Showing posts with label Film Noir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film Noir. Show all posts

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Force Of Evil 1948

 

The Marie Windsor Blogathon 
Hosted By Toby Roan over at 50 Westerns From The 50's



     While undoubtedly a film-noir (and one of the best IMO) Abraham Polonsky's 1948 FORCE OF EVIL while containing the classic noir elements such as the main character on an inevitable road to his fate that he cannot change, a beautiful (although not central) femme fatal and a dark and forbidding cityscape, there are other underlying things at work here. Unlike other noirs FORCE OF EVIL deals with shady lawyers and businessmen who control the lives and fortunes of those below them and was also one of the first films along with NEW YORK CONFIDENTIAL 1955 and THE BIG COMBO 1955 that showed crime as a corporation while inserting its tendrils into the very core of society. Because as in a way it could be seen as an anti-capitalism statement this film was the main reason for Polonsky to run afoul of the infamous House Committee on Un-American Activities (which John Garfield was also tragically involved with).
     Garfield plays ambitious young attorney Joe Morse who has a secret phone locked in his desk drawer that is a direct line to his main client mobster Ben Tucker (Roy Roberts HE WALKED BY NIGHT). Morse is in cahoots with Tucker in an attempt to gain control of the numbers racker in NYC by forcing out the small betting parlors by rigging the winning numbers. One of the interesting things FORCE OF EVIL does is that it gets down into the real nuts and bolts of the numbers racket in which millions of people made nickel & dime bets on a set of three numbers that were picked from horse racing results. As one character says in the course of the film "it's a petty crime" but FORCE OF EVIL shows hows that those small bets add up to millions of dollars that are used to pay off corrupt politicians, judges, and police.




   Morse has a brother Leo (Thomas Gomez KEY LARGO) who runs one of the small numbers parlors with which Joe Morse has made an agreement with Tucker to save and fold into the new large "corporation". Unlike most other film-noir that deal with shadowy figures dealing in robberies and murder FORCE OF EVIL puts the criminal activity in line with lawyers, wall street, and businessmen all of which are conspiring against the working class. The Morse brothers relationship is one of the primary plot points setting up a Jekyll and Hyde thing with the overtly corrupt lawyer contrasting with his crooked albeit decent working-class brother. While each brother cares for each other their motives and actions shift considerably as they move toward a tragic outcome. 
   Joe also begins a relationship with Doris (Beatrice Pearson) a young woman who works for Leo in a minor job and along with several other employees of Leo's are presented as the true innocents in the unfolding drama with Leo shown as a father figure and caring employer who feels actual empathy for his staff and is powerless as they're shallowed up and used by the big corrupt businessmen. 
    The story itself is terrific with well-written amoral characters and was based upon a book by Ira Wolfert titled Tucker's People which was published in 1943. The book was optioned by Garfield's newly formed Enterprise Productions which he started after his contract at Warner had expired and this was its second production which was preceded by BODY AND SOUL in 1947 (and was also directed by Polonsky). 
     If there is a fault with FORCE OF EVIL it is that it does become very "talky" at certain points as characters seem to engage in lengthly & highly detailed (and highly unlikely) conversations that explain in minute detail the workings of the racket which does help explain things to the audience but are kind of tedious. This however is more than overshadowed by the cast and production including beautiful cinematography by George Barnes who had shot JANE EYRE and Hitchcock's SPELLBOUND and REBECCA. The film makes great use of actual NYC locations much of which was shot in the very early morning hours which lends an empty and desolate feel to the city. There are several terrific sequences including a beautifully edited shooting in a basement restaurant while a Beethoven piece plays plaintively on a phonograph and a nail-biting shootout in a dark office.




    Garfield is terrific as the ambitious lawyer who is blinded by his greed and it's his internal narration that contains many of the scripts most poignant lines ("A man could spend the rest of his life trying to remember what he should have said") and it's interesting to see busy character actor Roy Roberts who usually played stuffy executives and business-types here take that characterization to the dark side. Howland Chamberlain (THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES) has a very symptomatic part as Leo's tragic accountant and he too was blacklisted after his appearance in HIGH NOON and didn't work again until the 70's.
      In one of her first credited roles, Marie Windsor has a small but very memorable role as gangster Roy Roberts's wife and has two nice dialogue sequences with Garfield. Although sadly underused as initially as her character is set up as the classic noir femme-fatal and although she obviously is trying to seduce Garfield their relationship doesn't lead to his downfall. She is, however (as always) unforgettable here, and when she's curled up in her black dress with those gorgeous eyes seductively conversing with Garfield's Joe Morse you wonder how he can not succumb to her like many a classic noir character, but then as he says is only in for the money. 
     A big thanks to Toby for putting this blogathon together and celebrating one the greatest and undersung actresses in film history.  


















