Clash By Night (1952): Love… because we’re bored

Clash By Night (1952)
Cheating wife faces the music…

Clash by Night (1952) from Fritz Lang transcends film noir in a neo-realist melodrama that turns the film noir motif upside down and inside out. Sexual abandon and existential entitlement are put on trial and found empty.

Lang and veteran noir photographer, Nicholas Musuraca, team with Paul Douglas, and noir regulars, Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Ryan, in a deep story grounded in simple lives and normal passions, from a screenplay by Alfred Hayes and David Dortot, based on a play by Clifford Odets. A very young Marilyn Monroe is also well-cast.

The realist feel is established in the long opening sequence which simply and eloquently documents the start of the working day in the fishing community of Monterey, but only after the impending drama is telegraphed in the opening scene with waves crashing on coastal rocks at night accompanied by a portentous and strongly emotive score from Roy Webb.

On one level, the picture is pure melodrama: sexual frustration, infidelity, deception, selfishness, and betrayal. On a deeper level it is about the possibility of redemption and the power of forgiveness. A female protagonist confronts the disastrous consequences of the false choices she has made. A tour-de-force performance from Barbara Stanwyck, who in her role as Mae, delivers a profound critique:

Earl Pfieffer (Robert Ryan)
Mae Doyle (Barbara Stanwyck)

Earl: You feel guilty? That’s the way they want you to feel.

Mae: They?

Earl: The world! All the people who haven’t got guts enough to do what they want to do…

Mae: All my life I’ve walked away from things.

Earl: And what’s stopping you now? Responsibility? … I told you somebody’s throat has to be cut!

Mae:
But it’s never our’s, is it Earl? It’s always someone else’s - why?

Earl: Because they’re soft.

Mae: And we’re tough, we’re hard? And if someone suffers because of us, that’s just too bad? That’s the way life is? Huh. How many times have I told myself that. Nothing counted but me. My disappointments, my unhappiness… I thought I was being honest. I thought I wasn’t lying, but I was. I said to the world, this is what I am, take me or leave me, so that it was always on my terms that they had to accept me. But it was a trick. Can’t you see Earl? It was a trick to avoid the responsibility of belonging to someone else.

Earl: What are you giving me? An hour ago you were in love.

Mae: I don’t know what the word means anymore. Not the way we use it.

Earl: You knew yesterday…

Mae: Love because we’re lonely, love because were frightened, love because we’re bored.

Clash By Night (1952): Love… because we’re bored

> Articles, Films, Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 4:58 am

January 31, 2008


Film Noir: Bringing Darkness to Light (2006)

Film Noir Bringing Drakness To Light (2006)A recent production from Leva FilmWorks on film noir, with a lot of talking heads and movie clips. A fair effort with well selected clips, but too focused on a limited selection of movies: no mention of Robert Siodmak or his pictures, and way too much attention paid to the inferior b-noir Decoy (1946).

The talking heads reprise established commentary and are settled in their views, but the contributions of James Ellory, who opens the film, are refreshing and challenging. He speaks with intense respect for the genre and careful precision: [film noir] exposited one great theme, and that great theme is “your fucked”.

Warner Home Video presents Film Noir: Bringing Darkness to Light as a bonus disc in their Film Noir Classic Collection: Vol. 3 box-set, with five 20-min. programs from the MGM series “Crime Does Not Pay” — “Women In Hiding” (1940), “You, the People” (1940), Fred Zinneman’s “Forbidden Passage” (1941), Joseph Losey’s “A Gun in his Hand” (1945), and “The Luckiest Guy in the World” (1947).

> DVDs, Films — Tony D'Ambra @ 7:28 am

January 30, 2008


Rififi (France 1955): America’s Loss France’s Gain

Rififi (France 1955)

Rififi has to be the greatest French film noir of the 50’s. The taught direction of Jules Dassin, working in France after his blacklisting by the HUAC, has Paris in deep focus in this classic heist gone wrong picture. An excellent cast and sexy night-club interlude culminating in the terrific final scenes of a car desperately careening through the streets of Paris, make an absorbing and sobering thriller. The whole action is underpinned by an evocative and hip jazz score.

The best line in the movie is given to a peripheral character, the wife of one of the hoods, whose young son is kidnapped by a rival gang, and in her anger and angst calmly confronts him with these words:

There are kids… millions of kids who have grown up poor. Like you.
How did it happen… What was the difference between you and them that you became a hood, a tough guy, and not them?
Know what I think Jo, they’re the tough guys, not you.

Rififi (France 1955)

Rififi (France 1955)

> Directors, Films, Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 12:34 pm

January 25, 2008


New Fox “Noir” Releases

Black WidowDaisy KenyonDangerous Crossing

Fox Home Entertainment has announced the Region 1 DVD release of 3 Fox Film Noir titles on 11th March 2008.

The blurbs from the press release:

Black Widow (1954) stars Ginger Rogers and Van Heflin as well as Gene Tierney and George Raft in a murderous tale of Broadway ambition. A classic love triangle featuring heartbreak and betrayal

Daisy Kenyon (1947) stars Joan Crawford and Henry Fonda, with a powerful supporting performance by noir-staple Dana Andrews and stunning black-and-white direction by Otto Preminger. Exploring the darkest corners of the mind, the classic psychological thriller.

