ABANDONED
(1949)
Universal
Pictures, 79m 14s
THE LADY GAMBLES
(1949)
Universal
Pictures, 99m 1s
THE SLEEPING CITY
(1950)
Universal
Pictures, 85m 50s
Kino
Lorber has issued a trio of obscure but credible docudrama film noirs under the
KL Studio Classics label. The boxed set has been branded FILM NOIR: THE DARK
SIDE OF CINEMA III and is comprised of Universal International Pictures
productions exclusively, all new to domestic Blu-ray. Each story navigates
sensational social problems of its time while the individual presentations
boast solid source material, with scratches that are barely evident when the
films are in motion. What's more, each disc offers a fresh commentary track for
those eager to level-up their noir
knowledge.
The
unpleasant social subject of ABANDONED
involves black market adoptions in the Los Angeles area, with a warning from
the narrator that such activity well might infiltrate any American city. Paula
Considine (Gale Storm) arrives on the scene as an outsider from Beaver Brook,
Pennsylvania to investigate the strange disappearance of her older sister Mary
Considine. After failing to find a sympathetic ear at the police desk, she is
assisted by reporter Mark Sitko (Dennis O'Keefe), who adds value quickly when
he confronts Kerric (Raymond Burr), a bottom-feeding private investigator on
Paula's trail. With Mark at her side, she learns her sister died of carbon
monoxide poisoning after delivering a child. Paula rejects the theory her
sister was a suicide case. With some assistance from expectant mother Dottie
Jensen (Meg Randall), an acquaintance of Mary's, Paula and Mark work together
in the interest of bringing down the predatory underworld system that so
cruelly victimized Mary and her baby girl.
The
noir spider woman was de rigueur in
the mid-to-late 1940s, though in this narrative she is not the usual temptress
of men, but rather a mature woman who ensnares tough-luck young females. A
false prophet if ever there were one, Mrs. Donner (Marjorie Rambeau) uses the
Bible to gain acceptance from the distressed women upon whom she preys. Her
appearance and diction suggest aristocratic heritage (conveyed perfectly by the
extensive theatrical training of the longtime stage actress Rambeau). Despite
her obvious danger to pregnant women and command over men like Kerric, her
weakness is implied by the cane she requires for walking assistance. Behind the
facade of upper class respectability is a weakened woman, vulnerable to the
right aggressor. Film noir is
overflowing with examples of limping men (ACT
OF VIOLENCE [1949], THE HITCH-HIKER
[1953], STORM FEAR [1955]), men in
wheelchairs (CONFLICT [1945], THE BIG SLEEP [1946], KEY LARGO [1948]) and men dependent
upon canes or crutches (DOUBLE INDEMNITY
[1944], GILDA [1946], THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI [1947]). Mrs.
Donner personifies the rare instance of the physically compromised female, a
woman who stands on wobbly knees in comparison with the healthy women she
manipulates. Further film noir enforcement
is provided by disreputable character types like the ethnic villain "Little
Guy" Decola (Will Kuluva) in cahoots with Mrs. Donner, along with his
knuckle-cracking henchman Hoppe (the always intimidating Mike Mazurki).
Irwin
Gielgud's first feature film screenplay reflects an era in which the newspaper
reporter was considered an important contributor to society. Rare today is the
film that features a reporter of any kind as a major character, but such
storytelling was not unusual during the Golden Age of Hollywood. Compared with
local law enforcement officials, Mark Sitko is the far more helpful character
encountered by the resilient female protagonist Paula. Local authorities show
little interest in her search for her sister until the reporter does some heavy
lifting. At the outset, the police desk clerk is dismissive of Paula's search
for her sibling, even though he admits she has come to the right location
regarding such matters. Later Chief MacRae (Jeff Chandler) takes a wait-and-see
approach after being confronted by Paula and Mark with what sounds like a case
worthy of investigation. Director Joseph M. Newman moves the material at a
pleasingly steady pace; this is one of the better film noirs manufactured at programmer length. He would return to
the genre with the excellent 711 OCEAN
DRIVE (1950), DANGEROUS CROSSING
(1953) and DEATH IN SMALL DOSES
(1957), an examination of pill-popping truckers.
Framed
at 1.355:1, just a bit off from the original theatrical scope of 1.37:1, the
visual splendor of William H. Daniels's cinematography is quite something.