Thursday, October 3, 2013

(Veronica Lake !!) Nazisploitation Movie Night # 4 - Flesh Feast 1970

"Creeping Crawling Flesh Eating Maggots !"


"Living Bodies Used For The Most Vile Experiment Ever Devised !"



    Veronica Lake of was one the more sad stories to emerge from the Hollywood dream factory of the 1940's. A combination of a domineering stage mother from hell, some tragically undiagnosed mental issues and an increasing dependence on alcohol all combined for a short sad career arc. Born Constance Frances Marie Ockelman in 1922 in Brooklyn NY, soon after the family relocated to Miami where she won several beauty contests as a child. After moving to Los Angeles her mother enrolled her in acting classes and after some bit parts Paramont signed her to a contract with her big breakout coming in 1942 with This Gun for Hire, Sullivan's Travels, I Married A Witch & The Glass Key. Although instantly popular with audiences with her "peek-a-boo" hair style (take a look at Jessica Rabbit & Kim Basinger in L.A. Confidential to see how much of an influence she was) and being a pin up favorite of G.I.'s by 1944 her star had begun to fade. Suffering from untreated & ignored manic depression, she was saddled with the "difficult to work with" tag and began to drink heavily. By the early 50's with her movie career over (and three failed marriages - one being to director Andre De Toth) she worked sporadically in theater & TV, finally ending up working as a barmaid in a NYC hotel.


    At some point in the mid 60's she settled in Hollywood., Fl. and began working on her autobiography. Its here that she somehow hooked up with low budget filmmaker Brad F. Grinter (who in 1972 would unleash the mind boggling Blood Freak ). One has to wonder about the circumstances of their partnership (she co-produced Flesh Feast). Lake no doubt needed money and Grinter could deliver a cheap movie and low budget horror films at the time had reputation for hopefully making back a quick buck. Although made in 1967 the movie was not released until 1970 (coincidentally the same year Lake published her tell - all biography). 


   Sadly by 1967 Lake's once beautiful features had been ravaged by years of alcohol abuse. Although only 45 at the time of filming her bloated face and bad teeth make her look at least 10 years older. Lake plays Dr. Elaine Frederick who has a rather unorthodox method of skin rejuvenation - flesh eating maggots which she herself breeds and controls by flashing psychedelic lights on them. Dr. Frederick is working with Karl Shuman (Doug Foster) a gun runner who's working as a go-between to the Dr. and a group of Hispanic Nazis (?) who want to use her maggots to rejuvenate their aging "commander" (hey - guess who that is !) and put him in charge after a revolution in an unnamed South American country. 



   Director Grinter (who spends almost the entire movie sitting at his desk chain smoking and yelling at people) plays an investigative reporter who sends Kristine (Heather Hughes - also in  Blood Freak) to pose as a nurse in Dr. Frederick's clinic to investigate the strange goings on (no doubt clued in by the sudden influx of neo-Nazi Hispanics with German accents). To help out (and move the investigation along) Kristine periodically steals corpses & body parts from a nearby hospital for the doctor to try her maggots out on. Also there is Nurse Sharon (Dete Parsons - Mako The Jaws of Death 1976) who unfortunately is hooked on pills & booze and also happens to be in love with the one "nice" Nazi Jose (Bill Rogers - A Taste of Blood 1967). 


Veronica Lake & Maggots ?? WTF !!

   Before working on the commander the maggots are tried out on elderly Nazi Max Bauer (Chris Martell - The Gruesome Twosome 1967). The maggots work out stupendously and Bauer emerges with a much younger face. Unfortunately immediately upon awakening Bauer attacks Sharon, kills her and in turn is killed by Jose. Soon the commander is wheeled on a gurney for his maggot rejuvenation and is reveled to be none other then Adolf Hitler ! However as Dr. Fredrick's mother had perished in a concentration camp (as a guinea pig for these very experiments) she has a surprise concerning Der Fuehrer & the maggots.
   Very cheap looking and not a good movie by any stretch as the entire thing takes place on about three sets and what looks to be a garage along with a couple of wooden tables make up the lab, but it is entertaining in its low budget way and there is a somewhat perverse curiosity in seeing a former Hollywood glamour queen laughing manically while gazing at Tupperware trays full of squirming maggots. 



