Paramount Pictures, 100m 58s
An
independent feature produced by Hal B. Wallis, THE ACCUSED was the
eleventh film released from Hal Wallis Productions, as well as his fifth film
noir in a row. This title is all-out Freudian noir with its lead
character in the wrong place at the wrong time. THE ACCUSED also stands
as one of the genre's preeminent "woman in peril" permutations, among
them DANGER SIGNAL (1945), NOTORIOUS (1946), SORRY WRONG
NUMBER (1948), WHIRLPOOL (1949), WOMAN IN HIDING (1950), CAUSE
FOR ALARM! (1951) and SUDDEN FEAR (1952). Furthermore, it is one of
many film noirs patterned after co-writer/director Billy Wilder's DOUBLE
INDEMNITY (1944), in which Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) finds himself in
uncomfortably close proximity to those investigating the murder he committed.
Similarly, Dr. Wilma Tuttle (Loretta Young) of THE ACCUSED must endure
firsthand reminders of an investigation closing in on her. The narrative not
only revolves around the staple noir theme of mental trauma, but
intertwines its psychological angle with physical abuse and physical
manifestations from a fragile state of mind.
Set
amid the California Coastline, the hallmarks of the noir story are
plentiful: low camera angles, an obsession with mirrors, horizontal shadows
cast by Venetian blinds, compositions that suggest entrapment, a flashback that
reveals our lead protagonist's dire situation, and so on. Above all else, THE
ACCUSED calls into question the role of psychology in American society. Is
the person who represents the tenets of psychology someone to be respected? Any
survey of the genre likely would suggest the answer commonly is "no."
In example, consider the heel psychologists that populate CAT PEOPLE
(1942), SHOCK (1946) NIGHTMARE ALLEY (1947) and WHIRLPOOL
(1950).
Originally
from Kansas, Dr. Wilma Tuttle is an uptight Associate Professor, Department of
Psychology, at a local university. A complex, textured personality worthy of
the viewer's attention, she serves as analyst and is the subject of analysis,
posited as both victim of fate and unwitting femme fatale. She is anything but
one thing, the byproduct of a post-WWII America still coping with where the
woman belongs within a patriarchal system that might not be down for the count,
but could be on the ropes. In the opening sequence along California's Pacific
coast highway, truck driver Jack Hunter (Mickey Knox) tells Tuttle the last
woman he encountered on the road robbed him at gunpoint. Hunter then quickly recognizes
why he has happened upon Tuttle: her
choice for a date could have been contemplated better. Especially considering
what we eventually learn about exactly why Tuttle was in need of a lift, an
uncertain climate for both men and women can be grasped from this segment. It
is implied America of the late 1940s has become a dangerous place where nobody
may be what they appear to be, where neither gender has a right to feel safe.
A star
vehicle for Loretta Young, THE ACCUSED cries out for a gender study
reading. Though the film is progressive in certain respects and is mostly in
sympathy with Young's character Tuttle, upon inspection Tuttle is defined
primarily by the men that surround her. Throughout the proceedings, there is a
conflict between Tuttle as elegant, sexual woman and woman of substance, as if
the two cannot coexist without social disruption. In the classroom this theme
is energized early, when the professor Tuttle's pencil takes on a phallic
representation in direct view of Bill Perry (Douglas Dick), her bewitched
student who eagerly returns the visual favor. Without a current man in her life
or any suggestion of past lovers, Tuttle shows obvious signs of sexual
frustration and clearly desires Perry. At the same time she judges Perry to be
a brash, self-indulgent young man, though she absolutely admires his intellect.
His relentless pursuit of Tuttle batters down her every defense mechanism. When
he describes his interest in marine mollusks, he unknowingly compares these
seemingly harmless invertebrate animals to Tuttle ("They can really get
you."). America may be a place fraught with danger, but both Perry and
Tuttle demonstrate they are attracted to danger, even if that fascination in
either case is of the unconscious variety.
