United Artists, 92m 25s
"My
soul is humble when I see the way little ones accept their lot. Lord save
little children. The wind blows, and the rain's a-cold. Yet they abide. They
abide and they endure."
To be
a fan of the cinema sometimes causes one, like it or not, to ponder what might
have been. Often such thinking revolves around careers cut tragically short;
for me that list includes screen legends such as James Dean, Sharon Tate, Bruce
Lee and Heath Ledger. Then there are those filmmakers who likely had
significant contributions to make had they survived longer, i.e. F.W. Murnau,
Michael Reeves and Bob Fosse. Perhaps even more painful are the films thought
forever lost, like the Lon Chaney vehicle LONDON AFTER MIDNIGHT (1927), the
unfinished Jerry Lewis project THE DAY THE CLOWN CRIED and the version
of THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS (1942) director Orson Welles intended
before studio interference chained his film's second half to the bottom of the
ocean. But the loss that bothers me most is the one-and-done directorial career
of Charles Laughton, whose astonishing THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER stands as
one of the most revelatory filmmaking debuts in Hollywood history. Though his
film's reputation only has grown in stature over the years, at the time of its
release it was a commercial and critical disappointment that prevented Laughton
from taking the director's chair again. One only can presume Laughton had far
more to offer than a solitary filmmaking effort. What if THE NIGHT OF THE
HUNTER was the floor of his artistic sensibility, not the ceiling? What if
he had started directing as a much younger man? What might he have brought to other
genres? That last question is the most challenging to consider given the one
Laughton-helmed production we have to evaluate. He definitely did not play it
safe. His film stubbornly resists categorization as it is many things at
once: German Expressionism throwback,
American melodrama, horror film, fantasy film, fairy tale, Biblical story and
of course film noir. Laughton bravely condenses elements from seemingly
disparate narrative forms into far-reaching, dark-witted dimensions, timelessly
unique and tonally coherent.
That THE
NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is concerned with children is apparent in the early
going. As the opening credits roll, ominous theme music (by Walter Schumann)
transitions into the traditional song "Dream, Little One, Dream,"
sung by children. Next the film's crucial matriarch communicates a message of
warning from Matthew 7:15: "Beware
of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing..." Her words of
caution segue into a God-like overhead view of a group of kids playing hide and
seek. In the course of play, the young ones are stunned to discover the
lifeless body of an adult woman, glimpsed only from the knees down. The woman's
killer is introduced next as he travels by automobile along the Ohio River in
West Virginia. Predatory preacher Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum) specializes in
victimizing women who have lost their spouses. As he holds a conversation with
a supposedly approving God, the self-proclaimed preacher confesses he has lost
count of how many widows he has destroyed as he awaits direction in regard to
his next mission. In response, at least in terms of Powell's unusual belief
system, the Lord Almighty has the preacher picked up for auto theft at a
burlesque club. Meanwhile, Ben Harper (Peter Graves) is arrested and condemned to
death after killing two people during a bank robbery. Before Harper is
arrested, he leaves $10,000 in stolen bank money with his two small
children: John Harper (Billy Chapin) and
Pearl Harper (Sally Jane Bruce). Significantly, Harper trusts his children with
the stolen money more than his wife Willa Harper (Shelley Winters). As film
noir fate dictates, Powell and Harper become cellmates. Before Harper is
executed, Powell hears Harper talking in his sleep, which puts the preacher on
the trail of that bank heist money, now guarded by young John Harper.
Prior
to his execution, Ben Harper mumbles in his slumber from the book of Isaiah,
"and a little child shall lead them." With Harper's boy thrust into
the role of cynical lead protagonist through no fault of his own, THE NIGHT
OF THE HUNTER applies the harshest of film noir aspects to a young
person. John finds his resolve tested by the sort of crushing pressures that
often defeat adults in the noir film. In the grandest of film noir
traditions, our unlikely lead protagonist is haunted by a past that would
traumatize anyone. After he and his sister (even younger) witness the arrest of
their father, who is roughed up by police before his sentence to death by
hanging, the Harper children must absorb the cruelty of their schoolmates
("hing hang hung, see what the hangman done"). This sequence reveals
the difference in maturity between John and Pearl: he is old enough to understand what is going
on and his sister is not. Thus by the time the preacher descends upon the town
in search of the recently widowed Willa Harper, her son John has been taught to
be skeptical of people and their motivations. As the preacher Powell charms the
local townsfolk without much resistance, John immediately distrusts the man in
black. John's suspicions about Powell are proven accurate when John catches
Powell in a huge lie about the whereabouts of the $10K. John maintains his
silence in honor of his late father's wishes as his mother weds the preacher to
create perhaps the most hopeless film noir union in a genre congested
with families under all sorts of emotional and economic stress. In fact
economic conditions greatly contribute to the sham of a union between Powell
and Mrs. Harper. THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is a Depression-era story, with
Ben Harper turning to crime for the financial betterment of his family. So the
Harper family's destruction is initiated by its patriarch, who by American tradition
provides support to the family structure's backbone. Instead his efforts to
improve his family's fortune cause its displacement into the tattooed hands of
the malevolent Powell. As if to mock the Harper sorrow, the prison hangman
(Paul Bryar) is shown to be part of an idealized family, complete with a boy
and girl asleep safe in their bed. Despite John's impressive display of
masculine strength throughout the narrative, noir forces eventually
break down our small protagonist in the film's final act, as he forfeits his
father's heist money in a moment of catharsis. As Powell is arrested in a
sequence that parallels the apprehension of John's condemned father, John
recognizes the difference that distinguishes his father from Powell is merely
one of degree.
THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is loaded to the gills with the visual signature of film noir |
Danger after dark |
The idealized female portrait |
Though
its story focuses on the development of children, THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER
offers no mature males capable of offering the sort of positive reinforcement
young people require. Failed husband and father Ben Harper is shown with his
children only long enough to give instruction on how to care for the money for
which he killed. Uncle Birdie Steptoe (James Gleason), the riverside town
drunkard, proves unwilling to notify the proper authorities after happening
upon a submerged body. Later he is too intoxicated to help the Powell children
at their most desperate time of need. Town merchant Walt Spoon (Don Beddoe)
suspects there is something wrong with Powell, but is unable to act on his
intuition given the influence of his wife Icey Spoon (Evelyn Varden), who
completely misreads the preacher in terms of character and intentions. Then we have
the false prophet, a dyed-in-the-wool misogynist of untethered greed, driven by
his narrow-minded construct of feminine evil. A serial killer of simmering
hate, those famously tattooed fingers suggest someone who harbors multiple
identities, a recurring theme of the film noir. His killing weapon of
choice has obvious Freudian implications, especially when that switchblade is
first triggered at a burlesque show. Like so many of the cinema's
knife-wielding killers, Powell is impotent. Perhaps the scariest things about
Powell is his earnest belief that his mission is noble. Unmotivated to deviate
from his long-held paradigm, obviously the Powell character brings to mind a
vast number of real-life conmen and charlatans that emerged before and since
the film's conception.
The
intense hatred of frivolous female sexuality harbored by Powell reflects
polarized female archetypes film noir followers should be quick to
recognize. But when he watches a striptease in a state of palpable bitterness,
seemingly ready to carve up a dancer for flaunting her sexuality, is the viewer
meant to side with the preacher? The sudden appearance of a police officer
strongly implies no. And surely the average viewer would struggle to side with
Powell's absurdly cruel treatment of Willa Harper, shamed sanctimoniously by
her new husband on their wedding night. Powell forces Willa to consider her
body only in terms of its ability to bear children. He even scolds her for
having amorous feelings: "That body
was meant for begettin' children. It was not meant for the lust of men."
Later on during a spooky tent-preacher sequence, Willa boldly announces she
is to blame for the Harper family’s dislocation. As if in a trance controlled
by Powell, she testifies before the affixed congregation that her material
demands alone set her husband on a crime rampage. In one of film noir's
greatest of ironies, she foretells her watery grave when she says, "My
whole body's just a-quivering with cleanness." Willa is far from an
unsympathetic character; she loses her first husband and ultimately her own
life, but her combination of spinelessness and gullibility is unappealing. Her
husband Ben has so little faith in her he calls upon their little
gradeschoolers to manage his ill-gotten gains. Perhaps the most positive female
of the townspeople who gets a closeup is Bess, the departed wife of Uncle
Birdie, now gone some 25 years and present only via idealized portrait (a
consistent film noir hallmark). Birdie believes she still keeps watch
over him, and he still talks to her as if she can listen.
A hopelessly unconsummated film noir marriage |
Given
the deficiency of responsible male role models and the presence of females
prone to the phony charms of the preacher, a strong-willed matriarchal figure
is required to guide vulnerable children into adulthood. That throwback
personality is Rachel Cooper (Lillian Gish), a God-fearing woman suitably
equipped to deal with the likes of Powell. A mature guiding light like Cooper
is especially important for the foolish naivete of teenage girls like Ruby
(Gloria Castillo), who is drawn instantly to the hypnotic evil embodied by
Powell. In fact Ruby maintains feelings for him even after he is
arrested for the murder of Willa Harper. Is Ruby set up for the identical fate
that entraps Willa? THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is cynical in its message
that positive females are either aging (Cooper) or long gone (Bess).
Simultaneously beautiful and repulsive: the death of Willa Harper evinces the coldly uncompromising noir aesthetic |
"It's
a hard world for little things."