Through both Los Angeles locations and studio work, he proves himself a
purveyor of outstanding high contrast imagery. The construction site finale at
Paradise Hills Country Club, a most plausible environment for a film noir conclusion, really highlights
the artistic potential of black and white cinema. It is impossible to imagine
this sequence in color. Daniels' incredible breadth crosses many genres and
includes the formidable noir films BRUTE FORCE (1947), LURED (1947), THE NAKED CITY (1948) and WOMAN
IN HIDING (1950). As far as I can remember, ABANDONED might include the only instance where I have seen multiple cars
involved in tailing a suspect. Most movies and television programs do not
bother with a tailing scheme this elaborate. On a lesser note, how could the
black market baby organization operate with anonymity for so long and be so
shortsighted as to plan Paula's death to occur at the exact same place they
murdered her sister? The torture of Raymond Burr's character seems like payback
for his role as the flame-obsessed maniac Rick Coyle in RAW DEAL (1948, also starring Dennis O'Keefe). ABANDONED was the first film in a long-term contract between
Universal and Jeff Chandler, who soon would be cast in starring roles.
The
audio commentary track was submitted by Samm Deighan, associate editor of DIABOLIQUE
MAGAZINE and co-host of the podcast "Daughters of Darkness." This is
the first track I have heard from Deighan, whose measured cadences quickly take
on a mechanical quality. Delivery is not her only issue; recurring word choices
are more than a little off-putting. Deighan would be well advised to eliminate
certain go-to words from her vocabulary, i.e. "sort of," "kind
of," "I think," "basically." Such language makes her
sound younger than she probably is. Nothing wrong with being young of course,
but to sound young is not a very desirable trait in a film historian. Perhaps
more refined commentary work lies ahead for Deighan, who obviously clocked the
research time. Particularly for those new to the genre, she touches most of the
accepted cornerstones, the most valuable one being film noir as a reflection of social issues worthy of our notice.
Her standout observation is that the film's pregnant women are not judged by
the filmmakers, and that too often such narratives assign blame to marginalized
characters for self-entrapment. Another good insight from Deighan is the inner
strength of Paula. Despite the romantic intentions that motivate Mark, Paula
suppresses her feelings for him and remains focused on justice for those who
factored in the death of her sister. Mark's prurient agenda must wait for the
film's concluding moments. Selectable Kino Lorber trailers include THUNDER ON THE HILL (1951), THE PRICE OF FEAR (1956) and NAKED ALIBI (1954).
Next
up in this film noir collection is THE LADY GAMBLES, another social
problem photoplay as the title matter-of-factly implies. As it unfolds in
mostly flashback form, it provides a textbook example of "downward
spiral" film noir framework, the
type of cautionary tale standardized by DOUBLE
INDEMNITY (1944), DETOUR (1945)
and OUT OF THE PAST (1947). How did
the lead protagonist get into this situation? In the noir film, how things
happen is vastly more important than what
happens. The filmmakers establish a brutal tone when Joan Boothe (Barbara
Stanwyck) is beaten mercilessly for her part in a loaded dice game in an alley.
Her husband David Boothe (Robert Preston) finds her at the local hospital and
explains he has not seen her in a year. The unemotional reductionist Dr. Rojac
(John Hoyt) calls Joan a tramp, but David knows his wife as a decent woman with
a terrible addiction. As David lobbies to get her the help she needs, he
relates her unfortunate past.
While
David is on assignment for a Hoover Dam story, the Chicago-based couple stays
in Las Vegas, where Joan discovers the world of tables and slot machines. Her
initial buy-in is innocuous enough when she asks for $1 in chips at a roulette
table. Joan knows so little about gambling she bets on both red and black at
the same time. After she takes a few covert pictures of the gaming floor, she
demands the attention of casino owner Horace Corrigan (Stephen McNally), who at
first views Joan as a harmless freelance journalist. No doubt because she is an
attractive woman, Corrigan gifts her some house chips so she can play for fun
and not win or lose. As luck would have it, those free chips encourage Joan to
take chances she would not take with her own money, and before long she is
primed for the real deal. She repeatedly dips into her husband's trip expense
budget and eventually blows through the entire $600. After some begging and
pawning, she wins the money back at the craps table and returns her husband's
expense allotment to its original status. Lesson learned, right? Not so fast.
THE LADY GAMBLES
stresses gambling as a form of addiction as dangerous as any drug. When in
front of the craps table, Joan is no different than the alcoholic who spends an
entire paycheck on himself and his friends at the local tavern across the
street from the factory. As she wins back the $600 she lost, her
heightened awareness and energy level is palpable. Clearly it is not just the
money that comes and goes, it is the unique excitement
that comes from risk-taking. To a gambling addict, risking money is like
getting high. When she tries to avoid the magnetic pull of the craps table, she
looks at her shaking hand that desperately wants those dice. Her enabler was
the casino man Corrigan, who provided free chips (the gateway drug) to get her
gambling persona in motion. Later he backs her in a private all-night poker
game, which leaves her susceptible to his sexual interest. Corrigan is the
homme fatale of this film noir, the
man Joan never should have met. Had she not encountered him, her gambling habit
might not have taken root.
