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Saturday, March 8, 2008

The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

Directed by Norman Jewison
Steve McQueen, Faye Dunaway, Paul Burke, Jack Weston, Gordon Pinsent, Biff McGuire, Addison Powell, Astrid Heeren, Yaphett Kotto
Music by Michel Legrand


Steve McQueen is one of the kings of sixties cool, but despite his successes in films like The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape and The Cincinnati Kid, many people weren’t sure how he’d go dropped into a business suit. They needn’t have worried – it didn’t matter if McQueen wore a cowboy hat, jeans and a leather jacket, or a three piece tailored suit, he was still the epitome of ‘cool’.

The Thomas Crown Affair is one of the most famous sixties caper films, although ‘the heist’ isn’t the most important part of the film. It is a character study. Thomas Crown (Steve McQueen) is a bored rich playboy, who plans the perfect robbery just to convey his frustration at the ‘system’. It’s never about the money, as he is already loaded. Vicki Anderson (Faye Dunaway) is the insurance investigator assigned to crack the case that the police are having no luck with. But she has an advantage that the police don’t – she is willing to almost ‘sell’ her feminine assets to get to her man.

Apart from being a caper film, and a character piece, The Thomas Crown Affair is also a lesson in style. It famously makes use of split screens and often blurs the images in certain panels to draw your eye to a certain section on the screen. Some images are repeated for emphasis, and in other instances, multiple story threads are being played out at once. Adding to the visual trickery is the music score by Michel Legrand. The score is very good, including the Oscar winning song, The Windmills Of Your Mind. The music is freewheeling swinging sixties jazz. It doesn’t always reflect what’s happening storywise, but it certainly captures the mood and the style of the film.

The film opens with Erwin Weaver (Jack Weston) walking up a hallway in a swank hotel in Boston. He knocks on a door – no answer. So he walks into the darkened room. Before he has time to react (like flicking on a light switch), he is suddenly blinded by two spotlights. Behind the lights, in silhouette, a man offers him a job as a driver. Weaver agrees, and is thrown an envelope full of cash to buy a car.

The film then employs the split screen effect, and we witness five men, from five different parts of the country travelling to Boston. Next we meet Thomas Crown. He is a successful business man with loads of cash. As he sits in his expansive office, he starts to receive phone calls from the five men who have arrived in town. Crown gives the word, and then the men go to work.

Their work is a down to the minute, perfectly planned robbery at a Boston Bank. The five men grab the bags of filthy lucre and place it in the back of the car, which Erwin Weaver is driving. Then the five men go back to where they came from. They will receive their cuts of the take later, in instalments.

Weaver drives off with the money and travels to a cemetery. He takes the money bags out of the car and places them in a rubbish bin. Then he drives off. Crown then arrives at the cemetery in his Rolls Royce and collects the loot.

Despite their being thirty two witnesses to the crime, the police have no leads as to who pulled the robbery. The insurance company has to pay out for the $2,660,000 that was stolen. The head of the insurance company, Jamie McDonald (Gordon Pinsent) is not happy about the pay out, and calls in his own insurance investigator to look into the robbery. The investigator is Vicki Anderson. She always gets her man, but she has some very unusual methods in doing so.

It’s fair to say that The Thoms Crown Affair is a classic. But it is a flawed movie. Some of the scenes don’t quite ring true, but they are also the pieces that give this film it’s flavour. It is about ‘style’. It’s about getting your ‘kicks’. It’s about ‘beating the system’. While not being a ‘flower power’ film, it certainly encompasses some of the themes that we have come to identify with that era, and as such is an interesting time capsule.

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Monday, March 3, 2008

The Burglars (1971)

Directed by Henri Vernuil
Jean-Paul Belmondo, Omar Sharif, Dyan Cannon, Robert Hossein, Renato Salvatori, Nicole Calfan
Music by Ennio Morricone – conducted by Bruno Nicolai
Based on the novel by David Goodis


The DVD is available from Xploited Cinema

This Euro-heist caper, set in Greece and directed by Henri Verneuil, is a bit different to most. Rather than building up to the perfect robbery, the film starts with the heist, then spends the rest of it’s running time, seeing if the criminals can get away with the loot.

Three men and a woman; Azad (Belmondo), Ralph (Robert Hossein), Renzi (Renato Salvatori) and Helene (Nicole Calfan), drive up to a stately home in an un-named Greek city. Ralph and Renzi get out of the car and put stockings over their heads. They go to the front door of the caretakers quarters and ring the doorbell. When the caretaker answers, he is knocked to the ground then tied and gagged. They then signal for Azad to go to the main house. He does and makes quick work of the front door. Inside there are priceless works of art adorning the rooms. Azad ignores them and heads straight to the safe. He puts on his gloves and goes to work. Joined by Ralph (Renzi and Helene keep watch out side), a x-ray machine is used to work out the model number on the inside workings of the safe’s door. Azad looks up the details in a safe guide book (must be very handy for all safe crackers). He finds another series of numbers. At this point, Azad, opens a suitcase he has been toting along with him. Inside is like a little computer. He enters these numbers and he is directed to a key shape. He then selects the base key from a series he has pre-prepared. Then this computer, sort of becomes a key-cutting device, and shapes this key into one which will fit this particular make and model of safe. It’s all rather hi-tech and hard to put in words, but it is impressive. So now Azad has a key, but he still doesn’t have the combination to the four tumblers on the door.

