Out In The British Film Noir Night- “Black
Orchid”
DVD ReviewBlack Orchid
Blue
Dahlia, Black Dahlia, Black Orchid, hell, even pink roses,
they all reek of film noir and all
are very, very nasty flowery ways in which murder, murder most foul, can be
committed by some ingenious sport looking to commit the perfect crime. But we
have worked the film noir milieu, although not the British variant as
extensively, long enough to know, know for dead certain, that crime does not
pay and so some rough-hewn justice will out in the end. Although the effort
here, Black Orchid, is not one of the
better British entries in the genre that simple home truth outs in the end.
Here is why. A dedicated English doctor out to cure one
of the world’s myriad medical diseases is trapped in a bad marriage with a wife
from South Africa who is nothing but a social-climber (not unusual in high society
although not always from South Africa) and, frankly, a drag on his career. She
will not divorce him however until she is good and ready. Good and ready comes
when her younger sister comes from South Africa to help our Good Samaritan doctor
out with his research and they fall in love (not unusual either although again
not always all the way from South Africa). There she is ready for her own reasons
to go through with divorce. That reason happens to be a funny Brit rule that
the sister of a divorced woman cannot legally marriage that ex-husband while
the ex-wife is still alive (yah, I know but you know how funny those Brits are
with their common law this and that). So you know that the ex-wife is a goner,
no question.
What is at question though is who killed the darling
ex-wife. Naturally the way in which she died (as a result of nicotine-essence
poison) points to our good doctor and he takes the fall for a while, mainly as
a result of the accusations of some shrewish personal maid of the ex-wife’s who
is sure the doctor did the deed. End of story. No way, see the ex-wife was
spending her lonely hours with a caddish publisher who also happened to be
nutty for odd-ball flower arrangements, black orchids, okay. Once he tired of
her he used a little nicotine-essence poison that he used to make his flowers
grow better to avoid any scandal that might come his way as a result of that
dalliance. Nice, right? Of course no way is he going to get away with that and
he doesn’t but you can see where once again, for the umpteenth time, crime
doesn’t pay, and also that the plotline, dialogue and repartee here are
calculated to make you curse the day you decided to check out toney upper-
class 1950s British film noir efforts.
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