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It's good to have a fifth volume of Warner Home Video's Film
Noir Classics Collection, and here's hoping for more. Accept that
we're past the point when masterpieces such as Crazy, Out of
the Past, and The Asphalt Jungle are going to turn up in
collections. And accept, with eyes unblinking, that some of the
movies on which Warner, Columbia, and other distributors are
slapping the noir label aren't true noirs--although why they
aren't can be fascinating to contemplate, and some of them repay
discovery on their own terms.
The noir credentials of Anthony Mann are, of course, impeccable.
His 1947 Desperate--the gem of the set--has flavor, tension, and
visual bravura to burn. The average-Joe hero played by Steve
Brodie is an independent trucker tricked into abetting a robbery.
Although he manages to mess up the crooks' plans, Brodie and
newly pregnant wife Audrey Long are soon fleeing cross-country
from the law as well as from vicious gang leader Raymond Burr.
Scene after scene features bold lighting, forceful angles, and
strong deep-focus setups--all before Mann had be working with
cameraman John Alton, whom many erroneously credit with being the
source of the Mann visual style. Sharing a disc with Desperate is
Cornered (RKO, 1945), an immediately post-World War II
mystery-thriller from the team that made Murder, My Sweet.
Just-freed POW Dick Powell, whose French wife was murdered along
with 50 of her compatriots, goes searching for the wartime
collaborator responsible, his quest leading from France to
Switzerland to Argentina. Director Edward Dmytryk is no
Hitchcock, and an extended sequence of Powell stalking his
quarry's wife all over Buenos Aires turns ludicrous. Still, this
is one of the films in which noir tried to give a shape to the
war's legacy of paranoia.
The Phenix City Story (Allied Artists, 1955) is "ripped from the
headlines," a fact underscored by a 13-minute documentary
foreword, voice-over narration of the film-proper by Richard
Kiley in character as reformer John Patterson, on-location
filming you can almost smell, and the inclusion of locals in the
cast. Phenix City, Alabama, suffered for generations under a
criminal machine until a her-and-son team of attorneys (John
McIntire plays the dad) helped smash the organization, mere
months before this film was made. Director Phil Karlson had a
genius for hysteria, never more potently engaged than here; the
film still shocks with its portrayal of daylight atrocity and the
unthinkably malignant nature of its evildoers. Is it film noir?
More like post-noir, part of the cycle of America-under-siege
movies to which Invasion of the Body Snatchers would be added a
few months later (screenwriter Daniel Mainwaring worked on both).
Also on disc 2 is Dial 1119 (1950), the closest MGM ever came to
minimalism: a low-budget suspense film with a no-name cast, a new
director, and action centered on a saloon where, for about an
hour of real time, an escaped mental patient (Marshall Thompson)
holds six citizens of Terminal City hostage. Gerald Mayer's
direction is eerily flat, which adds to the odd little movie's
spell.
Don Siegel's Crime in the Streets (Allied Artists, 1956)
likewise unfolds on the sound-stage version of a single urban
block, a legacy of the film's origin in live TV drama. Siegel and
cameraman Sam Leavitt work hard to make it kinetic, though
there's no getting around the problem-picture nature of Reginald
Rose's script on the then-hot theme of juvenile delinquency.
James Whitmore is top-billed as an earnest social worker, but the
real stars are two carryovers from the TV production, future
directors John Cassavetes (age 27) and Mark Rydell (22). During a
couple of sweltering summer days and nights, the Cassavetes
character's need to strike out at the world takes him from
recreational rumbles to plotting the murder of an obnoxious adult
neighbor. As his own mother admits, "Frankie's out of a whole
different piece of cloth." So is Crime in the Streets, whose
demons are too clinically addressed to make for authentic noir.
But its disc 3 companion, Armored Car Robbery (RKO, 1950),
delivers the goods with whipcord spareness. Splitting its focus
between criminal mastermind William Talman and gruff
detective Charles McGraw, this 67-minute Richard Fleischer movie
about the run-up to a caper and its lethal fallout makes fine use
of off-the-beaten-track L.A. locations.
Disc 4 feels like an afterthought. Deadline at Dawn (RKO, 1946)
is the lone screen collaboration of writer Clifford Odets and
director Harold Clurman from the left-wing Group Theatre of the
'30s. Its opening image is a knockout: a forced-perspective view
of a man climbing an apartment house stair and then turning up a
hallway as slanted as a playground slide. Master cinematographer
Nick Musuraca that, and his work grips us even as much of
the film is too cute for words. In the course of this meditation
on poetically lost souls at large in the nocturnal precincts of
Manhattan, someone gets murdered and the prime suspect is
afflicted with the ploy of short-term memory blackout. Principal
cast members Susan Hayward, as a taxi dancer, and Paul Lukas as a
cab-driving European philosophe manage to transcend the
preciosity of their roles, if not the arbitrary point-of-view
shifts of the storytelling. Then again, Deadline at Dawn looks
streamlined in comparison to Backfire (Warner Bros., made 1948,
released 1950). In this weak sister of the set, the plot comes at
us in sections, largely via flashbacks improbably narrated by
characters who exist only to do that, and the identity--if not
the convoluted rationale--of the mystery villain can be guessed
by noting which star has been kept off screen in reserve for most
of the movie.
As usual with these Warner Home Video sets, the clarity and
production quality of the DVDs is first-rate. However, volume 5
comes without commentaries (no Eddie Muller, no James Ellroy, no
Ursini and Silver, nobody), without featurettes, with nothing in
the way of extras but a couple of theatrical trailers. You walk
these mean streets alone. --Richard T. Jameson