Category Archives: 1947

Odd Man Out (1947)

Odd Man Out
Directed by Carol Reed
Written by F.L. Green and R.C. Sherriff
1947/UK
Two Cities Films
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant
#200 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Inspector: In my profession there is neither good nor bad. There is innocence and guilt. That’s all.[/box]

After a lapse of several years, I was only more impressed with this film on repeated viewing.  I think it is almost the equal Reed’s better known The Third Man.

Johnny McQueen (James Mason) is the Chief of “The Organization” (clearly a stand in for the Irish Republican Army) in a North Ireland city.  He has been in hiding for six months in the flat of an old woman and her granddaughter Kathleen.  Kathleen is in love with Johnny but he is devoted only to the cause.  Currently, he is planning the holdup of a mill.  This will mark his return to active duty as a member of the robbery gang.  Neither his henchmen nor Kathleen think he is up to the task.  But Johnny is not deterred.

The heist goes terribly wrong and shots are exchanged.  Johnny kills a guard and is in turn badly wounded,  Then he hesitates entering the getaway car.  A combination of missteps and basic cowardice on the part of the driver result in Johnny being left to run away alone.

The rest of the story follows the encounters of the gang members with the rest of the Northern Irish populace as they struggle to escape the police.  It is a story of betrayal, greed, mercy, and fear.  The last half of the film focuses on Johnny, the lone survivor, as he goes from place to place slowly bleeding to death.   With Robert Newton as a mad painter.

The poster tag line bills this as “the most exciting film ever made.” I wouldn’t go quite that far but it is one of the most beautiful.  For me, this is more a study of human nature than of Johnny’s specific plight.  The members of the organization and the people that they encounter on their flight exhibit most of the faults and some of the virtues we all are heir to. Then again, James Mason is mesmerizing as the hunted Johnny McQueen and it is hard not to focus on him.  Robert Krasker’s camera knows no limit in its Dutch angles and chiaroscuro magic.  Highly recommended.

Odd Man Out was Oscar-nominated for Best Film Editing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqctI12CBzo

Clip

1947 Here We Come

gentlemans_agreement posterIn movie news, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the practice of block booking violated federal anti-trust laws. The Actors Studio, a rehearsal group for professional actors, was established in New York City by Elia Kazan, Robert Lewis, and Cheryl Crawford. It soon became the epicenter for advancing “the Method” – a technique of acting that was inspired by Konstantin Stanislavski’s teachings.   The Motion Picture Code forbade derogatory references to a character’s race.  Ernst Lubitsch died.

The HUAC (House Un-American Activities Committee) opened its hearings for an investigation of alleged communist influence in the Hollywood movie industry. Its first wave of witnesses included the ‘unfriendly’ “Hollywood 19” (13 of 19 were writers). On November 24, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 346–17 to approve citations of Contempt of Congress against the “Hollywood Ten” after the screenwriters and directors refused to co-operate with the committee. They were blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studios on the following day.  Ronald Reagan was elected President of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG). Dedicated to stamping out Communism, he pledged to notify the FBI of names of actors who were “communist sympathizers” in the film industry. On November 17, 1947, the Screen Actors Guild voted to force its officers to take a “non-communist” pledge.

hollywood 10

1947 saw continued shortages in housing and consumer goods in the U.S. The National Security Act created the United States Air Force, National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency.  The Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, both seeking to stop the spread of Communism by granting aid for reconstruction and relief in Europe, were announced. The Voice of America began to transmit radio broadcasts into Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.

Jackie Robinson, the first African American in Major League Baseball since the 1880s, began playing with the Brooklyn Dodgers. The microwave oven, transistor, mobile phone, and Polaroid camera were demonstrated.  All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.  The number one popular song of the year was “Near You” by Francis Craig.

history-israel-palestine-borders-timelineIn world news, the Communists took power in Poland and Hungary. The International Monetary Fund and General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade began to operate. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank was published. Thor Heyerdahl’s balsa wood raft, the Kon-Tiki, proved that pre-historic peoples could hypothetically have traveled to the Central Pacific islands from South America.

The Muslim majority region formed by the Partition of India gained independence from the British Empire and adopted the name Pakistan. The greater Indian subcontinent with a mixed population that was formed by the Partition of India gained independence from the British Empire and retained the name India. In December, 400,000 people were slaughtered during mass migration of Hindus and Muslims into India and Pakistan.

