Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, The Film Foundation and Turner
Classic Movies again partner to present the fourth collection in
this series, Columbia Pictures Film Noir Classics IV. These five
films, all fully restored and remastered, three of which have
never before been released on DVD, showcase the work of directors
Joseph H. Lewis, Robert Rossen, Gordon Douglas and Alfred L.
Werker all of them masters at creating taut and atmospheric
visions from morally-strained hard-boiled stories. The collection
also highlights the genre-defining cinematography of Burnett
Guffey and George E. Diskant, and iconic performances by film
noir mainstays Dick Powell, Evelyn Keyes, Lee J. Cobb, Dennis
O'Keefe and Edmond O'Brien, who excelled at revealing the raw
heart that beat beneath noir's tough exteriors. (So Dark The
Night, 1946) Director Joseph H. Lewis ( Crazy, 1950)
established his reputation as a talented stylist by wrangling a
complicated story of a Parisian detective (Steven Geray) who
falls in love while on vacation, only to see the woman murdered
into a taut and atmospheric film noir. Overcoming the challenges
of recreating the French countryside in Canoga Park, California,
and working with a cast of virtual unknowns, Lewis and noir
cinematographer extraordinaire Burnett Guffey craft one of the
great surprise endings in all of noir, which would inspire such
films as (Possessed, 1948) and (Memento, 2000). (Johnny O"Clock,
1947) Johnny O'Clock (Dick Powell) is a junior partner in a posh
casino with Guido Marchettis (Thomas Gomez), but is senior in the
eyes of Nelle (Ellen Drew) Guido's wife and Johnny's ex. This
love triangle leads to a web of complications, leaving
Inspector Koch (Lee J. Cobb) to unravel the threads of deceit and
a murdered casino employee's sister (Evelyn Keyes) to tug on
Johnny's heartstrings before it's too late. Applying Raymond
Chandler's dictum that a good plot is an excuse for a series of
exciting scenes, rookie director Robert Rossen strings together
tense vignettes brought vividly to life by cinematographer
Burnett Guffey. (Walk A Crooked Mile, 1948) Director Gordon
Douglas drew on ing anti-Communist hysteria to create one of
the first Cold War films the tale of an FBI agent (Dennis
O'Keefe) and a Scotland Yard detective (Louis Hayward) who must
bust a ring led by a ruthless agent (Raymond Burr) working to
infiltrate an atomic research facility. Producer Eddie Small
stood tall in a battle against FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to
produce the film without interference, arguing the Bureau was
fair game for fictionalization. But Hoover had the last word,
writing The New York Times to say the FBI had not sanctioned the
film. (Between Midnight And Dawn, 1950) Dan Purvis (Edmond
O'Brien) and Rocky Barnes (Mark Stevens) are lifelong pals who
survived WWII and continue their armed service as uniformed prowl
car boys on the night shift in LA. But their friendship is tested
by their ongoing battle with a ruthless racketeer (Donald Buka),
the love they share for a beautiful radio announcer (Gale Storm)
and Dan's uncompromising and exaggerated sense of justice. Often
seen as the first example of the now commonplace buddy cop movie,
this film demonstrates that the genre has always been rife with
tension. (Walk Easxt On Beacon!, 1952) The Red e had reached
a fever pitch when director Alfred L. Werker (He Walked by Night,
1948) adapted this tale of Communist spies stealing secrets about
the Manhattan Project. The source material was a Reader's Digest
article by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and the movie shares
Hoover's obsession with surveillance, creating an atypical noir
focused on technology rather than obsessed with character
psychology. But the film did make abundant use of the mean
streets with over 14 weeks of location shooting throughout the
northeast, thus providing a rare snap of an era in American
life its physical locations and its mental state."