WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Drama >

Pete Kelly's Blues

Watch Pete Kelly's Blues For Free

Pete Kelly's Blues

In 1927, a Kansas City, Missouri cornet player and his band perform nightly at a seedy speakeasy until a racketeer tries to extort them in exchange for protection.

... more
Release : 1955
Rating : 6.3
Studio : Warner Bros. Pictures,  Mark VII Ltd., 
Crew : Art Direction,  Production Design, 
Cast : Jack Webb Janet Leigh Edmond O'Brien Peggy Lee Andy Devine
Genre : Drama Crime Music

Cast List

Related Movies

Chaplin
Chaplin

Chaplin   1992

Release Date: 
1992

Rating: 7.5

genres: 
Drama
Stars: 
Robert Downey Jr.  /  Geraldine Chaplin  /  Paul Rhys
Yes, No, Goodbye
Yes, No, Goodbye

Yes, No, Goodbye   2023

Release Date: 
2023

Rating: 2

genres: 
Drama  /  Romance
Caro Emerald: In Concert
Caro Emerald: In Concert

Caro Emerald: In Concert   2013

Release Date: 
2013

Rating: 8.3

genres: 
Music
Stars: 
Caro Emerald
Harlem Nights
Harlem Nights

Harlem Nights   1989

Release Date: 
1989

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
Eddie Murphy  /  Richard Pryor  /  Redd Foxx
Meeting of the Spirits
Meeting of the Spirits

Meeting of the Spirits   1982

Release Date: 
1982

Rating: 5.5

genres: 
Music
Stars: 
Larry Coryell  /  Paco de Lucía  /  John McLaughlin
Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill
Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill

Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill   2016

Release Date: 
2016

Rating: 7.8

genres: 
Drama  /  Music
Stars: 
Audra McDonald
The Banshees of Inisherin
The Banshees of Inisherin

The Banshees of Inisherin   2022

Release Date: 
2022

Rating: 7.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Colin Farrell  /  Brendan Gleeson  /  Kerry Condon
Bullets Over Broadway
Bullets Over Broadway

Bullets Over Broadway   1994

Release Date: 
1994

Rating: 7.4

genres: 
Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
John Cusack  /  Chazz Palminteri  /  Dianne Wiest

Reviews

Cathardincu
2018/08/30

Surprisingly incoherent and boring

More
Micitype
2018/08/30

Pretty Good

More
Claysaba
2018/08/30

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

More
Jenna Walter
2018/08/30

The film may be flawed, but its message is not.

More
edwagreen
2012/02/15

Not only did Jack Webb star in the film, he also directed it. Trouble is that with his meek character at the beginning of the film, Webb was weak here and should have handed over the role to Bob Mitchum or Alan Ladd.That being said, the film chronicles the 1920s jazz era in Kansas City. Pete and other bands are subjected to the protection racket by Edmond O'Brien. When a drunken Martin Milner, a band member, resists, he is shot dead and Kelly (Webb) falls in line.Lee Marvin plays a band member who makes Kelly see the light and Janet Leigh is along for the ride as Kelly's love interest. With her '20's look, she is ready to start shimmering at any time.Credit must be given to Peggy Lee for her boozy moll to O'Brien. Her appearance on screen was memorable and she earned a supporting Oscar nomination for it. She was generally trying to make a take-off of Claire Trevor's Oscar win in 1948 for "Key Largo."After Kelly gets the nerve, the film turns into a shoot out by the end.

