***Out Of The 1940s Crime Noir
Night- Put The Lame Blame Frame On Frankie-I Wake Up Screaming- A Film Review
DVD Review
I Wake Up Screaming, starring Victor Mature, Betty Grable, Carol Landis,
I Wake Up Screaming, starring Victor Mature, Betty Grable, Carol Landis,
I have at this point reviewed a fair
number of the crime noir films from the 1940s and 1950s. Some are
classics like Out Of The Past, some are filled with simple crime doesn’t
pay messages, some have femmes fatales that you would gladly commit
armed robbery unarmed for just to get a whiff of their perfume. Others you
would still be removing the bullets from your body, their bullets. Most,
frankly, are just kind of run-of-the-mill like the film under review here, I
Wake Up Screaming. Nothing exceptional here but the fact that the film has
two, count ‘em two, femmes fatales, well kind of, kind of femmes
fatales. And neither is bad, just misunderstood, but hell you would still
give something to catch a whiff of that perfume mentioned above. Although maybe
you would think twice about robbing banks unarmed for either.
Here’s the skinny. One wanna-be femme
fatale starts out like many another country girl hitting the big city
serving them off the arm in some hash house. Ms. Waitress (oops, waitperson,
played by Carol Landis) is just waiting around to be “discovered” and plucked
away from the eggs over easy. As luck would have it three, although only one
counts, Frankie Christopher (played by ruggedly handsome, up-front-the dregs
Victor Mature), men-about-town camp on her station and Frankie, a promoter of,
well, let’s leave it as promoter, decides to take Ms. Waitperson from rags to
riches, on the quick. He can see a meal ticket a mile away. And his
preparations for the big strike work, work well, for a while.
What fouls things up is that one fine afternoon Ms.
Waitperson is found by Frankie dead, very dead, in her apartment. And who fit
the bill for the frame by his various actions toward the deceased is none other
than Frankie. In a series of flash-backs the motives, actions, and responses of
most of those involved are uncovered. And that is where Sis, femme fatale
number two comes in; Ms. Waitperson’s sis (played by World War II soldier boys
calendar heartthrob Betty Grable) who is her roommate, her confidante and her
scolding younger sister is also in love with our boy Frankie (go figure, right)
but is confused by the evidence against him. And Frankie is smitten by Sis as
well so no fear things will get worked out. Hovering over the whole scene
though are the bizarre actions of a relentless big- city cop trying to send
Frankie to the chair for his own motives. Uncovering the cop’s motives is what
drives the second half of the film. And that is all you need to know about this
one. Oh, except as always the message is crime doesn’t pay, doesn’t pay even
for bloody coppers. Got it.
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