Tag Archives: 1944

Double Indemnity (1944)

Double Indemnity
Directed by Billy Wilder
USA/1944
Paramount Pictures

Repeat viewing
#172 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Phyllis: We’re both rotten.

Walter Neff: Only you’re a little more rotten.[/box]

You have to hand it to Billy Wilder.  He was a true original and yet his films established many new genres.  Some critics believe this movie was the first “true” film noir.  Wilder claimed it was intended to be a “documentary”.  Whatever it is, it is a masterpiece.

Insurance salesman Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) spots Phyllis Deitrichson’s (Barbara Stanwyck) anklet and it is lust at first sight.  Neff is trying to renew an auto policy but Phyllis convinces him that what she needs is an accident policy on her husband … and a fatal accident.  But can the pair collect when Walter’s friend, claims adjuster Barton Keyes (Edward J. Robinson), smells a fraud?

[box] Walter Neff: Yes, I killed him. I killed him for money – and a woman – and I didn’t get the money and I didn’t get the woman. Pretty, isn’t it?[/box]

This film is just loaded with everything it takes to make a movie great.  The direction, acting, cinematography, screenplay, and music are all brilliant.  The care with which the first few minutes are handled, with MacMurray taking his time to settle in with the dictaphone are masterful and this is before the plot starts rolling.  Barbara Stanwyck is the perfect amoral femme fatal, but it strikes me that the fatal flaw here is within Walter.  Once again the sin of pride rears its ugly head and Phyllis merely gives Walter the opportunity to prove he his smarter than Barton Keyes, which has been his motive all along.  But Walter isn’t smarter; he is only taller.

The special edition DVD was loaded with two commentaries and a documentary.  One of the folks on the documentary said that “I did it for the money and the woman…and I didn’t get the money or the woman” is film noir in a nutshell.

Double Indemnity was nominated for seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Director, and Best Screenplay.  It failed to win any, largely because Paramount was promoting its other 1944 classic Going My Way.  The story goes that Wilder was so miffed when Leo McCarey got up to claim his Best Director prize, he put his foot in the aisle to trip him.

This is truly not to be missed.

Trailer

Murder, My Sweet (1944)

Murder, My Sweet (AKA “Farewell, My Lovely”)
Directed by Edward Dmytryk
1944/USA
RKO Radio Pictures

Repeat viewing
#173 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Lindsay Marriott: I’m afraid I don’t like your manner.

Philip Marlowe: Yeah, I’ve had complaints about it, but it keeps getting worse.[/box]

This fun early noir is based on the novel Farewell, My Lovely by Raymond Chandler.  The title was changed because studio executives worried that the film might be taken for a musical given Dick Powell’s starring role.

Marlowe (Dick Powell) is approached by thug Moose Malloy (Mike Mazurki) to locate an ex-girlfriend named Velma.  Shortly thereafter, Lindsay Marriot hires Marlowe to accompany him to a remote spot to buy back a jade necklace that had been stolen from a lady friend. Marriot is murdered before the trade is made and Marlow is knocked out.  The next day, Ann Grayle (Anne Shirley) leads him to the owners of the necklace, her father Mr. Grayle and his wife Helen (Claire Trevor).  A series of twists and turns leads to the solution of both the missing-person and the murder case.

Philip Marlowe meets Moose Malloy

I think of this as “noir light” since it is short on the characteristic doom.  All the actors do well in their parts.  Claire Trevor makes a great femme fatal and Powell is particularly good at delivering Chandler’s sarcastic hard-boiled dialogue.  It’s hard to believe that he’s the same guy that played the tenor in all those Busby Berkeley musicals. This is just a very entertaining detective story.

Trailer