—Rachel
Cooper
According
to the onscreen information that accumulates in THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER,
indeed it is an unfairly difficult world for small creatures to navigate.
Children discover a Powell victim while playing. The Harper kids witness the
arrest of their father and must move on after his execution. Area children
cruelly mock the young Harpers after their father is hung by the neck. An
immature rabbit is killed by a barn owl. But nothing underscores the "hard
world for little things" theme quite like the preacher's interminable
pursuit of those small Harper children. As John and Pearl float down a river in
an attempt to outrun their chaser, the ecosystem possesses a lyrical quality,
in essence a departure into the terms outlined in Genesis 1:24-25:
"And God said, 'Let the earth bring
forth living creatures according to their kinds—livestock and creeping things
and beasts of the earth according to their kinds.' And it was so. And God made
the beasts of the earth according to their kinds and the livestock according to
their kinds, and everything that creeps on the ground according to its kind.
And God saw that it was good."
Their
small boat passes a spider's web, a frog, a tortoise, rabbits, sheep, cattle, a
whip-poor-will, dogs, a fox. Interestingly, Powell is on horseback as he
pursues the children. Like him or not, the preacher is connected in a Biblical
context. Ultimately the river delivers the endangered Harpers to the Rachel
Cooper farm, a safety zone for lost little ones. "I'm a strong tree with
branches for many birds," she explains. Cooper also has a knack for
warding off dangerous creatures like Powell; via confident shotgun fire she
reduces him to a defensive animal. As he takes cover in her barn, for the first
time Powell's own vulnerability is exposed. Fittingly, the film's concluding
scene plays out on Christmas Day, every child's favorite holiday. The instincts
of children triumph with the right encouragement from Cooper. John absolutely
proves his resourcefulness and durability and looks destined to assert himself one
day as an adult, to emerge as the sort of dependable, idealistic man the
narrative posits to be in short supply.
THE
NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is an extremely well-written film peppered
with all kinds of memorable dialog, much of it delivered by Robert Mitchum,
i.e., "I can feel myself gettin' awful mad," Powell warns the Harper
children in the basement. "She turned me out of the bed," he lies through
his teeth about the wife he murdered. Mitchum is an unbelievable force of evil
as the preacher. Certainly his performance here anticipates the similarly
single-minded menace he would portray in CAPE FEAR (1962), as when, arms
outstretched, he chases the fleeing children up the basement steps. When the
river-bound children board an available skiff and narrowly escape the singular
purpose of the preacher, his scream of anguish defines a madman even more unbalanced
than suggested up to that point. “Don’t he never sleep?” John laments in
reflection of their tireless hunter. An exceptional moment of the film involves
an unlikely duet between Cooper and Powell (the traditional hymn "Leaning
on the Everlasting Arms"). Powell is unaware as the two combine voices that he
is losing the battle of good versus evil he so likes to depict with his
tattooed hands.
The
1953 novel THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER was written by Davis Grubb, whose writing
was inspired by the true crime story of serial killer Harry F. Powers (born
Harm Drenth; November 17th, 1893 – March 18th, 1932). Executed by hanging,
Powers was convicted of murder in the deaths of two widows and three children
in Clarksburg, West Virginia. Powers used "lonely hearts" ads to find
available women he could exploit for whatever wealth they possessed. Reportedly
Laughton heavily edited screenwriter James Agee's adaptation, which was far too
lengthy for a feature film. Nonetheless, Laughton elected not to share
screenwriting credit with Agee. In light of the subject matter, securing
Production Code approval was a challenge. The film's budget was just under
$600K. Principal photography commenced on August 15th, 1954 and was completed
on October 7th that same year. As one might expect, various religious groups
stood opposed to Laughton's filmmaking debut, including the Catholic Legion of
Decency and the Protestant Motion Picture Council.
Since
the days of its theatrical run, THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER has jumped from
commercial misfire to long-treasured cult favorite. In 1992 it was selected for
preservation by the United States National Film Registry. In 2008 the French
film publication Cahiers du Cinéma chose THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER
as the second-best film in cinema history, behind only the monumental CITIZEN
KANE. And the reputation of Laughton's film got a recent boost from the
critics queried for SIGHT AND SOUND magazine's decennial "Greatest Films
of All Time" poll. In 2012 the film landed at 63, but by 2022 its position
improved to 25. THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER's influence on cinema and
television programming that would follow it really cannot be estimated. The
love/hate tattoo scheme that assured Harry Powell a starter conversation with
anyone he met has been referenced in films as diverse as JARDIM DE GUERRA
(1969), THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975), THE ONION FIELD
(1979), DO THE RIGHT THING (1989), THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
(1991), FATAL INSTINCT (1993), MALLRATS (1995), THE DEVIL'S
REJECTS (2005) and RUST AND BONE (2012). Interestingly, the early
exit of the Willa Harper character anticipates Marion Crane's (Janet Leigh) premature
departure in PSYCHO (1960) by five years.
