Hi all
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morrison-dylan-fan — 9 years ago(January 06, 2017 03:44 PM)
Hi Gordon! thank you for the excellent review (which I've ticked) of this obscure French Noir.With your last obscure French Noir leading me to Dédée d'Anvers,I was wondering if you found Hans to be almost as good?
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PimpinAinttEasy — 9 years ago(January 01, 2017 10:49 PM)
IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (1967)
- i didn't love it. the background score by quincy jones was great. great performance by ROD STEIGER. POITIER was a bit preachy. WARREN OATES in a supporting role. great atmosphere and loved the small town setting. loved the way the film looked, technicolor was great, i wonder why they did away with it. but it all felt a bit flimsy in the end. doesn't really work as a police procedural. the parts are better than the sum.
(7/10)
I get melancholy if I don't write. I need the company of people who don't exist
- i didn't love it. the background score by quincy jones was great. great performance by ROD STEIGER. POITIER was a bit preachy. WARREN OATES in a supporting role. great atmosphere and loved the small town setting. loved the way the film looked, technicolor was great, i wonder why they did away with it. but it all felt a bit flimsy in the end. doesn't really work as a police procedural. the parts are better than the sum.
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jgcole — 9 years ago(January 02, 2017 11:24 AM)
A contract star at 20th Century Fox, Tyrone Power was tired of playing the swashbuckling, romantic lead. He had been a stage actor before going to Hollywood and wanted parts that would show that he was a serious actor doing meaningful films. He bought the rights to the pulp fiction novel
Nightmare Alley
and managed to get it produced as his follow up to
The Razor's Edge
, another film that was more in line with his ambitions.
Alley was not a low budget film, having top actors, a director with stage and writing experience, and one of the best cinematographers in the business, Lee Garmes. Garmes had worked with Joseph von Sternberg, photographing Marlene Dietrich in
Morocco
and
Shanghai Express
and his expressionist lighting techniques and camera work perfectly mirrored Alleys bizarre and twisted plot and subject matter.
Power plays Stanton Carlisle, a carnival barker who uses his considerable charms with women to obtain the secret code to a mind reading act. He discards the woman who taught him the code, opting for a younger, better looking one for his new act, The Great Stanton, a mentalist who reads the minds of people in the audience. He soon meets the beautiful Dr. Lilith Ritter, a psychiatrist who records her sessions on tape, giving her a library of the deepest, darkest secrets of her patients. She finesses the charismatic, and by now famous, Stanton into a scheme using those secrets to extract money from her wealthy patients.
Stanton has successfully used two women on the way up but has met his match in the villainous Dr. Ritter. After shes done using Stan his fall is quick and has no bottom. The startling transformation of the character is a brilliant piece of acting by Power who is unrecognizable in the last scene. Daryl Zanuck was shocked and worried what this film would do to his matinee idol star. The studio got nervous, underpublicized it and gave it only a very limited release. The film died, the rights went into a protracted legal fight, and was rarely seen until its release on DVD about ten years ago. Of course the film gained a cult status but is also considered to be one of Powers best, if not the best, performance of his career.
No cops, gangsters or guns, Nightmare Alley is a noir deviant with a
Twilight Zone
feel about it and strong elements of horror. Highly recommended, this one is not for the faint of heart. -
Jessica_Rabbit69 — 9 years ago(January 03, 2017 02:24 PM)
I wrote a review about it not long ago and couldn't agree more. The film positively reeks of desperation and proves that Noir doesn't need detectives, femmes fatales, guns, gangsters and outright murder to be true Noir.
Jessica Rabbit
"I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way." -
morrison-dylan-fan — 9 years ago(January 03, 2017 03:30 PM)
Happy New Year Cole! It looks like your Noir year kicked off with a bang in your great review,I was wondering if The Razor's Edge shares many similarities with Alley?
These are my notes on the film from 2015:
9
For the first hour of Jules Furthman's adaptation of William Lindsay Gresham's novel,the screenplay focuses on building Carlisle's psychotic personality,with the carnival setting surrounding Carlisle with freaks & geeks who he mercilessly takes advantage of in order to grab the limelight,with no regard at all for the effect it will have on his fellow performers.Along with striking Carlisle's Film Noir personality across the screen, Furthman also begins to subtle lay down cards which get turned during the final round.