More
MartinHafer
2010/11/10

I was eager to see this film, as it was a rare chance to see Jack Webb star and direct a film where he does not play a cop. While the topic of the film (jazz) might surprise some, it didn't catch me by surprise as I have read a biography about Webb and know he adored jazz. He had one of the best record collections anywhere and in the 1950s and 60s, he was responsible for many collections of jazz recordings. Apart from playing a cop, jazz was Webb's love.Webb plays the title character--a cornet-playing band leader in the 1920s. His band has a moderate amount of success when they are approached with an 'offer' from a mobster (Edmund O'Brien) who wants to be the band's agent...and collect 25% of their take. The bottom line is that they must work with this cheap hood or, if they are lucky, just have their heads kicked in! Well, through some bad choices, one of the more headstrong members of the band is killed and Webb just walks away---forming a new band and knuckling under to O'Brien's thuggish tactics. But, despite swallowing his pride, deep within Webb's conscience is eating at him...as he has trouble sleeping with this devil.The film is very interesting for its look and sound. While I am no fan of jazz, I really liked the cool jazz sound and it gave the film a great ambiance. Webb chose his selections well. I also liked all of the characters...save one. Webb was just too laconic--too stiff. While this worked well when he played Joe Friday on "Dragnet", here he seems too wooden--at least until the end. He wasn't bad...he just wasn't as good as he could have been. Otherwise, some fine performances by Janet Leigh, Rosemary Clooney (in a pretty tough role) and O'Brien. Despite the lovely Warner Brothers color, the film played a lot like film noir with its gritty dialog and heavies. An interesting film--and one well worth seeing even with its faults. Plus, despite his oddly controlled acting, Webb directed this film very well--keeping it taught and entertaining throughout.By the way, you gotta love that scene with the disco ball. When you see it, you'll know what I mean.

More
calvinnme
2010/01/16

This film is musically great with a couple of numbers by Ella Fitzgerald. However, this is not anything close to a musical. Rather it is a 20's gangster tale that involves Pete Kelly (Jack Webb) and his band. For those of you who remember Dragnet, Webb's narration might have you thinking of Dragnet just a little too much. Webb also directed this film, and he did a great job of giving it a real 20's feel. You don't feel like you're looking at a bunch of people from the 50's dressed up for a 20's costume party.The only thing bad I can say about it is I had a hard time figuring out Pete Kelly's motivation. A person close to him is killed, and he is ready to give in to the gangster responsible and forget the whole thing ever happened. He finds out another person he barely knows has been killed by the same gangster and he's ready for war. He tosses an eager and beautiful Janet Leigh out of his room in one scene, and in the next scene he's overjoyed to see her to the point of wanting to marry her. The clinical acting style that worked so well for Webb in Dragnet just left me a little confused here. Still, overall, I would recommend it.

More
bkoganbing
2009/03/06

The background of the Prohibition Era of Tom Pendergast's Kansas City in the Twenties at its height is the setting for the story of Pete Kelly's Blues. Jack Webb's crisp documentary like style honed by years of doing Dragnet on television is the manner in which Pete Kelly's story of resistance to the mob is told. All Webb in the title role wants to do is play jazz, but playing jazz in mobbed up Kansas City came at a price.The one who wants the payoff is political ward boss/gangster Edmond O'Brien. He's got the swinging part of Kansas City in his pocket where all the speakeasies and clubs are and he's thought of a new racket, charge protection to the musicians, even to the extent of moving their own legitimate agents out. And O'Brien wants 25% not the usual 10% real agents charge.Webb's defiant, cowed, and then defiant again during the course of the film. The murder of his drummer Martin Milner takes a lot of the fight out of him. But O'Brien pushes way too hard and he's a really crude sort of thug. In the end Webb snaps.With one exception the cast is great. The music end is taken by two really great singers Ella Fitzgerald and Peggy Lee who have some great numbers that show why they were the best in their business. Lee even copped an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress, but lost to Jo Van Fleet for East Of Eden. Lee Marvin is here and not playing a thug, but is a clarinetist and Webb's best friend. Webb plays the trumpet. Andy Devine is law enforcement and deadly serious. The squeaky voice is moderated and Andy's bulk is used similarly to Laird Cregar in I Wake Up Screaming and Orson Welles in Touch Of Evil. Andy never had a role this serious on screen. And Peggy Lee even with that Oscar nomination never followed up on it, my guess being she thought of herself as a singer not an actress primarily.Janet Leigh who usually is great disappoints me here. Her role as an air-headed party girl is really out of place and why Webb is falling for her is a mystery. Later on she nearly gets him killed when he finally decides to face down O'Brien. Janet does her best, but the part makes no sense at all to me.The locale of Pete Kelly's Blues in Pendergast controlled Kansas City is interesting. O'Brien is just the kind of guy Pendergast would have as a lieutenant. Pendergast's name is not mentioned, in 1955 it didn't have to be. The recent president of the United States, Harry S. Truman was a product of that machine and that was never out of the public's mind even after Pendergast was dead.Dixieland jazz fans will really like the music from Pete Kelly's Blues, I certainly did along with the rest of the film.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now