I
confess until recently I was unaware of the made-for-TV remake that aired in
1991. Thanks to YouTube, I was able to give it a watch. From the opening
credits, as directed by David Greene, NIGHT OF THE HUNTER offers no
pretense of being a work of art. One of the movie's many problems is its
Depression-era source material injected into a contemporary setting. Other
issues include pedestrian writing and an obviously modest budget that sometimes
brings to mind a daily soap environment. But most off-putting of all is the
focus on the opportunistic Harry Powell (Richard Chamberlain) as the lead
protagonist rather than John Harper (Reid Binion). This alteration either
dilutes or eliminates many of the Laughton original's major themes and motifs,
especially with the Rachel Cooper character excluded. Probably the best
illustration of the difference between the 1955 version and the repurposing for
1991 is the wedding night sequence. The remake does nothing to establish the
sexual inadequacies of Powell, so his reaction to his new wife's entrance into
the bedroom makes sense only if one is familiar with the source material.
Another version of the Grubb novel might be on the horizon as well: on April 7th, 2020 it was reported Universal
Pictures had started development on another remake, this time adapted by Matt
Orton. I could not uncover any more recent news on the subject of this
purported modernizing of the original story.
With a
cavalcade of prestigious titles getting the 4K Ultra HD treatment, Kino Lorber
has been busy lately making me feel like my Blu-ray collection is completely
obsolete. Thankfully they have done an admirable job with THE NIGHT OF THE
HUNTER. The triple-layered UHD100 disc boasts a new 4K scan of the 35mm
original camera negative and looks spectacular framed at 1.85:1, though a significant
departure from the original theatrical scope of 1.37:1 (according to Turner
Classic Movies). Compared with home video releases framed at 1.66:1, the result
is a loss of some content, as Gary Tooze reported:
www.dvdbeaver.com.
Absence of some information aside, the Kino release must be considered the
preferred option to appreciate the dazzling B&W cinematography by Stanley
Cortez (THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS, THE UNDERWORLD STORY [1950], THE
THREE FACES OF EVE [1957]), who ensures the production is rich in the
atmosphere of the noir form. No doubt this is the best THE NIGHT OF
THE HUNTER ever has looked, with vastly improved contrast and definition
versus the Criterion Collection edition issued in 2014. But in terms of
disc-based bonus material, collectors are advised to hang on to their Criterion
discs for the considerable array of unique supplemental features.
The
most significant Kino extra is a new audio commentary track by novelist and
former VIDEO WATCHDOG editor Tim Lucas, whose understanding of the language of
cinema is put to good use during the film's runtime. Lucas examines the
differences from novel to film (some in terms of Production Code limitations),
references to D.W. Griffith and Walt Disney, as well as the film's various
connections to scripture. He discusses the film's notions about unconditional
love in terms of the Cooper character, who loves and cares for her adopted
children though she recognizes they might forget about her as they grow up and
leave (there is evidence that has happened to her repeatedly already). One of
his best observations is that the riverside picnic sequence features Robert
Mitchum and Shelley Winters striking poses from a bygone era. But I also
appreciated his commentary track for bits of information less important to
movie love, as when Lucas offers some particulars on the gar, a large, toothy freshwater
fish that inhabits the Ohio River. Also according to Lucas, THE NIGHT OF THE
HUNTER was the first movie to make use of the word "whores."
A
separate Blu-ray disc contains a small amount of newly-recorded material for
this Kino Lorber release. In "LOVE AND HATE: Filmmaker Ernest Dickerson on THE NIGHT OF
THE HUNTER" (8m 31s) Dickerson points out it is Mitchum's character
who nudges the film into noir territory; the film's early sequences are
shot in a much more naturalistic sense. As the narrative progresses the film
takes on an increasingly stylized, nightmarish quality. A faster film stock
allowed for a lower level of light as certain sequences required. "LITTLE
LAMBS: Actress Kathy Garver on THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER" (9m 53s)
allows Garver to recall THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER as her introduction to
the film business. As the 8-year-old double for the 6-year-old Sally Jane
Bruce, Garver was called into action primarily for sequences that required
Pearl Harper to run. As history has it, Bruce would not act again and Garver
has amassed 100 acting credits on IMDb.com at the time of this writing. With
"HING, HANG, HUNG: Artist Joe Coleman on THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER"
(15m 42s), the artist/performer Coleman reviews the history of convicted killer
Harry F. Powers, "The Bluebeard of Quiet Dell," along with the
differences from novel to feature film.
Also
on the Blu-ray disc is a collection of trailers for comparable titles available
from Kino, along with two trailers for THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER (1m 38s
and 1m 36s).
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