Hours of telephoning restaurants and employment agencies, and miles of streets walked interviewing people are shown beside analyses of unusual grasses and studies of types of stone.
Lead actor John Miles made no more movies after The Tattooed Stranger. He had appeared in nineteen films in the previous six years, mostly in small, uncredited bit-parts. Ironically, his first starring role was in his last film. Why he quit movie-acting at only 27, and if he continued his profession elsewhere, i have not been able to discover. Jack Lord has a small part as a crime-analysis detective.
While The Tattooed Stranger has an inexplicable problem with its script, it does not prove fatal to the enjoyment of the film which, aside from being a pretty good police procedural, will also be of interest to film buffs and social historians. If you like all three elements, as I do, then this is a must-see movie.











































