Category Archives: Movie Reviews

Reviews of movies I have seen.

Side Street (1949)

Side Street
Directed by Anthony Mann
Written by Sydney Boehm
1949/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Film Noir Classic Collection Vol. 4 DVD

 

[box] [first lines] Capt. Walter Anderson: New York City: an architectural jungle where fabulous wealth and the deepest squalor live side by side. New York is the busiest, the loneliest, the kindest, and the cruelest of cities – a murder a day, every day of the year and each murder will wind up on my desk.[/box]

This movie has everything you could possibly ask from a fillm noir except the femme fatale.

Joe Norson (Farley Granger) has lost his gas station and is now living with his in-laws in New York City and working as a part-time mail carrier.  His wife Ellen (Cathy O’Donnell) is about to deliver their first child.  One day, he makes a delivery to law office and sees a couple of hundred dollar bills on the floor.  The next day he comes when nobody is in and cannot resist the temptation to break into a file cabinet  Big, big mistake.

When he has a chance to look inside the file folder he snatched, he finds that instead of the few hundred he expected there are $30,000 in carefully batched bills.  Terrified, he goes back to the law office to return the money.  Second big mistake.  The lawyer denies that it is his money or that he even had a file cabinet.   Joe leaves and stashes the loot, in a gift box, with a bartender.  Worse and worse.

After checking with his sources that Joe is not a cop, the lawyer sends his goons after Joe. Joe finds he is a suspect in two murders.  The rest of the story is taken up with Joe’s frantic search for the money and its origins and flight from the goons and the police.  With Jean Hagen in a small but choice part as a boozy nightclub singer who is the girlfriend of one of the goons.

Anthony Mann is becoming one of my very favorite noir directors.  With Academy Award winning cinematographer Joseph Ruttenberg, he creates a visual feast in Side Street. Mann loved to experiment with camera angles and a variety are used here without distracting from the story.  The car chase that ends the film is very innovative, including helicopter views of the tiny cars winding through crowded city streets.  The lighting is rich and expressive.   Granger makes an excellent angst ridden noir hero and O’Donnell and Hagen do what they do best. Recommended.

Trailer – cinematography by Joseph Ruttenberg

 

Woman on the Run (1950)

Woman on the Run
Directed by Norman Foster
Written by Alan Campbell and Norman Foster; original story by Sylvia Tate
1950/USA
Fidelity Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Amazon Prime Instant Video

[box] Eleanor Johnson: [In the dark shadows of roller coaster on the deserted beach at night] I don’t like this place.
Danny Leggett: It’s a good spot. I used to come here with my girl when I was a kid. It’s more frightening than romantic. It’s the way love is when you’re young… life is when you’re older.[/box]

This is a fairly routine programmer with a few thrills at the end.  We also get some nice location shots of 1950 San Francisco.

Frank Johnson is walking his dog when he witnesses a gangland shooting.  For some never explained reason, he slips away while being interviewed by the police.  Inspector Ferris (Robert Keith) is irked and goes to fetch Frank’s wife Eleanor (Ann Sheridan).  She acts as if she couldn’t care less that her husband might become the target of the killers and is able to offer very little information about him.  During the night she escapes her well-guarded apartment with the help of reporter Dan Leggett (Dennis O’Keefe).

Dan is Eleanor’s constant companion as she searches San Francisco for her husband who needs his heart medicine.  During the search, she finds out a lot of things about Frank that she didn’t know, including that he might actually love her.  Inspector Ferris is on her trail throughout.  As she gets closer to finding her husband, Eleanor faces trouble from more than the cops.

I watched this one over a couple of days on my iPad, not perhaps adequate for a fair appraisal for this relatively highly rated movie (7.3/10 on IMDb),  This is more of a woman’s picture/thriller than it is a film noir.  Even the final roller coaster scene did not lift it far above average for me.  The performances are all fine.