The male gaze |
Perry
drives Tuttle to an isolated Malibu cliff some 75' above the shore, where he
forces himself on her to the point she repeatedly asks him to stop hurting her
arm. Undeterred, Perry is convinced Tuttle in truth is turned on by his brutish
behavior. In response to his rape attempt, Tuttle beats Perry into a
permanently non-aggressive state. Though Tuttle acts in self-defense, she fears
the events of the evening easily could be misinterpreted and bring about
career-wrecking scandal. Tuttle is indeed the "cyclothymiac cutie" of
Perry's essay, the unassuming woman talked into an impromptu date with him on
what will be the last evening of his life. He correctly describes her as a
sexually-repressed woman struggling with unfulfilled desires. So accurate is
his assessment of Tuttle that his essay, ironically ordered by Tuttle, acts as
the catalyst for her potential downfall. There is compelling evidence Perry understood
his subject well when Tuttle's psychic trauma attacks her body; at one point
she lands in the hospital with pneumonia, at another she collapses into a piece
of office furniture. And while enveloped by the bloodlust of ringside fans at a
boxing event, her faculties break down completely when she envisions the
unwelcome visage of Perry in the ring. It is unsurprising that the truth just
has to come tumbling out; all along we sense Tuttle has too much character to live
with her concealed crime forever.
Though
Tuttle is a respected professor who projects upward mobility, at the same time
she is objectified and lives at risk of the men who would like to contain her,
as when Warren Ford (Robert Cummings) announces their imminent marriage without
bothering to consult her on the subject. Whether she is to be blamed for that
fateful night at a precipitous cliff is a difficult question, though in light
of the last close-up of Loretta Young, it seems axiomatic the filmmakers stand
firmly on her side. That the jury would be sympathetic to Tuttle based upon her
crime's circumstances is laudable, particularly with the first-hand knowledge
of that terrible seaside night the viewer is granted. Unfortunately, we are
left with the impression Tuttle will be set free thanks to her enchanting good
looks, which hardly implies the equality of all citizens in the courtroom or
any sense of fairness. The other major takeaway is equally troublesome: the intelligent woman is more capable of
deception and thus should be considered the most threatening type of woman.
Interestingly, Tuttle's capacity to kill does nothing to discourage the
attention of homicide officer Lieutenant Ted Dorgan (Wendell Corey), who finds
Tuttle irresistible, even in the courtroom! Her beauty has a borderline
hypnotic command over him; again it isn't just Tuttle who is drawn to danger.
The implication is disconcerting; the more dangerous Tuttle might be, the more
attractive she becomes. Tuttle the professor has no suitable male callers
begging for her hand, Tuttle the murderess has options! Is dangerous living
really that entrenched in American life? Dorgan seems to understand that
possibility best when he sets Ford straight about homicide investigation work:
"You want the illusion that youth
means innocence? Today kids kill their parents, their grandparents, children
killing children. Sweet sixteen. They murder their lovers."
Susan
Duval (Suzanne Dalbert), an immigrant student, is one of the peripheral
characters that reflects Dorgan's cynical life philosophy. She very much likes
Perry, but he treats her poorly, to the extent she says she could kill him (it
is not directly stated, but strongly implied Perry impregnated Duval).
If
Tuttle is contextualized in terms of the male gaze, the male characters are
united by a fairly consistent train of thought about a woman’s place. Although
the narrative is constructed around an ambitious, career-oriented woman, that
character is observed through an unmistakable prism of antiquated patriarchal
power. There is evidence that men are both empowered and weakened by the
female, especially when the woman happens to be alluring. Dorgan confesses a
"blind spot" that sometimes gets the best of him. Naturally that flaw
is a fondness for beautiful women, whose distracting charms and tendency to be
"gabby" interfere with his professional duties as a homicide
investigator. Similarly, Ford admits he fell for an accused female in the past
without any clue he is wandering down that identical path with Tuttle. He also
suggests beauty and brains should not (or perhaps cannot) exist within the same
feminine body. Even the truck driver Hunter flirts with Tuttle; no man can seem
to help it. And then we have Perry, another of noir’s decidedly negative
psychiatrists given his rather self-serving analysis of his “cutie” instructor.
