RKO Radio Pictures, 61m 51s
A
lively film noir programmer from good
ol' RKO, director Phil Rosen's STEP BY
STEP makes for an entertaining Saturday afternoon diversion. Set along
California's coastline, this taut noir
plunges the viewer into post-WWII malaise, with rogue Germans still very much a
nuisance to American ideals. Stuart Palmer's screenplay, based on an original
story by George Callahan, exploits the concern that Nazism has metabolized into
the country's social and political structures. In its implication that evil
never can be entirely defeated (it just regroups and starts over), the
atmosphere advanced in STEP BY STEP
is no place for the weak-kneed or the uninformed. Though the war may be over,
the isotropic tension of aggressive Nazism might manifest itself in person, via
listening devices or through one's own compromised employee.
At
his seaside home, Senator Remmy (Harry Harvey) suggests his newly-hired
secretary Evelyn Smith (Anne Jeffreys) enjoys the beach while he awaits the
arrival of James Blackton (Addison Richards), a government operative who
possesses a list of 200 Germans whose day-to-day actions deserve monitoring. On
her way to the beach, Evelyn draws the hungry eye of Johnny Christopher (Lawrence
Tierney), recently discharged from the United States Marine Corps after being
stranded in the South Pacific. The two have a friendly conversation, but
nothing happens beyond talk. Evelyn returns to the Remmy beach house and
eventually is followed by Johnny, who is floored to be greeted by another
blonde (Myrna Dell) who claims to be Evelyn!
STEP BY STEP
qualifies as a film noir thanks
mostly to its unstable environment where the order of things is questioned and ordinary
people inspire doubt. Our lead protagonist Johnny stands among a vast array of noir characters who served their country
only to encounter continued opposition back in the states. This theme pervades
the narrative early when a motorcycle traffic cop (Pat Flaherty) accuses Johnny
of being a shell-shocked veteran whose perceptions cannot be taken seriously.
An unhelpful public servant, the cop does not buy into the former Marine's
story and is outwitted easily by the Nazis led by Von Dorn (Lowell Gilmore) who
have assembled at the Remmy estate. The battle-tested noir doppelgänger theme is emphasized by this German crew that
substitutes for Remmy and Evelyn without much resistance. Effectively the Nazis
put Johnny and Evelyn on the run, with the couple sought by both police and
criminals.
Particularly
for film noirs of this period, the
woman of mystery is one of the accepted genre conceits. It is hinted at very
early in the proceedings that Evelyn Smith might not be who she claims to be in
terms of work history. On a related note, she is an outsider from the east.
Though not a femme fatale per se, from the opening segment there is question as
to who she is and why she suddenly has become a secretary for Senator Remmy. In
fact she eventually reveals she was selected for the job based on false credentials,
and thus never should have been in a position to attract Johnny with her
fetching swimwear. Interestingly, Evelyn proves she is capable of spider woman
detail when she tricks the chauffeur Norton (Phil Warren) into admitting his
treachery just before he gets iced.
The requisite heterosexual union (well, sort of) |
Ultimately
the Nazi fugitives are expunged as Hollywood conventions of the time required,
although the cathartic concluding sequence strains credulity to the limit, with
law enforcement firepower responding to a wildly implausible S.O.S. signal
engineered by Johnny. Overall the plot seems heavily dependent upon coincidence rather than the preferred film noir power of fate. STEP BY STEP reunites
Lawrence Tierney and Anne Jeffreys from DILLINGER
(1945), though it should be mentioned this vehicle is hardly the forum for the
unique talent of the real-life bad boy Tierney, who was so effective the
following year as the heavies in THE
DEVIL THUMBS A RIDE (1947) and BORN
TO KILL (1947). Myrna Dell's character Gretchen is branded repeatedly as
far less attractive than Evelyn, as if Dell were some sort of ugly duckling.
Not only are Nazis engaged in nefarious activities that threaten our basic
freedoms, the viewer is to understand their women are homely to boot.
This
Blu-ray presentation is derived from outstanding source material and looks
smooth and crisp in motion, framed at the original theatrical scope of 1.37:1.
Two bonus features are selectable. The first is THE TRANS-ATLANTIC MYSTERY
(1932, Warner Bros., 21m 40s) with Ray Collins, who would later appear as Boss Jim
Gettys in CITIZEN KANE (1941). John
Hamilton from STEP BY STEP is also
part of the cast. The second supplement is “The Great Piggy Bank Robbery”
(1946, Warner Bros., 7m 33s) a surreal animated short starring Daffy Duck.
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