The
need for a respectable, stable man in Joan's life is neatly integrated with the
arrival of her shrewish older sister Ruth Phillips (Edith Barrett), who hits
Las Vegas just as David is leaving. That noteworthy timing encourages Joan to
feed her hunger for gambling without her husband's knowledge. After a
disastrous losing streak, Joan is found despondent. In the hope of leaving Las
Vegas losses behind them, Joan and David escape to Mexico, where she soon runs
into Mr. Sutherland (Don Beddoe) a man associated with her recent Las Vegas casino
crawl. This chance encounter (or was it fate?) is thematically significant in
that it emphasizes what is at risk when women stray from their husbands. This
friendly male acquaintance invites
her to a casino he has discovered in the area, and Joan's addiction takes hold
of her again. She loses everything the couple had saved for living expenses,
which prompts the immediate departure of David, who no longer has the means to
finish his book as planned. The family cash box to a gambler is the equivalent
of a liquor cabinet to an alcoholic. At this juncture, it is clear Joan cannot
be left alone for any amount of time.
THE LADY GAMBLES is a woman's
picture in the sense that the female protagonist takes center stage, but this
is far from a celebration of the power of woman. Without the guidance of a
dutiful husband, Joan likely will lose every war waged by her addiction.
Whether the filmmakers are in sympathy with Joan or pity her is open to
interpretation.
The
cataclysmic meltdown in Mexico predictably leads Joan back to Corrigan, who
sets her up as a front for his new horse racing operation, with predictably
disastrous results. After Joan spoils a shady income opportunity for Corrigan
and his cohorts, he discards her at a local bus stop. "This is the end of
the line," he informs her, in a nod to the Stanwyck classic DOUBLE INDEMNITY. Now her downfall
really accelerates, leading Joan to lower and lower lows and ultimately to the
rather indifferent care of Dr. Rojac, who sees her more as a statistic than a
patient. It seems only David can help extricate his wife from the
self-imprisonment of chronic gambling. After Joan turns from the selfishness of
her older sister Ruth, THE LADY GAMBLES
winds down with David's dedication to his wife's recovery and incontrovertible
proof of the husband's worth to the troubled wife. Without his love and
understanding she surely would have died via suicide. The nature of this
husband/wife dynamic has a familiar ring, particularly at this point in the
history of American cinema. The long-term stability of the female without a
loyal man's undying support seemed beyond the average screenwriter's capacity
to imagine.
Director
Michael Gordon's early career saw him crafting modestly-budgeted crime movies.
Later he would helm the noir films THE WEB (1947), AN ACT OF MURDER (1948) and the undervalued WOMAN IN HIDING (1950). Unfortunately he was targeted by the House
Un-American Activities Committee and thus was unable to work throughout much of
the 1950s. Screenwriter and novelist Roy Huggins was very active during the
classic film noir movement, with a
resume that includes contributions to I
LOVE TROUBLE (1948), TOO LATE FOR
TEARS (1949), WOMAN IN HIDING
and PUSHOVER (1954). The incredibly
prolific cinematographer Russell Metty, known for his work with director
Douglas Sirk on 10 productions in the 1950s, also left his impression on film noir, having lensed some of the
genre's most revered works, including THE
STRANGER (1946), RIDE THE PINK HORSE
(1947), KISS THE BLOOD OFF MY HANDS
(1948), NAKED ALIBI (1954) and TOUCH OF EVIL (1958), the noir masterpiece directed by Orson
Welles. My favorite shot in THE LADY
GAMBLES occurs at the pawn shop where Joan forfeits her camera for fresh
gambling money. As the pawnbroker (Houseley Stevenson) places Joan's pawned
camera on the shop's shelf, the camera joins an army of other cameras, all
presumably pawned by people like Joan. On a side note, classic film fans are
sure to recognize Tony Curtis in a brief scene as a bellboy (billed as Anthony
Curtis).
The
audio commentary track was contributed by Kat Ellinger, a well informed but
unpretentious voice in film criticism. A veteran of just under 100 commentary
recordings at the time of this writing, the editor-in-chief for DIABOLIQUE
MAGAZINE strikes an ideal balance between scholarly observation and film fan
enthusiasm. Her accent is strong for an American ear (she hails from
Cheltenham, a town in Gloucestershire, England), though easy enough to follow.
