The conflict between the small operator and the syndicate is film noir’s most direct engagement with the organizing principle of mid-century American capitalism: consolidation, rationalization, and the elimination of competition through violence. The small-time crook in these films is a figure of almost elegiac pathos – a craftsman of crime whose individual skill and independence are being rendered obsolete by the same forces of corporate organization that were transforming legitimate American business. These films understand the criminal world as a funhouse mirror of the legitimate economy, with the same dynamics of monopoly and displacement playing out in blood rather than contracts.
A mob lawyer works to consolidate New York’s numbers racket under a single powerful boss, crushing the small independent operators – including his own brother – in the process. Abraham Polonsky’s film is the most explicit Marxist analysis of organized crime in the classic noir cycle.
A detective’s obsessive pursuit of a crime boss who seems completely insulated from the law is a study in the asymmetry of power between individual investigators and organized criminal enterprises. The syndicate’s operations are shown as thoroughly rationalized and virtually immune to conventional enforcement.
A group of criminal specialists assembled for a single job represents the last gasp of artisanal crime in the face of syndication – and their destruction is engineered not by police but by the respectable lawyer who financed them. Huston’s sympathies are entirely with the craftsmen.
A bootlegger who went to prison for his partner returns to find the partner has built a corporate entertainment empire while he rotted in jail, and that the legal complexity of corporate structure is designed to prevent the kind of justice he seeks. Kirk Douglas is perfectly cast as the modern criminal.
An honest police captain wages a one-man war against a crime syndicate whose reach extends to every level of city government and law enforcement. Robert Ryan and Robert Mitchum face off as the two sides of the law’s relationship to organized crime.
The complete takeover of a small Alabama town by a criminal syndicate is documented in a film that blurs the line between journalism and noir fiction. The syndicate’s total control of Phenix City’s economy, politics, and law enforcement is presented as an achieved fact.
A female prisoner is released to testify against a syndicate boss whose reach extends so far into the justice system that she cannot be protected anywhere except in a hotel room guarded by a single honest cop. Ginger Rogers plays the witness with unexpected authority and complexity.
A plainclothes detective goes undercover in the waterfront mob after a gangland shooting, discovering how thoroughly the syndicate has penetrated the longshoreman’s union. Broderick Crawford is solid in a film that anticipated the Kefauver hearings’ revelations about organized crime’s reach.
A corporate portrait of organized crime in America, following the business operations of a syndicate boss and the professional hitman whose loyalty he takes for granted. Broderick Crawford plays the crime boss as a company CEO, making the parallel between crime and capitalism unusually explicit.
A masked criminal mastermind assembles a team of specialists who don’t know each other’s identities for a bank robbery – the perfect corporate structure for crime. John Payne’s framed innocent man must penetrate this syndicate to clear his name.