Showing posts with label Vincent Price. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vincent Price. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

365 Days: #33 The Long Night (1947)

I first watched this movie in 2017 and would have been interested in watching it for the cast alone, even if I hadn't already seen the film that inspired it. 

#33  The Long Night


Joe Adams, a former soldier, has shot a man, and then refuses to open the door to the police, instead shooting at them through the door. They run away to seek reinforcements, allowing Joe time to reflect on the circumstances that led up to him becoming a murderer. We learn he is a working stiff with a sandblasting job that's damaging his health, who falls in love with a cute, young girl, who's been taken in by charming creep, Maximillian. After Joe catches her sneaking around to see Maximillian perform, he takes up with Maximillian's former assistant for a no strings relationship. Joe and JoAnn finally decide they love each other enough to commit to one another, but Maximillian isn't having it, and he confronts Joe in a way that isn't very smart. JoAnn mounts a last ditch attempt to save Joe.


"A murderer. A killer. Thought I was all through with killing. Had no use for it. Hated it. Maybe even more than you. Well, here I am. You ever see a killer before? I've seen plenty. And plenty killed. Lots of murderers around. All kinds of them. And lots of ways of getting killed. Everybody kills a little bit, quiet like. With nobody knowing it." 



This movie is definitely worth watching, but of the two films, I think it's fair to say that Le jour se lève is a superior movie. Henry Fonda has a lot more dialogue to explain what's going on inside his head, taking away some of the imagination required, and Barbara Bel Geddes, in her first screen role, narrates an extended sequence explaining thoroughly her relationship with Maximillian. Vincent Price is as entertaining as ever, hamming it up in the role of charlatan, and Ann Dvorak is comparable to Arletty, though she maintained a safe distance from Henry Fonda in the bedroom scene, lest we think there was a possibility that they were doing more than drinking beer and snacking on pretzels. The Hollywood ending is less powerful than the punch-in-the-gut ending of the French version. The sets in this film have the same visual style as the French version, which makes it interesting to compare the two.

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Le jour se lève

The Long Night

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Movies Every Day 1: The Bribe (1949)



"I never knew a crooked road could look so straight."

 

Why I'm Watching

  • I love Vincent Price and Charles Laughton.
  • It's been awhile since I've enjoyed a good film noir.

The Gist

Federal agent, Rigby, is on a mission to track down airplane motors in order to expose a war surplus racket in Central America, and is waylaid by a dame, who's the wife of one of the racketeers, and also a suspect. He's willing to take a bribe because of his love for another man's wife.


Similarities

  • Narration and flashback recalls Double Indemnity.
  • Ava Gardner's sultry nightclub singing makes me think of Gilda. 
  • Snappy dialogue reminds me to watch Pitfall again soon.
  • When Rigby chases Carwood through the festival crowd, I can't help thinking of the final scene of Children of Paradise, which makes me laugh a little to think of Rigby as Baptiste and Carwood as Garance.

Surprises

  • I never thought of Charles Laughton as pie-shaped before this movie, but it fits.
  • The "Situation Wanted" song really got stuck in my head. I liked when Ava Gardner plants her cigarette in a transfixed band member's mouth while singing it. 
  • I've never heard Vincent Price sound less like Vincent Price, which makes it especially funny when he says, "Looks like everybody is wearing somebody else's voice."
  • I definitely wasn't expecting a shark attack. 
  • Characters are not what they seem.
  • Carwood is ruthless with a pillow.
  • Explosive fireworks!

Puzzles

  • How is it that Bealer and Carwood already knew Rigby was an agent when he arrived in Carlotta? Did I miss something?
  • Is the extended shot of the marlin dangling off the hook symbolic of trying to catch the criminal or hook the girl?
  • What is up with the eyes flashing out of the dark during the shootout in the darkened room? Who is that supposed to be?
  • Is Rigby being bribed with money or with Mrs. Hintten?


Patterns

  • Characters are shown in varying levels of light and darkness, moving from light into darkness and vice versa.
  • Characters confront a mirror before they are about to make a bad choice.


Notable Dialogue

Rigby (to himself): How do you like finding out that maybe you've got a price tag too? After all these years. How much do you cost, Rigby? How much for you? Or would you rather use another word for what you're selling out? One with a fancy necktie on it? Say...honor. And what does that mean...honor? Same thing to everybody or different things to different people. Honor. Just a word. Say it over often enough and it's not even a word anymore. Just a sound. A sound without any meaning at all.


Rigby: Look, why don't you stop acting like you're alone in the jungle.
Elizabeth: I'm not?
Rigby: Okay, so you are, but you'd be surprised how nice the birds and the beasts can be if you'll only give 'em a chance.
Elizabeth: Tell me, Rigby, do you fly, walk on all fours, or crawl?


Elizabeth (to Rigby): I'm spoiled, you're careful. We sound like a couple of Dick Tracy characters.


Rigby (to Elizabeth): When I kiss somebody goodbye, I like to know in advance, I do better.


Bealer: I've got a good nose for a deal, and I can smell one on the stove right now.
Rigby: Any deal you'd offer would smell, Bealer. Too high for me.


Rigby (to Elizabeth): I never knew a crooked road could look so straight. What do you suppose makes it look that way? You being around? That could be it.


Rigby: That drink, there was something in that drink.
Elizabeth: Something for the road, Rigby. So it won't seem so lonely.
Rigby: Playin' me, eh? Setting me up for it. You really found yourself a pigeon didn't ya'? You didn't have to do it this way. It was working fine for your side. Guilty or innocent, it didn't make any difference. I was selling out for you, but you outsmarted yourself, baby. Now I can do my job.


Rigby: What's good for me? I know one thing by now, what's good for me isn't you.
Elizabeth: Your hand!
Rigby: Yeah. It got caught in a broken promise. My own!


Rigby (to Bealer): I've been looking for you, sweetheart. I want you to pour out your little heart to me. Where's the guy behind you, fat boy? That's the guy I want.


Rigby: You don't look natural, fat boy. You're no gun bearing animal. C'mon, hand it over.
Bealer: Don't you come no closer!
Elizabeth: Don't, Rigby, he's dangerous.
Rigby: Sure, any scared guy with a gun's dangerous, that's why I want to take it away from him.


Rigby: Alright. Yeah, funny it is alright...as of here and now...with me...where you're concerned.
Elizabeth: No, it's not alright with us. I sold you out and I can't even ask you to forgive me. I'm not ashamed or sorry. Not even now. It would be a lie if I ask you to forgive me.
Rigby: Forgive. What's forgive? An old beat up word? Who's got a right to use it? Not me.


Memorable Moments




















Love It or Leave It

Love it. The villians are not all bad and the heroes are not all good. There are lots of gray areas. Nothing is black or white. Except for Carwood. He's bad. And with Vincent Price, that's good.
 

Similarities, Surprises, Puzzles and Patterns is adapted from the Grid Analysis Technique developed by the British Film Institute from Aidan Chambers 'Tell Me' Questions.