I couldn’t find a decent clip.  The complete movie is also currently available on YouTube. This is another one that was recently restored but is still awaiting a home video version of the new print.

Too Late for Tears (1949)

Too Late for Tears (AKA “Killer Bait”)
Directed by Byron Haskin
Written by Roy Huggins
1949/USA
Hunt Stromberg Productions/Streamline Pictures
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

 

[box] Danny Fuller: Don’t ever change, Tiger. I don’t think I’d like you with a heart.[/box]

Lizabeth Scott is cast against type as the deadliest of femme fatales.  She’s even too much for Dan Duryea’s villain.

Jane Palmer (Scott) is tired of being a member of the “poor” middle class.  She wants to outdo the Joneses.  She is married to conventional hardworking Alan (Arthur Kennedy), however.  One day, Jane sees her opportunity when a valise containing $60,000 in old bills is thrown in the back of their convertible.  Howard wants to turn the money in to the police but Jane convinces him to put it in a safe place for a week so they can think about it some more. The couple leave the bag at the stored luggage department of a railway station and Alan takes the claim check.

Soon enough, the blackmailer Danny Fuller (Duryea) shows up and starts threatening all kinds of mayhem if Jane does not return his money.  He gives her until the next day to come through.  She hides the visit from Alan.  Alan plans a romantic evening to compensate for turning the money into the cops.  But Jane has a gun and nothing and nobody is going to come between her and her dream.  Meanwhile, a mysterious visitor (Don DeFore) befriends Alan’s sister and helps her to get to the bottom of Alan’s disappearance.

This is an OK “money isn’t everything” noir.  I think the role of the truly evil Jane did not suit the more girlish charms of Lizabeth Scott in the least.  One can only imagine someone like Barbara Stanwyck in the part.  As usual my beloved Duryea acquits himself well. He has a bit of a conscience, too, for a change.

I watched this on Amazon Instant Video because I feared the print on the Alpha DVD Netflix rental would be really bad and the movie has recently been restored.  I needn’t have bothered.  The print was quite fuzzy.  The 35-mm restoration is showing on the festival circuit so maybe there is a better DVD coming in the future.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6avldLNY5mY

Clip – cinematography by William C. Mellor

T-Men (1947)

T-Men
Directed by Anthony Mann
Written by John C. Higgins; story by Virginia Kellogg
1947/USA
Edward Small Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Dennis O’Brien: Did you ever spend ten nights in a Turkish bath looking for a man? Don’t.[/box]

This police procedural is enlivened by the direction of Anthony Mann and the gorgeous cinematography of noir master John Alton.

A new batch of counterfeit bills is in circulation that is printed on dangerously good paper. Treasury Agents Dennis O’Brien (Dennis O’Keefe) and Tony Genaro are assigned to infiltrate a conterfeiting gang and determine the source of the paper.  They elaborately plan their new identities down to the last detail.

The Schemer (Wallace Ford), a small time hood who puts the bills into circulation, leads them to the mob bosses.  After that it is a deadly game of cat and mouse as the agents offer some excellent printing plates to go with the paper.  With Charles McGraw as an assassin.

This is an early police procedural with extensive third-person voice-over narration.  It was made with the cooperation of the Treasury Department and shows the work of its Secret Agents in considerable detail.  The story could be pretty dry but for Anthony Mann’s mastery at creating tension and framing shots and the low-key lighting provided by Alton. The scenes in the steam bath are particularly impressive.

T-Men was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Sound, Recording.

Clip – the bathhouse murder (spoiler) – cinematography by John Alton

 

Try and Get Me! (1950)

Try and Get Me! (AKA “The Sound of Fury”)
Directed by Cy Enfield
Written by Joe Pagano from his novel “The Condemned”
1950/USA
Robert Stillman Productions
First viewing/Amazon Prime Instant Video

 

[box]The intelligence of that creature known as a crowd is the square root of the number of people in it.  ― Terry Pratchett, Jingo [/box]

Though it drifts over the top in places, this “B” film noir has an irresistible raw energy.

