The slow-motion dissolving opening credits of a shimmering font seem to establish a whimsical tone. The orchestral music crescendos gently as each main credit slowly appears then decrescendos as credits fade. Then the cycle repeats. With a complicated lead character, this movie needs to be watched more than once to catch all the nuances that make this low-budget film work. The film's pacing in the first thirty minutes was a bit frustrating, however. The cinematography by John Russell is certainly a highlight. The exception is the "Keystone Cops" rear projection of 1930s traffic as seen from a speeding (studio) police car's windscreen. The wacky, blurred footage embarrasses an otherwise solid, yet slightly quirky, film. The sets nicely masquerade for location filming yet, according to the film, all businesses apparently close after dusk. The insomniac city is Chicago and Chill Wills gives it voice during one day in the Windy City.
In
the mix is an “exotic” dancer, Mala Powers, to whom Young is not that
committed either. He would like to be but it is complicated.
She plays an aspiring ballerina whose bit of bad fortune placed her
in the company of Tutu-less dancers. Also in love with Powers is
perhaps the film's most unusual character. Wally Cassell plays the
club's unique entertainer whose job behind an elevated glass case
outside the nightclub is to fool the public into believing he is
actually a mechanical man. With his face painted silver, under a top hat and black tuxedo, he performs in shifts for the equivalent
length of this movie---ninety minutes---with fifteen-minute breaks in
between. This quirky
character is the only witness to a murder by Talman outside the club. And Cassell's single tear exposes the truth.
There
is a nice ending twist of confusion for Talman. The father takes the police radio call in place of his son. Talman is stunned to learn father is there not to take him to the Hoosier state but to
handcuff and arrest him. With the devastating realization of Talman's heartless action, Young's career commitment and life purpose hit new heights, no thanks to Wills. The ending is the typical gunfire
exchange while running to total exhaustion. Chicago's electrified elevated commuter rail system is a big concern as both men sidestep around them in the shadows.
Spoiler Alert: When Chill Wills pops up out of nowhere to be Gig Young's substitute patrol partner, the viewer and Young wonder where he came from. It is a good bet this film is the only fantasy noir released by Republic Pictures or any other studio. It is another quirky element and I am not sure it even has a point. Young does not seem to be affected by any of Will's angelic wise counsel. Nearing the film's end, once he is confident Young has his life on course, he vanishes just as mysteriously as he appeared.
Notes: A couple of officers refer to Talman as a “who’d.” It was an era when "hoodlum" was truncated to "hood" as slang. Other movies of the era may use the same term. Finally, Wally Cassell may be best known as the soldier with constant amorous intentions in the notable 1945 film, Story of G.I. Joe.
Thanks for reviewing this (to me) unknown B goodie! What was the source you viewed -- a dvd or youtube version? I love the casting... Talman and Burr proved to be quite compelling noir heavies, soon-to-be plain-speaking johnny law adversaries.
ReplyDeleteThanks! This was a surprisingly excellent print on YouTube. I kept ignoring it for quite awhile. Missed it on TCM.
ReplyDelete