Furthman slowly has Carlisle develop an uneasy sense of doubt of the revelations of the Tarot cards, to Carlisle having strong feelings of grandeur over being able to dominate and con anyone that stands in his way.Whilst the psychotic Noir mood that Furthman has been threading is clipped for an optimistic final note which goes against Gresham's novel, (most likely due to the Hays Code still having some grasp on power) Furthman takes Carlisle out of the carnival,and places him in a ruthless urban circus,where Carlisle's former attention-grabbing tricks are no match for the psychologically quick-witted circus animals waiting to get Carlisle in their grasp.
Despite the ratings board leading to a (what now appears long lost) scene involving carnival geeks attacking a chicken being pulled from the title,director Edmund Goulding & cinematographer Lee Garmes are still able to unleash an excellent,off-beat Film Noir atmosphere.For the carnival sequences,Goulding and Garmes dim the circus lights in order to cast long dark shadows across the screen,which reveal the darkness hiding behind Carlisle's colourful tricks.Getting out of the carnival,Goulding and Garmes superbly use tightly held, stilted shots to tear apart the charming image that Carlisle has built for himself,in order to uncover the decaying animal lurking beneath the surface.
Going against his good-guy image, Tyrone Power gives an excellent performance as Carlisle,with Power impressively making Carlisle's carnival act a tense affair,despite the viewer being told how the magic tricks are done.Gradually peeling away Carlisle's showmanship,Power strikes a brutal intensity,thanks to Power showing Carlisle not care about what method he must use to get to the top,even if it plunges him deeper into being a Film Noir loner.Lighting up the screen with their beauty, Joan Blondell/Coleen Gray & Helen Walker each give fantastic performances,with Blondell giving Zeena an underlying sense of doubt over teaching Carlisle the act,whilst Gray counters Blondell's unease by giving Molly a sweet,naïve charm,as Helen Walker burns Carlisle's nightmare carnival down. -
jgcole — 9 years ago(January 05, 2017 07:05 AM)
Been a long time since I've last seen
The Razor's Edge
so not sure about any similarities to
Nightmare Alley
, other than they were both directed by the same guy and had the same star.
I didn't think the ending was that optimistic, certainly not enough to consider it to be a cop out - I mean it was 1947. Stanton Carlisle lost everything, reduced to a drunk, relegated to living out his days as a carny. And there was no way out as he had his enabler - his estranged wife who saw this as her opportunity to hold on to Stan - just as was the case at the beginning of the film with Zeena and Pete. At best, she was only going to "save" him from being The Geek. Stan was doomed. I thought it was an effective end to the story, going full circle from the opening.
I looked for Jessica's review of this but couldn't find it. But I did read it when it was posted, so thanks as that's the reason I watched this film. Definitely Top Ten in the dark and bleak category for me. -
Jessica_Rabbit69 — 9 years ago(January 05, 2017 01:51 PM)
I'm glad you watched it because of my review. I actually just posted it on this thread, not on the movie page. I could post it again, but I just looked at it again and I simply got carried away with my writing, the review is too long and rambling. It needs some serious editing.
I too didn't think the ending was optimistic. In the end, Molly and Stanton are simply the mirror image of Zeena and Pete, the nurturer and the hopeless down-and-out alcoholic for whom there is no salvation anymore. At best, Stan seems to have fallen into the position of Pete at the beginning of the film, rescued from oblivion by a woman who cares for him. But theirs was never a happy arrangement.
He is saved by Molly from becoming the Geek, for now at least, but his future doesn't exactly look bright. Maybe Stan has not become the Geek, but he has become Pete.
Stanton will end like Pete, dead of some bad liquor. And the love of a good woman will not save him. The films ends how it started.
Jessica Rabbit
"I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way." -
Spikeopath — 9 years ago(January 06, 2017 06:20 AM)
It's a personal favourite so it's great to see such a positive and intelligent review. I'll just piggyback your review with my own so as to add more weight.
Don't forget, to err is human- -to forgive- -divine.
Nightmare Alley is directed by Edmund Goulding and adapted to screenplay by Jules Furthman from William Lindsay Gresham's novel. It stars Tyrone Power, Coleen Gray, Joan Blondell, Helen Walker, Taylor Holmes and Mike Mazurki. Music is by Cyril J. Mockridge and cinematography by Lee Garmes.