THE
ACCUSED is based on the 1947 novel BE STILL, MY LOVE by June
Truesdell. The adaptation for the screen was written by Ketti Frings, an
eventual Pulitzer Prize winner. For whatever reason there were uncredited
contributions from six(!) contract writers (Jonathan Latimer, Barré Lyndon,
Allen Rivkin, Robert Rossen, Charles Schnee, Leonard Spigelgass). This is an
unusual film noir in that both the source material and its script were
credited to women. It was directed by William Dieterle, who would helm additional
noir productions for Paramount Pictures such as ROPE OF SAND
(1949) and DARK CITY (1950), again for producer Hal B. Wallis, and THE
TURNING POINT (1952) for producer Irving Asher. Cinematographer Milton R.
Krasner's noir credits include many of my favorites: THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW (1944), SCARLET
STREET (1945), THE DARK MIRROR (1946), THE SET-UP (1949), HOUSE
OF STRANGERS (1949), NO WAY OUT (1950), DEADLINE - U.S.A.
(1952) and VICKI (1953). There is a lot to like about the supporting
cast installed around Loretta Young, especially Wendell Corey, who excels as
Lieutenant Ted Dorgan. Robert Cummings also was an inspired choice as Warren
Ford, Perry's legal guardian and attorney. Douglas Dick is suitably slimy as
the well-documented womanizer Bill Perry, another of film noir's
unstable veterans. Sam Jaffe (THE ASPHALT JUNGLE [1950]) is in his
element here as Dr. Romley, and even in a small role, it is always reassuring
to see Henry Travers (HIGH SIERRA [1941], SHADOW OF A DOUBT
[1943], IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE [1946]). The billboard for the Macdonald
Carey / Gail Russell movie "Murder" is injected cleverly, though the
title referenced is fictitious.
This
single-layered Blu-ray release from Kino Lorber was derived from a somewhat
bespeckled print, congested with scratches and various artifacts. Contrast is
average at best, but despite the less than perfect source material, the movie
looks solid in motion with an appropriate level of film grain. Bottom line this
is an important film noir and yet another notable addition to the Kino
Lorber Studio Classics product line. Framing looks correct at 1.37:1.
The
audio commentary track by film historian Eddy Von Mueller is new to this
Blu-ray edition of THE ACCUSED. Von Mueller notes the film was released
at a time when long-term attitudes about social norms were being challenged. THE
ACCUSED is rooted firmly in the time of its creation, a time of
"horrific moral decay," with a telling reference to the Black Dahlia
(the gruesome, still unsolved murder of Elizabeth Short in 1947). Von Mueller
recognizes brainy women historically are presented as a problem in cinema,
particularly when they occupy a position of power over men. The Tuttle
character challenges every man she encounters one way or another. Despite the
fact her violent actions were only out of self-preservation and understandable
under the circumstances, her narration reveals a split in her consciousness, a
variation on the doppelgänger theme that distinguishes numerous film noirs,
quite overtly in SHADOW OF A DOUBT (1943), PHANTOM LADY (1944), THE
DARK MIRROR (1946), STRANGE IMPERSONATION (1946), STRANGERS ON A
TRAIN (1951) and BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT (1956). Both Tuttle and
Dorgan make direct reference to the theme of doubles, and the recurring mirror
motif hammers down the same point.
Von
Mueller's commentary is not without its memorable sound bites, as when he
critiques outrageously sexist dialog, "'Your brains don't show a bit.'
Jesus. This is the good guy, folks!" Another winner comes as he recalls
that Mickey Knox's wife's sister Adele Morales was married to Knox's good
friend Norman Mailer, who almost stabbed Morales to death. "Norman Mailer
was a dick," summarizes Von Mueller. He concludes his excellent, highly
professional track with an extraction from the courtroom sequence, dialog that
encapsulates the very essence of film noir, "It's always a fine
line between what we cause to happen and what happens to us."
A
theatrical trailer collection includes a trailer for THE ACCUSED along
with trailers for a host of other comparable titles available from Kino Lorber.
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