***Out In The 1950s Crime Noir
Night-Watch Out, Watch Way Out For Two-Timing Dames-“Human Desire”
DVD Review
Human Desire, starring Gloria Grahame, Broderick Crawford, based on a novel by Emil Zola, directed by Fritz Lang, Columbia Pictures, 1954
Human Desire, starring Gloria Grahame, Broderick Crawford, based on a novel by Emil Zola, directed by Fritz Lang, Columbia Pictures, 1954
No question I am a film noir,
especially a crime film noir, aficionado. Recently I have been on a tear
reviewing various crime noir efforts and drawing comparisons between the ones
that “speak” to me and those that, perhaps, should have been better left on the
cutting room floor. The classics are easy and need no additional comment from
me as their plot lines stand on their own merits. Others, because they have a
fetching, or wicked, for that matter, as here femme fatale to muddy the
waters also get a pass. Some, such as the film under review from 1954, Human
Desire, offer both those and, additionally, the pedigree of a story-line
based closely on the work of 19th century French writer, Emil Zola (he of
Dreyfus case fame), and directed by German expressionist film director, Fritz
Lang, with his flare for great and dramatic use of black and white
cinematography. This film while not right up there with the top of the line Out
Of The Past, Gilda and The Big Sleep, partially for chemistry
factors between the lead characters and heaviness of plot line in places, is
just a notch below. In other words you had better take an hour and a half and
watch this thing.
A little summary of the plot line is
in order to set the stage. Obviously Zola’s work was set in 19th century
emerging bourgeois society France rather than 1950s post- World War II red
scare America. But the tale he had to tell of thwarted love. love gone wrong,
love never on the right track, and in the end, a cautionary tale of how far
certain people will go, dare I say even to murder, sums up the range of human conditions,
when the human body heat is up. And the body heat rising here is nothing less
than sexual desire. Of course. Simply said a certain femme fatale, a
certain speedy femme fatale as it turns out, played by 1950s B-movie
fixture, Gloria Grahame, tired of trying to make do behind a cigarette counter
does what any girl would do in the situation, marries a "big lug," a
railroad middle-level management big lug guy who loves his booze, played by
Broderick Crawford (he of All The King’s Men fame), in order to get out
from under. But speedy femme fatales are not built for the slow, big lug
life, especially when they have a little past, a little past as they always do,
here as a former, maybe former, mistress of a Mayfair swell. Needless to say
he, as the plot unrolls and big lug Crawford proves to be less a catch than
anticipated, gets jealous when he finds out that said wifey has two-timed him.
And big lugs know only one way, or seem to know only one way to deal with their
two-timing wives, kill the lover, naturally, kill him here right in front of
wifey and make her complicit in the murder, holding a certain piece of evidence
to put the frame on her, put the frame on her big time, if she crosses him.
All of that is so much lead-up to
the real story though. Two-timing femme fatales, whether they got their
start behind a candy counter, a hat-check counter or cigarette counter, do not
survive in this wicked old world without being primo man-traps. Man-traps that
can wrap a guy, wrap a guy tight, very tight, and get him to do anything,
anything at all, including, dare I say it, murder. Enter one returning Korean
War GI, played by Glenn Ford, who on returning home to small-town Anytown,
U.S.A. just wants to wash the grit of that experience off and continue his prior
work as a railroad engineer moving goods and passengers along the quickly
declining rails of 1950s America. And dream the dream of finding a good woman
and grabbing a slice of the little white house with a picket fence, 2.2 kids
and a dog, named Rover, probably. And, of course, she is there in the
background.
But enter one two-timing femme
fatale trying to get out from under a possible murder rap, out from under a
loser husband, and who, well, looks like she might be a very nice little
adventure, a very nice little adventure, indeed, especially once Glenn gets a
whiff of that perfume, lights that cigarette, and takes dead aim at those ruby
red lips (I assume they are ruby red, this is after all a black and white noir).
Yah, she has him hook, line and sinker. Has him that is until “crunch time.”
Then we shall see.
Naturally, in these crime noir melodramatic plots the
need to put a big gap between good and evil is usually served up by there being
a “good girl” counter-posed to the femme fatale. That is the case here
and is, in the end what stops old Glenn from going over the edge. But still I
blame Glenn for most of the problems here. Yes, sure I wouldn’t have minded
taking dead aim at those Grahame lips, who could blame a guy, a small town
America guy, especially once she put on the full-court press with that cooing
voice. Whee! But see Glenn has already been down this road before. He played
Johnny to Rita Hayworth’s Gilda in the 1946 movie of the same name so he knows,
or should be presumed to know, what happens when you take dead aim at those femme
fatale lips. Here’s the “skinny” though- average joes, very average train
engineer joes included, should keep fifty yards, no, fifty miles, away from
blonde (although they are not always blondes) femme fatales when they
get that “come hither” look in their eyes. You have been warned.
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