Dangerous Crossing (1944) stars Jeanne Crain and Michael Rennie in a high-seas mystery.

These are obscure titles, which I haven’t seen, and I wonder whether Fox is stretching the envelope just to milk the genre by badging such movies as film noir. Full details at DVD Times.

> DVDs, Films, Lobby, News — Tony D'Ambra @ 6:48 am

January 24, 2008


More Great Movies on ABC TV

Further to my post of 30 December Feast Of Free Noir Movies, here are more great movies to catch ad-free on Australia’s ABC HD Digital TV over the next fortnight:

Thurs 17/1 Film Noir Triple Feature:

Body And Soul

11:30pm Body And Soul (1947)
Starring John Garfield. Screenplay: Abraham Polonsky. Director: Robert Rossen

Journey Into Fear

1:15am Journey Into Fear (1943)
Starring/Director: Orson Welles With Joseph Cotton Screenplay: Eric Ambler

The Leopard Man (1943)

2:25am The Leopard Man (1943)
Directed by Jacques Tourneur and based on the book Black Alibi by Cornell Woolrich. From the renowned 1940’s Val Lewton horror production unit at Universal. See Scorsese Chronicles Horror Film Producer.

Mon 21/1

Dakota Lil

12:25am Dakota Lil (1950) A noir Western with Marie Windsow as Dakota Lili!

Thur 24/1

Casbah 1948

11:25pm Casbah (1948)
Hollywood remake of the saga of Pepe LeMoko (1937), the French poetic realist classic. Pepe is a criminal who hides from the law in the Casbah section of Algiers until the love of a woman forces him to the outside world and his doom. Starring Peter Lorre and Yvonne De Carlo.

Wed 23/1

Rear Window

10:35pm Hitchcock Classic: Rear Window (1954) Starring James Stewart and Grace Kelly.

Mon 28/1

Citizen Kane (1941)

1:45pm Citizen Kane (1941)

Wed 30/1

Frenzy (1972)

10:40pm Hitchcock Classic: Frenzy (1972)

Ramrod (1947)

1:35am Ramrod (1947)
Men are so Easy!… A Little Lace, a Pair of Lips, a Touch, and they Kill for you!
Noir western with Veronica Lake! Directed by Andre de Toth.

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens

> Films, Lobby, News — Tony D'Ambra @ 12:36 am

January 13, 2008


Jim Morrison: LA Woman - Cars Hiss By My Window

Double Indemnity (1944)

The cars hiss by my window
Like the waves down on the beach
The cars hiss by my window
Like the waves down on the beach
I got this girl beside me
But she’s out of reach

Headlight through my window
Shinin’ on the wall
Headlight through my window
Shinin’ on the wall
Can’t hear my baby
Though I called and called…

Windows started tremblin’
With a sonic boom
Windows started tremblin’
With a sonic boom, boom
A cold girl’ll kill you
In a darkened room

Cars Hiss By My Window :Track 4 - LA Woman - The Doors (1971)

> Lobby, Music — Tony D'Ambra @ 11:35 pm

January 6, 2008


Otto Preminger At Film Forum

Angel FaceA post by Lloydville Rediscovering Preminger on his blog mardecortesbaja.com, has alerted me to an Otto Preminger retrospective at New York’s Film Forum from 2-17 January.Preminger’s many masterworks include a number of film noir movies from the classic period, and the Film Forum has included an excellent selection for the retrospective - the brilliant Laura (1946) was screened last week:

Double-Feature Sunday Jan 6 - 2:50, 6:30, 10:10 pm

ANGEL FACE (1952)
“the precision of the editing, the mise-en-scene, and the directing of the actors attain a wholly classical clarity of definition” - A Panorama of American Film Noir 1941-1953

FALLEN ANGEL (1945)
“all the intensity of great film noir” - Ibid.

Double-Feature Thursday Jan 17 - 2:50, 6:30, 10:10 pm

WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS (1950)
“includes a fascinating manhunt” Ibid.

WHIRLPOOL (1949)
“the direction is faultless” - Ibid.

Full details

To coincide with the Film Forum series, an exhibition of Preminger film posters, spotlighting the innovative graphics of Saul Bass, will run at that great movie poster house Posteritati (239 Centre Street; 212- 226-2207) January 2-31. Visit their web site for a great selection of original film noir posters on sale all of January.

> Directors, Films, Links, Lobby, News, Posters — Tony D'Ambra @ 11:34 am

January 5, 2008


Film Noir Features On-Line At Veoh

These full-length noir features can be viewed free on Veoh.com:

Impact
M {Fritz Lang}
Scarlet Street
The Red House
Killer Bait (aka Too Late for Tears)
The Stranger
The Big Combo
D.O.A.
Port of New York
Quicksand
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
Jigsaw
Detour

> Films, Links, Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 10:22 am

January 4, 2008


film noir