Daily Archives: July 4, 2014

The Sniper (1952)

The Sniper
Directed by Edward Dmytryk
Written by Harry Brown, Edna Anhalt and Edward Anhalt
1952/USA
Stanley Kramer Productions/Columbia Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Columbia Pictures Film Noir Classics DVD

 

[box]Tagline:Hungrily, he watched her walk down the street…and then he squeezed the trigger![/box]

Returned war vet Eddie Miller (Arthur Franz) is one sick puppy.  By day he is a mild-mannered delivery driver for a San Francisco dry-cleaning company.  By night, he obsesses over the wrongs done to him by women and the high-powered rifle he keeps locked in his bureau drawer. He knows he is twisted, even holding his right hand over a hot plate to prevent himself from using the rifle.  His efforts to get caught and get help come to nothing however.

Then Eddie begins shooting brunettes.  The ironically named Police Lt. Frank Kafka (Adolphe Menjou) is on the case but the killings continue despite the best efforts of the police department.  Can Eddie be stopped? With Frank Faylen as a police inspector, Richard Kiley as a police psychiatrist/profiler, and Marie Windsor as one of the victims.

The film begins with a title card explaining the research done into the social problem of the sex criminal and urging understanding to combat its growth.  It is a mixture of a psychological thriller with a police procedural.  Unfortunately, the story grinds to a halt during many of the police segments.  There is one particularly ludicrous lineup parading offenders from peeping toms to poison pen writers before the eager press.  The officer resembles no one more than Howard Cosell!  All the writers can come up with to “solve” the problem is to lock up any one exhibiting signs of perversion in an asylum for life.

That said, the negatives are overcome by the very strong and suspenseful scenes with the sniper. The location photography in San Francisco is also quite evocative and beautiful. On balance, I would recommend the film.

Menjou appears clean-shaven and in a rumpled suit.  If not for his voice, he would be unrecognizable.  One of the little ironies in the back story of the production is the pairing of director Dmytryk, one of the Hollywood Ten, with Menjou, one of the foremost red-baiters in Hollywood during the McCarthy era.

Edna and Edward Arnhalt were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Story.

Trailer – cinematographer Burnett Guffey

 

 

Detective Story (1951)

Detective Story
Directed by William Wyler
Written by Philip Yordan and Robert Wyler based on the play by Sidney Kingsley
1951/USA
Paramount Pictures
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

 

[box] Detective James McLeod: I built my whole life on hating my father. All the time he was inside me, laughing.[/box]

The movie portrays one day in the life of a city precinct, a little like a very dramatic “Barney Miller”.  Several suspects are brought in including: a shoplifter (Lee Grant), a war hero who embezzled from his employer and the girl who tries to help him (Cathy O’Donnell), and two burglars, one of whom is about to become a four time loser.

James McLeod (Kirk Douglas) is a by-the-book detective who hates crime and criminals.  He is actually intolerant of all human weakness or softness.  He has been pursuing Dr. Karl Schneider (George Macready) for months for performing some sort of unnamed surgery that has killed mothers and their babies.  The wily doctor and his lawyer are always one step ahead of him.  As he is closing in, the lawyer accuses McLeod of persecuting Schneider due to a personal vendetta associated with his wife Mary (Eleanor Parker). McLeod’s reaction to this news threatens to destroy his marriage and life.  With William Bendix and Frank Faylen as detectives.

I generally love Wyler movies but, for me, most of the acting comes off as if the performers were playing to the cheap seats on Broadway and spoils the experience. Joseph Wiseman as Charlie the three-time loser is especially egregious but even Douglas and Parker stray over the top at points.  I did appreciate the struggle of Lt. McLeod and his wife.  I only wish it had been more nuanced.  I realize I am in a distinct minority here with regard to this highly rated film.

I was surprised at the amount of strong-arm tactics used by the police almost as a matter of course.  Things certainly have changed – or at least this behavior is no longer accepted or condoned.   I didn’t see the ending coming.  It would be good to go into this one spoiler free.

Detective Story was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Actress (Parker), Best Supporting Actress (Lee Grant), Best Director, and Best Writing, Screenplay.  Parker has the distinction of having the least screen time of any Best Actress nominee.

Trailer – cinematography by D.P. Lee Grimes (John F. Seitz uncredited)

 

The Lady from Shanghai (1947)

The Lady from Shanghai
Directed by Orson Welles
Written by Orson Welles from the novel If I Die Before I Wake by Sherwood King
1947/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#220 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Michael O’Hara: Everybody is somebody’s fool.[/box]

The Lady from Shanghai leaves me as at sea as the characters.  If not for the sometimes awesome visuals, it would entirely escape me.

It is love at first sight for seaman Michael O’Hara (Orson Welles) when he rescues beautiful Elsa Bannister(Rita Hayworth)  from some muggers in Central Park.  Elsa apparently likes Michael too because she begs him to join her and her husband Arthur (Everett Sloane) on their yacht.  Michael demurs but a ruse by Arthur gets him aboard and he is soon way over his head.

Arthur’s law partner George Grigsby soon makes the party complete.  The “friends” are all at each other’s throats like sharks in a feeding frenzy that begin to devour themselves. The bewildered Michael is the only person left with a shred of humanity.  His love for Elsa makes him greedy, however, and he gives in to temptation when Grigsby offers him $5,000 to help him fake his death.  After this the only thing certain is that Michael will be the fall guy, no matter who is double-crossing whom.

Welles’s noir classic has me completely disoriented from the word go.  In the end, I could write a plot summary but still feel like I missed a lot.  Between that and Welles’ on-again-off-again Irish brogue, I can’t give this noir classic a lot of love. On the positive side, Rita Hayworth looks fabulous (I think the short blonde hairdo really suits her) and gives the strongest performance I have seen her in.  I love the trial scenes and their wicked skewering of the justice system.  And the justly famous scenes in the fun house are mind-blowing.  It’s hard to imagine how they got those shots.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBsF4TimNF8

Trailer – cinematography by Charles Lawton Jr.