  In 1970 with the proceeds from her autobiography (in which she speaks fondly of Flesh Feast) Lake moved to England and after another failed marriage there returned to the U.S. in 1973 suffering from critical hepatitis. Checking herself into a hospital in Vermont she died of acute renal failure on July 7 1973 at the age of 50. After a sparsely attended memorial service in NYC her ashes were reportably scattered in the Atlantic Ocean, but as a final indignity a portion of the ashes and her urn were discovered in a second hand store in 2003 (where upon she was given a proper & well attended memorial service).
  I found this on a Beverly Wilshire DVD for $3.00 and it seems to be a direct copy of the old World Video VHS (complete with video rolls and tracking lines). Supposedly Mike Varney of SWV has the negative but can't release it because of a rights issue. 


"Hollywood gives a young girl the aura of one giant, self-contained orgy farm, its inhabitants dedicated to crawling into every pair of pants they can find"
                                                                                                 Veronica Lake


Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Hell's Half Acre DVD & Blu

   Coming out on March 26 from Olive Films is the great 1954 film noir Hell's Half Acre. Directed by John Auer and featuring a great cast including Wendell Corey, Evelyn Keyes, Elsa Lancaster, Jesse White and noir goddess Marie Windsor.  Taking place (and filmed) in the rather unusual location for a B&W crime film of Honolulu, Hi. this is a great little film. It's really nice to see companies like Olive taking the time for almost forgotten little goodies like this.



Thursday, May 10, 2012

Big Heat Blu

  Twilight Time has just released Fritz Lang's 1953 noir The Big Heat on blu. Limited to 3000 copies and features a great nasty bad guy performance by Lee Marvin.  Also with the always wonderful Gloria Graham.  What Marvin does to Graham with a hot coffee pot still packs a jolt to this day. Plus you gotta love that cover.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Dragnet

   With Shout ! Factory picking up the ball with the color run of Dragnet after Universal quit after the first season (Dragnet 1967), an unexpected bonus turned up in season two set - the 1966 pilot movie. When Webb revived the series in 1966 he hoped to get Ben Alexander back in the role of Frank Smith, but he was busy with a new ABC series Felony Squad. Webb then cast Harry Morgan in the role of Bill Gannon. In the pilot (not aired until 1969), Gannon is on his last day before retirement and Friday's rank is Lt. - not the familiar Sgt.  Perhaps Webb still hoped to get Ben Alexander back and just used Morgan as a fill in for the pilot, once the series was sold hopefully Frank Smith would be back.  The series was picked up and Harry Morgan was cast as Bill Gannon and Friday was back to a Sgt. The movie itself is based upon the real life case of serial killer Harvey Glatman ("The Lonely Hearts Killer") and some of Glatman's own statements to the police were used in script. 
    Although I grew up with the color Dragnet the original B&W series is really where it's at. Warner thru its MOD DVDr program on Amazon has released the original 1954 movie in all it's Warnercolor glory. A fascinating pre- Miranda rights procedural police movie, with Jack Webb's entire "stock company" from the TV series (many of whom would also appear later in the color Dragnet) including Virginia Gregg, Stacy Harris and Vic Perrin.  Also on board are Richard Boone, Ann Robinson and Dub Taylor (who gets blown away with a shotgun in opening scene).  Based upon the actual L.A. Police Intelligence Bureau who during the 1950's were responsible for fighting the war on organized crime in Los Angeles.
   The original B&W TV series still seems to be ignored by Universal - there are bunches of public domain DVD's out there with the same handful of shows.  I've bought a bunch of them and this one seems to be the best, with the most episodes and decent quality.



"Shotgun, extreme close range, double-O. Starkey was hit four times, first two cut him in half. "

"The second two turned him into a crowd."

Friday, June 24, 2011

The Killer Is Loose DVD

  MGM just annouced some more MOD DVD's thru Screen Archives , among them is The KIller Is Loose from 1956 directed by Budd Boetticher and shot by Lucien Ballard. Boetticher was just starting to get rolling - his next three movies were Seven Men From Now, The Tall T and Decision At Sundown (need I say more). A great film noir with a really unsettling preformance by Wendell Corey. Also with Joesph Cotton and Rhonda Fleming. 


Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Criterion Does The KIlling on Blu Ray/DVD !!

   This Aug. Criterion is putting out Stanley Kubrick’s  classic 1956 heist film The Killing. With a cast that includes Sterling Hayden, Coleen Gray, Timothy Carey, Elisha Cook Jr., Marie Windsor, Ted de Corsia, Vince Edwards and Jay C. Flippen (whew...) - you can't go wrong. One of the greatest film noirs ever made. Worth it alone for Timothy Carey.

Monday, May 30, 2011

New DVD's from MGM

A few crime/film noir DVD's were just announced by MGM in their MOD program.

Crime Against Joe 1956, The Fearmakers 1958,  and The Girl in the Black Stockings 1985 ( with Mamie Van and Marie Windsor !!). Good Stuff.