Howard Tyler (Frank Lovejoy) has had no luck finding a job in California.  He can scarcely afford to give a quarter to his son for a movie and there is another baby on the way.  At the bowling alley he gets to talking with Jerry Slocum (Lloyd Bridges) a preening stud who is obviously quite fond of himself.  Jerry says Howard can earn big bucks simply by driving his car.  Of course, it’s a getaway car – Jerry makes his living by sticking up small businesses on the interstate – but Howard is so desperate by this time that he takes the job.  He starts hitting the bottle to cope with his guilt.

Things go south when Jerry wants to hit the big time by kidnapping a millionaire’s son. The crime doesn’t go as billed and Howard descends into an alcoholic miasma of guilt and fear.  Then things get much, much worse.  With Richard Carlson as a muckraking journalist.

The story is based on the same true incident that inspired Fritz Lang’s Fury (1936). Unfortunately, by 1950 the public was not as receptive to messages about the dangers of mob rule and yellow journalism.  HUAC particularly denounced this movie as being un-American and Endfield was blacklisted and driven to England to find work.

The movie starts out with an unrelated scene of a blind fundamentalist preaching fire and brimstone on the street while people run as if fleeing a natural disaster. Groups of people in motion are used throughout building up to the impressive climax with hundreds of extras.  I thought this was quite effective.  Although both actors overdo it when the going gets especially tough, Lovejoy is convincing and Bridges has the ego-maniac character perfected.  The film does suffer from the inclusion of the character of Dr. Simone, a European scientist, who delivers several speeches making explicit the message inherent in what we can see for ourselves.

BAFTA nominated Try and Get Me!/Sound of Fury as Best Film from Any Source and for the UN Award.

Clip – the kidnapping (spoiler) – cinematography by Guy Roe

 

 

 

Compulsion (1959)

Compulsion
Directed by Richard Fleischer
Written by Richard Murphy based on the novel by Meyer Levin
1959/USA
Darryl F. Zanuck Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box]Jonathan Wilk: In those years to come, you might find yourself asking if it wasn’t the hand of god dropped these glasses… And if he didn’t, who did?[/box]

This is a superb  treatment of the Leopold and Loeb case, also adapted for Hitchcock’s Rope.

Arthur A. Straus (Bradford Dillman) and Judd Steiner (Dean Stockwell) are two highly intelligent and privileged law students.  Artie also happens to be a psychopath and Judd gets his kicks from playing at a master-slave relationship with him.  They decide to commit the “perfect murder” simply to see if they can get away with it.  Their crime of choice is kidnapping a child, murdering the boy, and throwing his body into a ravine.  They follow up by sending his parents a ransom note.

The boys are not as smart as they think they are and the body is found before they can collect on the ransom.  Artie has more fun by insinuating himself with the police and sending them on wild goose chases after teachers, servants, etc., ruining several careers in the process.  D.A. Harold Horn has strong suspicions about some glasses found at the scene though and eventually the killers are brought to justice.  The remainder of the film is devoted to their trial at which liberal defense attorney Jonathan Wilk (Orson Welles) – a stand-in for Clarence Darrow who defended Leopold and Loeb – admits their guilt but makes an impassioned argument against the death penalty.

Orson Welles does not make his appearance until the last third of this film.  The first part of the story is devoted to the awful but fascinating characters of the murderers, compellingly played by Dillman and Stockwell.  Dillman’s is a fairly straightforward psychopath but Stockwell gets to show a more rounded portrayal as a twisted young man who just might have a conscience buried somewhere inside.  Welles’s anti-death penalty monologue ending the film was the longest in film history and is very moving.  Fleischer also makes this compelling to look at. Highly recommended.

Dean Stockwell, Orson Welles, and Bradford Dillman jointly won the Best Actor Award at the Cannes Film Festival.  The film was nominated for the Palme d’Or.