Ellinger explains how THE LADY GAMBLES
vacillates between the web of film noir
and the woman's film with Babs in the lead. It is never one brand of film
consistently as it explores how the average person suddenly can become incredibly
vulnerable to a stubborn addiction, in this case by way of the contaminated
atmosphere of the Las Vegas strip. THE
LADY GAMBLES combines post-WWII malaise with the emergence of women in the
workforce required by the wartime economy. After the end of the war, not all
women were excited about returning to domestic roles. Joan embodies one of
these women; ultimately she is unfaithful to her husband. Ellinger makes an
excellent point that this is a woman's story told by a man. Baked into the recipe are moral overtones directed at women
who do not observe the advice of their husbands. Ellinger takes issue with the
ending, which seems overly influenced by the Stanwyck noir vehicle SORRY, WRONG
NUMBER (1948). She is probably right about that, though the concluding
moments certainly mesh with the film's patriarchal agenda established from the
very beginning. Overall this is an eminently listenable track from a seasoned
film genre expert. Only demerit is for overuse of the word
"interesting." Trailers are included for WITNESS TO MURDER (1954), THE
GREAT MAN'S LADY (1942) and KISS THE
BLOOD OFF MY HANDS (1948). THE LADY
GAMBLES is framed at 1.36:1, a close approximation of the original
theatrical scope of 1.37:1.
The
final film in this bundle opens with leading man Richard Conte speaking
directly to the camera regarding Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan, where much of
the footage for THE SLEEPING CITY
was collected. In an effort to distance what we are about to see from the
massive building's day-to-day reality, Conte testifies to the legitimacy of the
institution's medical research and dedication to the betterment of mankind. The
proper narrative commences with pulverizing effect when Dr. Foster (Hugh
Reilly) is shot at point blank range with a .38 caliber revolver. The no-nonsense
Police Inspector Gordon (John Alexander) is unable to break the case, so Fred
Rowan (Conte in his first role under contract with Universal) is brought in to
pose as Fred Gilbert, a new intern on staff. Rowan's most promising lead may
involve the nurse Ann Sebastian (Coleen Gray, against type), who reputedly was
fond of the executed Foster.
Rowan's
roommate is another person of interest. Dr. Steve Anderson (Alex Nicol, his
debut) is the portrait of the disenchanted man, the character type who almost
always has a place in the film noir.
He feels grossly underpaid and seriously resents those who have accumulated
more money than him. Like so many of the genre's flawed protagonists, Anderson
firmly believes all his problems would find resolution if only the dollars were
stacked sufficiently high. An anxious man, Anderson shows signs he may be
mentally unstable as well. He appears the obvious suspect, but in truth is
merely a symptom of a more disconcerting disease rooted in currency required to
pay off debts. Without giving too much away for the uninitiated, the manner in
which intern gambling debts are settled is about the last thing a hospital's
administrative staff would want to discover. Even for a film noir, the implications are incredibly bleak.
When
Rowan is introduced to Ann Sebastian, the scene is loaded with sexual
suggestion. She is a divorcée, saddled with debts of her own. Could she be some
iteration of the film noir femme
fatale? Absolutely, though not in the way noir
devotees probably conjure up that objectified female archetype. What is true to
form is that Sebastian is a more complicated creature than her appearance
suggests. Her complexity is revealed in earnest when she offers the following
passage to Rowan, which begins with a quote from the Roman poet Ovid:
"'Blemishes
are hid by night and every fault forgiven.' The world should live by night. The
dark draws people together. They can feel the need for each other. But the world
gives the night to the sick. It keeps for itself daylight and lets men look
into faces filled with fear and hatred."
Though
not a woman who has made the best of choices, Sebastian is somewhat sympathetic
in that she appears to have been caught up in a system easier to enter than
exit. Perhaps any nurse plagued by hard times could have fallen into the
identical trap. Time and again this sort of possibility is one of the central
messages communicated by film noir,
that often the system is more powerful than we are.
Sebastian
obviously does not live up to her uniform, thus Rowan is an appropriate match
for her. Like Sebastian, he is not what he portrays himself to be. Unlike any
other genre, film noir is flooded
with multiple identities, characters who say they are one thing but in fact are
another. Aliases often come into play. Rowan adopts an undercover identity and
does not have the education or experience his new identity requires. He is
instructed to avoid anything beyond his capabilities, but in a crisis
situation, would that directive realistically be possible to follow? Rowan may
be out to perform the greater good, but like the nurse with whom he is linked,
his very presence poses a risk to the hospital's many patients. In a multitude
of ways, THE SLEEPING CITY insists
that for one person to prosper another must suffer.
