Daily Archives: March 26, 2015

They Live by Night (1948)

They Live by NightTheyLiveByNightPoster
Directed by Nicholas Ray
Written by Charles Schnee and Nicholas Ray from the novel “Thieves Like Us” by Edward Anderson
1948/USA
RKO Radio Pictures
Repeat viewing/Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 4

 

Mr. Hawkins, Wedding Chapel Proprietor: I believe in helping people get what they want as long as they pay for it. I marry people ‘cos there’s a little hope they’ll be happy. But I can’t take this money of yours. No sir. In a way I’m a thief just the same as you are, but I won’t sell you hope when there ain’t any. 

There are plenty of films about lovers on the lam.  This one is more poignant than most and strikingly shot by Nicholas Ray.

Bowie (Farley Granger) has just escaped from prison, where he was serving a sentence for a murder that took place during a robbery he was involved in.  The luckless boy was the only one the police could catch.  Now he finds himself hiding out in a gas station with his much older felllow escapees, the alcoholic Chickamaw (Howard da Silva) and redneck T-Dub.

Bowie serves as getaway driver for a heist and is hurt in a crash.  When a policeman comes to investigate the accident, Chickamaw shoots him.  Keechie (Cathy O’Donnell), the station owner’s daughter, grudgingly nurses Bowie and the two fall in love. But now Bowie has been tagged for the murder and the two flee together with the robbery proceeds.

live by night

On a sudden impulse, the two get off the bus and marry at a truck-stop chapel.  The justice-of-the-peace speaks suggestively of his contacts in Mexico but the two press on.  Keechie falls pregnant and then everything goes to hell.

live by night 1

Although it is firmly in the noir style, They Live by Night is actually more a tragic love story than a crime film.  O’Donnell gets a crack at a more complex character than usual for her, being hardbitten before she is tamed by love.  I thought she was very good.  Farley Granger is always Farley Granger to me.  I don’t find him too convincing.  The most notable aspect of the film are the awesome compositions and beautiful cinematography.  Ray pioneered the use of a helicopter to film an action sequence in the opening.

This was Ray’s first feature.  As was his wont, Howard Hughes put it on the shelf for two years before releasing it.

Clip – opening

A Hen in the Wind (1948)

A Hen in the Wind (Kaze no naka no mendori)600full-a-hen-in-the-wind-poster
Directed by Yasujirô Ozu
Written by Yasujirô Ozu and Ryôsuke Saitô
1948/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga
First viewing/Hulu Plus

 

This is a film of unusual intensity by director Yasujiro Ozu, complemented by the usual intensity of actress Kinuyo Tanaka.

Tokiko (Tanaka) has been struggling to support her two-year-old son while she waits for her husband to come home from four long years in the army.  As the film opens,  she is trying to sell her last kimono just to meet living expenses.  She has resisted all suggestions that she use her “good looks” to bring home the bacon.  Then the toddler gets really ill and the hospital demands ten days advance payment.  She takes up the local madam on her offer for one night.

a-hen-in-the-wind

Her best friend is appalled by her action.  Tokiko, herself, thinks maybe she should have sold the furniture instead but she wanted her husband to come home to the kind of home he left.

When the husband does come home, he inquires about his son’s health and Tokiko blurts out the truth.  The husband does not react well, to say the least.  He is full of rage and insists on learning every last detail.  The couple struggle through a lot of pain until the beautifully redemptive end.

hen in the windThis is a tad on the melodramatic side but Ozu’s use of ellision and transition shots distance the viewer from some of the pathos.  Tanaka gives a beautiful performance ranging from maternal tenderness to desperation.  Recommended.

Clip – the confession and aftermath