The story has also been made into the movies Rope (1948), Swoon (1992) and Murder by Numbers (2002)

Trailer – cinematography by Willaim C. Mellor

Human Desire (1954)

Human Desire
Directed by Fritz Lang
Written by Alfred Hayes based on the novel La Bete Humaine by Emile Zola
1954/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Columbia Pictures Film Noir Classics II

[box] Jean: All women are alike. They just got different faces so that the men can tell them apart.[/box]

Fritz Lang’s adaptation of Victor Hugo’s La Bete Humaine features the most fatal of Gloria Grahame’s femme fatales and some stylish imagery.

Jeff Warren (Glenn Ford) has recently returned to his beloved job as a railroad engineer after a tour in Korea.  He rooms again in the home of his friend and co-worker Alec Simmons (Edgar Buchanan).  Alec’s daughter Jean has grown into a lovely, wholesome young woman who is clearly in love with Jeff.  Jeff wants only a quiet life of railroading, fishing, and an occasional movie on Saturday night.  Jean adds that he needs the right girl to share these with.  Unfortunately, Jeff is not fated to find her.

In the meantime, we meet yardman Carl Buckley (Broderick Crawford).  He has been fired from his job and urges his luscious young wife Vicki (Grahame) to use her influence with wealthy importer John Owens to get it back for him.  Vicki reluctantly agrees to do this and succeeds.  Her delayed arrival back to their room provokes the insanely jealous Carl into a rage, though.  His revenge involves implicating Vicki in Owens’ murder by luring him with a love letter that he forces Vicki to write.  He will hold the letter over Vicki as a form of blackmail to keep her by his side.

Jeff, who is deadheading it back to his home station on the train, witnesses the couple exiting Owens’ compartment.  Vicki uses her charms to distract him and then to get him to withhold testimony at the inquest.  They begin a torrid love affair.  Vicki frequently laments not being able to leave her abusive husband who has some strange hold over her.  When the now drunken Carl loses his job yet again, matters come to a head.

Those familiar with Jean Renoir’s adaptation of Zola’s novel will recognize the story as a fairly faithful modernization of the same material to this point in the plot, minus the hereditary alcoholism that drives the protagonist into homicidal fits.  While I did not miss that part of the story, the ending of the Lang version differs dramatically and causes it to lack the haunting tragedy of Renoir’s version.  The times and the Production Code cause this to seem watered down in comparison.

That said, the performances in this one are all first rate and it looks splendid.  Crawford makes a pathetic villain and Grahame keeps us guessing throughout.  Recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cbmSWBOpao

Clip – Gloria Grahame and Broderick Crawford – cinematography by Burnett Guffey

 

The Harder They Fall (1956)

The Harder They Fall
Directed by Mark Robson
Written by Philip Yordan based on a play by Bud Schulberg
1956/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

 

[box] Nick Benko: The people, Eddie, the people! Don’t tell me about the people, Eddie. The people sit in front of their little TVs with their bellies full of beer and fall asleep. What do the people know, Eddie? Don’t tell me about the people, Eddie![/box]

This was Humphrey Bogart’s last performance.  He went out with a bang.

Shady fight promoter Nick Benko (Rod Steiger) imports ‘Toro’ Moreno from Argentina. Toro’s claim to fame is his huge size – he cannot hold his own in the ring even against his sparring partner.  This does not deter Benko in the slightest and he offers washed-up newspaper columnist Eddie Willis (Bogart) big bucks to act as Toro’s press agent. Despite knowing that the fights will all be fixed, Eddie needs the money and does a great job, disgusting his old friends and his wife (Jan Sterling).in the process.

But Eddie becomes one of the two people Toro likes and trusts and when his manager is sent back to Argentina, Eddie has increasing moral qualms.  These build to a head when Toro is put up for the championship against a fighter who will not take a fall.