Director
George Sherman was noted mostly for churning out "B" Westerns, though
he did direct some other noir films
such as LARCENY (1948), THE SECRET OF THE WHISTLER (1946) and THE RAGING TIDE (1951), none of which I had heard of before reviewing Sherman's credits. Sherman also directed six
episodes of the television series NAKED CITY from 1959—1963. THE SLEEPING CITY is paced to demand
one's attention, even upon repeat viewings, although at times Sherman's
direction looks unimaginative, with the camera functioning as a theatrical
spotlight at certain intervals. This is particularly true in the early
sequences that focus on the police work of Inspector Gordon. The dedication to
using Bellevue as opposed to sets to shoot interiors probably contributed to
this outcome. The director's preferred set-up has his actors facing the camera, a
popular film noir convention. This
arrangement has little in common with the way people typically talk to one another
in real life, but allows an efficient and economical brand of storytelling to
merge with subtle but effective cinematic artistry.
The
final chase sequence, itself a film noir
staple, begins in the bowels of Bellevue and leads to a logical rooftop finale.
The trip to the hospital's highest point is made possible by an exterior
staircase, complete with prison-like bars that imply the villain's useful life
is about to reach its end. Stairways and ramps of various kinds are common film noir components, often used to
illustrate a power struggle or emphasize the complexity of an interconnected
setting. Steps are of special concern in THE
SLEEPING CITY since they factor in both the murder at the film's exposition
and the climactic shooting of the killer responsible. Especially considering
the many scenes that feature staircases in between, the labyrinthine setting
amounts to a human maze not everyone is destined to escape. Essentially the
same environment is suggested in NIGHT
AND THE CITY (1950), released the same year as THE SLEEPING CITY and also written for the screen by Jo Eisinger.
The
commentary laid down in April of 2020 in New York City by erudite film
historian Imogen Sara Smith is the most polished and informative of the three
tracks compiled for this noir
collection. The author of IN LONELY PLACES: FILM NOIR BEYOND THE CITY (2011)
succeeds in the most critical area of any commentator's assignment: to heighten the viewer's awareness of the
subject film's place in movie history. According to Smith, the year of THE SLEEPING CITY's release saw the
greatest number of film noirs
distributed theatrically. Beyond raw numbers of film productions, 1950 served
as a turning point for the genre. There was a transition from stylized visuals
to the more flat, realistic look associated with documentary filmmaking. Many
notable Hollywood filmmakers made wartime documentary features and brought some
of those techniques into post-WWII fiction film, including more location-based
footage. Another shift involved the departure from small-time, individual crime
stories to organized crime enterprises that ensnared far more persons than the
typical noir stories of the 1940s. By
the 1950s, the city had evolved from a sometimes dangerous nocturnal
environment to a place with such widespread greed and corruption that everyone
is impacted at all hours of the day. Even hospital patients may be unsafe in
such an atmosphere. THE SLEEPING CITY
hovers on the borderline between the moral ambiguity of 1940s film noir and the more black and white
approach (good versus evil) of police procedural noir that characterized the semidocumentary movement of the 1950s.
A crucial theme broached by Smith is the significance of the undercover man's
moral responsibility as it may interfere with his professional duty. In the
interest of protecting his identity, a patient could be the subject of gross
neglect.
Smith
also does a commendable job handling the storied history of Bellevue Hospital,
which is covered as a prison-like structure by cinematographer William Miller.
Bellevue always has been known as a hospital that cares for the underprivileged
members of the city. It remains one of the largest hospitals in the US. At the
time of her recording, Smith notes, "Bellevue is the site of a makeshift
morgue for victims of the COVID-19 pandemic." The city's tragedies always
have been connected closely with Bellevue Hospital. If Smith has a flaw as a
commentator, sometimes she reaches too far in search of profundity, as when she
comments on the character played by Richard Taber: "...he's very effective in the way he's
able to shift from this harmless, colorful Damon Runyon-esque figure to a
sinister villain; the way his obsequious benevolent manner masks his resentment
and hostility towards the interns." A bit much for my taste, but not an
inaccurate appraisal. Trailers are selectable for THE SLEEPING CITY and CRY OF
THE CITY (1948). The feature presentation is framed at 1.355:1.
FILM
NOIR: THE DARK SIDE OF CINEMA III makes for a fine addition to any classic
movie fan's personal collection. There is a lot to like, and at the moment the
boxed set is being offered at a discounted rate via kinolorber.com. Act
accordingly, and be advised their follow-up set FILM NOIR: THE DARK SIDE OF
CINEMA IV ships this week.