On November 29, The United Nations General Assembly voted to partition Palestine between Arab and Jewish regions, resulting in the creation of the State of Israel.

****************************************************************************************

The list of films I will select from can be found here and here.   I have previously reviewed the following films from 1947 on this site:  Out of the Past; Nightmare Alley; The Lady from Shanghai; Crossfire; They Won’t Believe Me; T-Men; and Nora Prentiss.

I’ve seen 35 of the films released in 1947.  Based on my current ratings, my ten favorites are, in no particular order: Out of the Past; The Bishop’s Wife; Body and Soul; The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer (???!); Black Narcisscus; Odd Man Out; Miracle on 34th Street; Quai des Orfevres; Pursued; and Nightmare Alley.  I expect that will change somewhat as I re-watch some and catch up on some others.

Montage of stills from Oscar Winners

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrN0CEt48-4

In 1947, the Academy began to recognize  a Foreign Language film annually, at first with an Honorary Award and, starting in 1956, in competition.  Since I no longer have my Oscar nominee montage to give you, I hope you enjoy this collection of short clips showing the history of the award.

Nora Prentiss (1947)

Nora Prentissnora prentiss poster
Directed by Vincent Sherman
Written by Paul Webster, Jack Sobell and N. Richard Nash
1947/USA
Warner Bros.
First viewing/Warner Archive DVD

 

Dr. Richard Talbot aka Robert Thompson: I’m writing a paper on ailments of the heart.Nora Prentiss: A paper? I could write a book!

A melodrama of adulterous love turns pitch black by the end.

Heart specialist Dr. Richard Talbot (Kent Smith) lives on a tight schedule dictated by his wife of twenty years, who strictly disciplines their two children as well.  One day, his orderly existence is knocked on its ear when he gives first aid to sassy nightclub singer Nora Prentiss (Ann Sheridan) when she is slightly injured by a car.  Opposites attract and, when Talbot’s wife goes away with the children one weekend, they begin a love affair against Nora’s better judgement.

nora prentiss 2

Before long, she tires of hiding and lying and decides to go to New York for a fresh start. Sadly, Talbot can neither bear to ask his wife for a divorce nor part with Nora.  His guilt and despair are tearing him apart and he can no longer hold a scalpel steady.  When a heart patient suddenly dies of a heart attack late at night in his office, Talbot sees a way out involving a switch in identities.  By now the film has turned noir, though, and Fate has other ideas.

nora prentiss 1

Surprisingly for film noir, Nora is actually the sane and decent party to the relationship.  It is the man, struggling to escape the restrictions of his domestic obligations, that will not let go of her.  I have noticed that smothering wives and girlfriends make frequent appearances in film noir and that its heros are inevitably punished for defying them. Here, also, the hero is suffering from his inability to be seen as in the wrong.  How else could it seem preferable to let his wife and children mourn him than to ask for the divorce?

Ann Sheridan makes a very appealing heroine.  Smith (Cat People) is fine though a more dynamic actor might have been preferable.  The first part of the story drags a bit but after Richard and Nora arrive in New York it picks up speed and builds to a devastating climax.

Trailer – cinematography by James Wong Howe

 

Out of the Past (1947)

Out of the Pastoutofthepast poster
Directed by Jacques Tourneur
1947/USA
RKO Radio Pictures
Repeat viewing

#198 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb users say 8.1/10; I say 10/10

 

Jeff Bailey: You can never help anything, can you? You’re like a leaf that the wind blows from one gutter to another.

This visually beautiful film has a classical film noir plot involving a protagonist who is doomed by his obsession with a femme fatale and haunted by an inescapable past.  The laconic Robert Mitchum is perfect as the fatalist hero of the tale and Jane Greer is one of the most perfidious shady ladies in all of noir.

I love this movie and have seen it at least ten times.  With the last viewing I think I have at last figured out the confusing second half of the movie.  This only added to my enjoyment but folks that have not seen the movie may not want to know the part between the spoiler alert notices.

The rather mysterious Jeff Bailey (Robert Mitchum) runs a gas station in a small town in the Sierra Nevada.  He is in love with a local girl named Ann.  One day, a thug named Joe Stephanos comes looking for Jeff.  Joe’s boss Whit Sterling wants to see him.  Jeff and Ann drive to Lake Tahoe.  On the way, Jeff tells Ann his story.  The first part of the picture is thus one long flashback with voice-over narration.