Bogart looks a bit haggard but is a dynamo of energy with an underlying sensitivity that shines through his expressive eyes.  Steiger is every bit his equal as the ruthless and volatile promoter who cares about nothing but his bottom line.  This is a fairly standard indictment of the boxing game, and by extension dog-eat-dog capitalism, otherwise.  The two lead performances make it well worth seeing, though.

Burnett Guffey was nominated for an Academy Award for Black-and-White cinematography for The Harder They Fall.

Clip

Fallen Angel (1945)

Fallen Angel
Directed by Otto Preminger
Written by Harry Kleiner from a novel by Mary Holland
1945/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] June Mills: “Then love alone can make the fallen angel rise. For only two together can enter Paradise.”[/box]

This was billed as Alice Faye’s first turn as a dramatic actress but actually proved to be a breakout performance by the 22-year-old Linda Darnell in her new incarnation as a “bad girl”.  Boy, does she sizzle!

Con-man Eric Stanton (Dana Andrews) arrives in the California beach town of Walton (think Pismo Beach) with a dollar in his pocket.  He stops in a diner for a cup of coffee and is immediately obsessed by sullen beauty Stella (Darnell), who has already captivated every other guy hanging around the place.  He interests her too but she insists on a ring and a home with someone who can provide for her.  He decides the best way of getting the money is to steal it and proceeds to woo good-girl heiress June Mills (Faye) to get access to her safe deposit box.

June is an easy mark.  Even after Eric skips out on their wedding night to see Stella, she forgives and supports her man.  He needs all the support he can get when Stella turns up murdered.  With Charles Bickford and Bruce Cabot as Stella’s admirers, Percy Kilbride as the owner of the diner, John Carradine as a phony medium, and Ann Revere as June’s sister.

This is probably more of a true film noir than Preminger’s Laura of the previous year.  It is highlighted by some subtle and fluid long takes and beautiful lighting.  I love Darnell in this kind of role in which she gets to be very sexy and deeply cynical all at the same time.

Clip – cinematography by Joseph LaShelle

Trailer

 

Gilda (1946)

Gilda
Directed by Charles Vidor
Written by E.A. Ellington, Jo Eisenger and Marion Parsonnet
1946/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#201 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Johnny Farrell: Statistics show that there are more women in the world than anything else. Except insects.[/box]

Gilda is an example of how style, attitude, sharp dialogue, and a beautiful woman can triumph over plot in film noir.

Johnny Farrell (Glenn Ford) is somehow reduced to cheating at dice with American sailors on the streets of Buenos Aires when an elegant gentleman with a hidden stiletto blade rescues him from a mugging.  Their conversation afterwards reveals that both are brothers under the skin who “make their own luck.”  They meet again when Johnny appears at a fancy illegal gambling den and starts to win big at blackjack by cutting cards.

It turns out his rescuer, Ballin Mundson, owns the place.  Two security men haul Johnny in for cheating but Johnny convinces Mundson that he needs him on his side.  Before long Johnny is managing the casino.  When Mundson takes a vacation he gives Johnny the combination to his safe.

Mundson returns with an American bride, the beautiful Gilda (Rita Hayworth), who makes her own luck as well.  Johnny knows Gilda well enough to hate her intensely and she seconds the emotion.  She constantly tries to provoke Johnny with apparent infidelity to his boss and he just as ruthlessly attempts to control her.  This is a dangerous game as Mundson is deadly and madly jealous.  With Joseph Calleia as an Argentine police detective and Stephen Geray as a philosophical men’s room attendant.

The hard-boiled remarks never stop in this classic of the film noir genre and cinematographer Rudolph Maté makes Hayworth look desirable enough to drive any man to his doom.  This makes for a really entertaining experience good enough for many repeat viewings.  The story is strangely forgettable, however.  We never learn what Gilda did to Johnny to warrant his overblown enmity and the ending wraps up things entirely too neatly with characters that reverse course on a dime.

Trailer - Rudolph Maté, cinematographer

“Put the Blame on Mame”