Daily Archives: June 16, 2014

Out of the Fog (1941)

Out of the Fog
Directed by Anatole Litvak
Written by Robert Rosson, Jerry Wald, and Richard Macauley from the play “Gentle People” by Irwin Shaw
1941/USA
Warner Bros

First viewing/Warner Archive DVD

[box] Olaf Johnson: The man that collects the money always comes.[/box]

This proto-noir is a little stage-bound and heavy handed but I enjoyed it for the performances and for James Wong Howe’s luminous black-and-white nighttime cinematography.

Jonah Goodwin (Thomas Mitchell) and Olaf Johnson (John Qualen) escape their dreary working-class existences four nights a week by fishing in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn. They dream of buying a bigger boat and fishing in the clear, warm waters off Cuba.  Jonah has saved $190 as a down payment and they have just convinced the owner of the boat they have their eye on to sell it to them on the installment plan.

 

But their dreams are shattered by the arrival of Harold Goff (John Garfield), a protection racketeer who threatens to scuttle their little boat if they don’t pay him $5 a week. When Jacob tries to refuse he gets smacked down.  Worse, Jacob’s terminally bored daughter Stella (Ida Lupino) thinks Goff is exciting and continues to consort with him even after she finds out what he is doing to her father.

Desperate, Jacob tries to send Stella off to Cuba for a vacation offering her the $190 he had saved.  Stella refuses the money but tells Goff what her father wanted to do for her. Goff, who “has rocks inside”, then goes after Jacob for the $190.  Jacob unsuccessfully seeks justice from the law and is mercilessly beaten for his trouble.  After hearing Goff’s tirade about how he will always win because “inferior” people are afraid to fight back,Jacob hatches a plan with Olaf to do just that.  With Eddie Albert as Stella’s doting boyfriend. George Tobias as a kvetching bankrupt shopkeeper, and Aline MacMahon as Jonah’s nagging wife.

I don’t think John Garfield ever played a more thoroughly despicable character.  This makes his part in Force of Evil look like Santa Claus.  It is only natural since the screenplay makes it perhaps a little too clear that Harold Goff is a stand-in for Hitler.  In addition, Hayes Code considerations greatly weaken the ending and even turn Goff’s little ride in the fishing boat into something of a comedy.  Stella’s motivation and change of heart is not too clear.

That all said, I liked this an awful lot while I was watching it.  Garfield has such tremendous energy you can’t take your eyes off of him and Mitchell is fabulous as well.  The movie is nicely paced and I’m a sucker for wet dark streets and fog, especially as lit by the great James Wong Howe.

Trailer

Dumbo (1941)

Dumbo
Directed by Ben Sharpsteen, Samuel Armstrong et al
Written by Joe Grant, Dick Huemer et al
1941/USA
Walt Disney Productions
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#158 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Jim Crow: [singing] I seen a peanut stand /And heard a rubber band /I’ve seen a needle that winked its eye / But I been done seen about everything / When I see an elephant fly.[/box]

This is a sweet story and a beautifully animated Disney classic.

Mrs. Jumbo is has been anxiously expecting the arrival of the Stork and is overjoyed with her baby, whom she names Jumbo Jr.  But the poor baby has huge ears and all the mean, gossipy old maid elephants make fun of the little thing and call him Dumbo.  Soon all the kids at the circus start harassing the odd-ball and Mrs. Jumbo gets so infuriated and violent that she gets put in jail.  The heart-broken Dumbo finally finds a friend in Timothy Q. Mouse, who tries to find a way to make him a star.  Being the top of an elephant pyramid doesn’t work out but, when the two friends wind up at the top of a tree after a night of inadvertent drinking, Dumbo’s destiny becomes clear.

I can imagine this gives a few little kids a good dose of separation anxiety as I got pretty teary myself during “Baby Mine”.  I really love the drawing style in this movie.  It is more fluid somehow than earlier efforts.  Dumbo and his mom are the only animals in the cartoon that don’t talk and they have just as much personality, if not more, than any of them.

Frank Churchill and Oliver Wallace won the Oscar for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture. Churchill and Ned Washington were nominated for Best Original Song for “Baby Mine”.

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

Clip – “Baby Mine”