Monday, March 19, 2012

I can get it for you Wholesale (1951)

Stars: Susan Hayward, Dan Dailey, George Sanders
Plot: A dress designer bulldozes her way to the top of the garment/fashion industry; but finally has to choose between ambition and love.

Staring two of my favorites: Susan Hayward and George Sanders; "I can get it for you wholesale" has some good moments but can't overcome an extremely wordy script with minimal character development and a predictable plot.

There are *some* funny/witty lines expertly delivered by Sanders & Hayward - but that's larded between a lot of dull/mediocre stuff. As in "Force of Evil" Polonsky seems to believe that word-count equals quality  and almost every second of run-time is filled with with talk.  Yak, Yak, Yak.  And like "Force of Evil" I had a hard time caring about the less-than-likable characters. On the plus side, the acting is quite good, there's a lot of George Sanders being  George Sanders, and we get some interesting location shots of 1951 NYC.

**Spoilers Ahead**

The last two scenes in the movie are examples of Polansky's overwriting. Both are well acted and have some good lines - but Polanksy simply can't keep it short and effective. In the Sanders & Hayward scene he has both characters exchange the same thoughts over and over. In the last scene with Jaffe-Hayward-Daily, Sam Jaffe's character has the final words. He only had to say "Teddy, just because 7th avenue is a jungle, there's no need to live like a wild animal. That's what Harriet learned, that's why she's back. Remember Teddy, its not easy to walk back in, after you walked out." Cue embrace. Cut/print it.

Instead Jaffe goes on for another minute - saying nothing memorable or needed. Typical Polansky.

**End Spoilers**

Having seen almost all of Abe Polonsky's films I'm less than impressed with his talents. Its somewhat amusing to read of the author of 'Tell them Willie boy was here" and "Madigan" dissing Kazan -but that's politics in Hollywood. I think Wilder had him in mind when he stated that "Only two or three of the Hollywood Ten had talent, the rest were just unfriendly".

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Big Combo (1955)

Plot: A police detective (Wilde) is obsessed with bringing a suave, and seemingly invulnerable crime boss (Conte) to justice - the gangster's girlfriend may be the weak link.

Stars: Richard Conte, Cornel Wilde, Jean Wallace, Brian Donlevy

Enjoyable but over-praised Film Noir. The plot is pretty standard but with an 84 minute run time that's not a problem. More problematic is the bland Cornel Wilde and the 2 wooden female performances. The action scenes are mixed. A couple are well done, others are almost unintentionally funny. Anyone want a pineapple in a box?

Pluses: A great jazz score and some beautiful B&W cinematography. Also, Earl Holliman and Lee Van Cleef are memorable as the Gay(?) henchmen. Conte is fabulous as the ruthless "Mr. Brown".

Summary: Another "cult film" that leaves me puzzled. I liked it, but its no better than 30 other film-noirs. Rating: ***

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Odds Against Tomorrow (1959)

Stars:  Harry Belefonte,  Robert Ryan, Gloria Grahame, Ed Bergley, Shelly Winters
Plot:   A New York City Jazz Singer, a retired disgraced Cop, and a racist muscle-man plan to rob a small town bank in Upstate New York.

Effective little film noir, with some good acting (and some bad), great cinematography, and some good action scenes. Filmed on low "B movie" Budget, director Robert Wise gets all he can out of the location shots on Hudson New York and New York City. Belefonte is surprisingly good as the gambling Jazz Singer who has to become a bank robber to pay-off the Mob, while Bergley is quite sympathetic as the old eccentric who plans the heist. On the minus side, Winters and Grahame aren't given much to do. Ryan does a tired repeat of his usual evil bigot, and the phony southern accent doesn't help.

What keeps "Odds against tomorrow" from being a very good film-noir is the script by Abe Polansky. The movie sags in the middle, and the 3 main characters aren't particularly sympathetic or smart. The 'race issue' stuff is rather dated.  Also, Polansky threw away the book's upbeat ending to create his own downbeat symbolic ending - which has all the subtlety of a jack-hammer.

 **Avast Ye - Spoilers ahead**

 Finally, the heist itself is well filmed except for the incredible idiocy of the police. First, they shoot Ed Bergley six times over 5 minutes, and while having the gang pinned down in the alley never think of sending someone around back to cut off their escape. Later, they let Ryan and Belefonte shoot and chase each other till they get to a Gasworks, where they continue to let the two shoot each other and also blow up the gas works. We don't see any dead Gaswork employees - but no thanks to "Mellon's Finest"!