The rise and fall of Carnival Barker, Stanton Carlisle..
Picture opens with Cyril Mockridge's ominous music, sprinkled with carny strains, it's a portent of what is to come. The characters of this particular travelling carnival then enter the fray, boxed in by Lee Garmes' shadowy photography. Mood is set at dark, not even the sight of a handsome Tyrone Power can shift the feeling that there is bleakness coming our way. Thankfully, that is the case.
Due to a legal dispute, Nightmare Alley was out of the mainstream circulation for over fifty years. A crime that robbed a whole generation of film noir lovers the chance to sample this excellent picture. Power had himself purchased the rights to Gresham's novel, determined to expand his range and break free of his typecasting as a Matinée Idol, Power wanted to play bad and got his wish. In the process giving arguably his finest career performance as Stanton Carlisle, a small time hustler who gleefully casts away human feelings to rise to the top as part of a spiritualist/mind reading act. But this is film noir, and around the corner are people just as unscrupulous as he is.
Have I ever mentioned God in this racket?
Very talky for the most part, it's the backdrops to the story that serve the narrative so well. Be it the carnival and the assortment of characters that inhabit it, or the up market club where Stanton and his wife, Molly (Gray), use psychological trickery on the affluent members of society, there's a disquiet, a sadness even, to proceedings, with Goulding and Furthman also casting an acerbic eye on social institutions and religious fervour. The latter of which provoked complaints from religious orders. There's barely a good or level headed human being to be found for the whole running time, picture is full of phonies and con-artists, gullibles and straw clutchers, beasts and alcoholics, it's no wonder the suits at the PCA got all twitchy! This is a bleak world view, and had it finished two minutes earlier, then we would be talking about one of the finest of all film noir endings. Sadly 20th Century Fox chief Darryl Zanuck had Goulding tag on a coda to get past the PCA. Not a film killer, no sir, but a disappointment for sure.
Lilith: A female demon of the night.
The team assembled for the production is of a high quality. Power and Goulding may be out of place in the genre of film noir, but they both come out with much credit. The former is thoroughly absorbing and the latter knits it together without fuss; letting the actors fully form Furthman's (To Have and Have Not/The Big Sleep) seductively crisp screenplay, while Garmes (Scarface/Detective Story) brings the chiaroscuro, which makes a nice devilish bedfellow for Mockridge's (Road House) music. Benefiting most from Goulding's direction is Helen Walker (Murder in the Music Hall/Call Northside 777) as Lilith Ritter, an excellent portrayal of the icy cold psychiatrist who forms an intriguing axis between the three women in Stanton's life. Both Gray (Kiss of Death/Kansas City Confidential) and Blondell (Cry Havoc) earn their money as polar opposites jostling for Stanton's attentions, and Ian Keith gives a heart tugging performance as alcoholic Pete Krumbein, a critical character that spins the protagonist into a vortex of smug charlatanism-cum-self loathing.
Now available on DVD with a lovely transfer, this is worthy of a delve for the film noir dwellers. 9/10
The
SpikeopathHospital Number
217 -
telegonus — 9 years ago(January 07, 2017 01:36 PM)
Good review of
Nightmare Alley
, Spike. I've seen it maybe twice in its entirety, like it but it's not a favorite. You may well have nailed it with your calling it "talky". The narrative drive just isn't there, or not for me anyway. The movie feels like a Ty Power vehicle, which it sort of is,and it's one of his bestthough it might have been better with a bit less Ty and a somewhat more Nightmare. Edmund Goulding was a fine director, and he did get some excellent performances out of his cast. My favorite is Ian Keith's as the dipso geek. His scenes are haunting. Yet overall, stylistically, the picture just doesn't jump off the screen.
Comparisons with Tod Browning's
Freaks
are near inevitable, but it's really a different sort of film. The Browning was sort of an exploitation art film horror, while the later film is more carny
noir
on steroids. Problem: the steroids don't kick in. I think it would be better to compare
Nightmare Alley
with Siodmak's
The Killers
and the Jules Dassin
Brute Force
. Those two rock; and in their best scenes they really do jump off the screen.
Nightmare Alley
feels too genteel for the kind of story it's telling; yet for all that, its gentility doesn't ruin the film, it just keeps it from being the classic it might have been with a stronger beat. -
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