Jeff – real name Markham – used to be a private detective.  Whit (Kirk Douglas) hired him to find Kathie Moffet, a woman that shot Whit and made off with $40,000 of his money. Whit wanted Kathie back, with or without the money.

Jeff trailed Kathie to the Mar Azul cafe in Acapulco and was immediately obsessed with her to the exclusion of his job or the consequences.  They began an affair and Kathie agrees to go away with him.  She admited shooting Whit but denied taking his money.  The couple returned to the U.S. and begin living in San Francisco.  Whit hired Jeff’s partner Jack Fisher to track them down.  When Fisher caught up with them, he attempted to blackmail the couple.  Kathie shot Fisher dead and fled in Jeff’s car.  A bank book she left behind showed that she had a balance of $40,000.

Out of the Past 2

SPOILER ALERT

Segue to the present, a few years later.  Jeff arrives at Whit’s mansion at Lake Tahoe. Kathie has returned to the fold.  Whit tells Jeff that an accountant named Leonard Eels is blackmailing him with records that will show Whit owes the IRS $1 million.  Whit asks Jeff to go to San Francisco to retrieve the records.  Jeff is suspicious but agrees.

Jeff goes to see Eels’ secretary and girlfriend Meta Carson (Rhonda Fleming).  The plan is that Jeff will pose as Meta’s cousin and meet her at Eels’ place after which they will steal the records from the office.  Jeff senses a frame up and attempts to tip off Eels that he is in danger.  He follows Meta and sees her steal the records from the office.  When Jeff returns to Eels’ apartment, he finds Eels murdered.  Jeff hides Eels’ body in an empty apartment.

He returns to Meta’s apartment and overhears Kathie calling Eels’ building and asking the superintendent to check on Eels.  Kathie is shocked when the superintendent does not find a body.  Jeff confronts her and she says she is afraid of Whit and acting under his orders.  Jeff tells her Eels escaped.  She says Whit made her sign an affidavit saying that Jeff killed Fisher.   The affidavit is now locked in Eels’ safe.  She says she still loves Jeff and tells him where he can find the tax records so that they will be able to blackmail Whit into giving them money and letting them go off together.  Jeff melts.

Jeff finds the records and mails them somewhere.  In the meantime, Kathie learns from Joe Stefanos that he did kill Eels.  Jeff finds Joe and Kathie together.  He reveals that he has the records in a safe place and says that he will hand them and Eels’ body over in exchange for the affidavit and $50,000.  Whit’s henchmen are now very suspicious as it looks like the only way Jeff could have found out about the affidavit was from Kathie. Kathie and Joe say they are going to get the affidavit but instead give Jeff the slip.

Jeff takes a deaf-mute kid that works for him and goes fishing in the High Sierras.  Somehow Joe and Kathie locate the kid and get Jeff’s whereabout’s from him. Joe goes off to shoot Jeff but the kid sees him first and causes Joe to falls into the river and be killed.

Jeff goes back to Tahoe and confronts Kathie.  He finds out Whit knew nothing about the plot for Joe to kill him and that Kathie told Whit that he killed Fisher.  Jeff again agrees to turn the records over to Whit for money and the affidavit.  When Whit and Kathie are alone, Whit becomes furious, hits Kathie, and threatens to kill her if she does not do exactly what he says.

Out of the Past 4

Jeff returns to Bridgeport and sees Ann.  He again professes his love for her.  Later, Jeff goes to Tahoe to finalize the deal and finds that Kathie has murdered Whit.  Kathie wants Jeff and herself to have a fresh start in Mexico.  This time, she will be in total control.  She is willing to threaten Jeff with being framed for the murders of Fisher, Eels, and Whit to get what she wants.  While Kathie is finishing her packing, Jeff calls the police.  Kathie shoots Jeff when their car runs into a police roadblock and dies herself when the car crashes during a shoot-out with the police.

END SPOILER ALERT

Out of the Past 3

Clearly, I had been missing a lot for a long time!  This viewing made Kathie seem much more evil than before and Whit not quite so bad.  I was wondering whether Whit would have gone after Jeff at all if he had known Kathie killed Fisher.

Probably 75% of my enjoyment of this film lies in it exquisite compositions and chiaroscuro lighting.  I don’t seem to have the words to explain the shots but I know that I am enraptured by them. The music is also very beautiful and the dialogue is a kind of hard-boiled poetry.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7oTM9oaDmI

Clip – Jeff first sets eyes on Kathie