Meanwhile, driving by is police detective Abel Zacharia (Omar Sharif). He notices Azad’s car parked out the front, and stops to investigate. As he snoops around, the bound and gagged caretaker tries to make as much noise as possible. Rocking his chair, he crashes into a fish bowl that smashes loudly on the floor. By now Zacharia’s suspicions are heightened. But before he can move in to the house, Azad scoots around the back to his car. Zacharia notices and comes across to question him, forgetting about the noise inside. Azad gives Zacharia a cock ’n’ bull story about his car breaking down. Zacharia trusts him for now, and goes about his business.

Azad returns to the safe, and using a listening device attached to his computer / cutter / suitcase, he cracks the tumblers and the safe. Inside there is a large amount of money and bonds, but Azad only takes one million dollars worth of emeralds. The heist is beautifully staged in its intricacy and precision. Azad and crew have made their score, now they have to get out of town. But this has been pre-arranged. They have made a deal with the captain of the ship, the Arax, to take them (and the emeralds) from the country, no questions asked. Unfortunately the ship has suffered hull damage as it came into port. It will be another five days before it leaves.

Azad and crew decide to wait it out and head their separate ways in the meantime. After Azad has dropped Helene off at the train station he notices he is being followed by somebody in a beaten up, dirty little car. In traffic, Azad tries to lose the unseen, gloved driver, but this driver is well up to the task and doggedly stays on Azad’s tail as the cars race around the streets, down steps, through tunnels, and basically on any surface a car can travel. It’s a great sequence.

As you’ve no doubt guessed, Zacharia isn’t quite as he seems. Actually he is, but he’s a little bit more too. He is a cop, but one who is looking to raise his lifestyle and willing to blackmail a few people on the way. Sharif appears to be having a great time, especially when eating, drinking and shooting.

Dyan Cannon’s role is little more than a cameo. She plays a glamorous photographic model that Azad picks up in a bar. Sure, there’s a twist, but there’s no real attempt by the film-makers to conceal it, so you won’t be guessing long.

This film has a series of amazing scenes that on their own are quite okay, but as a cohesive film they don’t link too well. The heist at the beginning is well staged, and carried out virtually without dialogue, but after Jules Dassin’s Riffifi, I guess all good heists have to be carried out that way. This is followed up by the fantastic car chase that I mentioned earlier in the review. When you review a car chase, it inevitably gets compared to the ones in Bullitt or the French Connection. Unlike many others, this is actually worthy of the comparison. It won’t surprise many people that it was put together by French driving legend, Rémy Julienne. Later in the film, there’s an interesting musical interlude at a strip club; some drunken target practice in a toy factory; and finally Belmondo shows us an interesting new technique for catching buses. All these sequences are good. But the film as a whole just doesn’t add up to quality of its disparate parts.

The Burglars isn’t a bad film, but it has dated. In the early seventies, the story may not have mattered so much. It was about style, and this film has early seventies jet-setting style to burn. But now with the world virtually at out fingertips, style isn’t so important. We want a story and characters that are engaging, and this film just falls short of the mark.

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Thursday, October 25, 2007

Bulldog Drummond

Bulldog Drummond's Revenge
"On my record darling, you're justified in expecting battle, murder and sudden death." -- Bulldog Drummond

A while back, I watched a slew of old Bulldog Drummond films courtesy of one of those 50-films for $20 cheapo collections. 1937's Bulldog Drummond's Revenge kicks off the collection in grand fashion. I'm familiar with the character, but have only seen him in action in the much later and very different Deadlier than the Male, which is an exceptional film and very much worth watching. It's a lot more colorful, of course, seeing as it's in color, and more in line with the swingin' 60s spies like Flint and Bond whereas the 1930s version of the dogged investigator is much more in line with the traditional image of a private eye the likes of a Thin Man or the Falcon -- those snappy, chipper, fast-talking gents who, in sharp contrast to the grim heroes of the noir era, always seem to be having a whale of a time solving whatever mystery has fallen into their lap.


The so-called noir film revolution was just beginning to peek out from behind the curtain, and while Bulldog Drummond may dip a toe into the hard-nosed world from time to time, it has more in common with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the early espionage and suspense thrillers of Alfred Hitchcock than with Raymond Chandler or Out of the Past. The dialog is snappy, the wit is sharp, and there's a fair bit of smart humor sprinkled liberally throughout this tale that finds Drummond's upcoming wedding complicated by the heist of a powerful new explosive that he must recover before it falls into the hands of people who would use it to do things like blow London to bits.

I'm not sure exactly where this film falls chronologically in the series of Bulldog Drummond features that were produced during the 1930s, but it doesn't take long to get acquainted with the principle players. Actor John Howard is superb as Drummond, and his performance is further buoyed by a stellar supporting cast (including the elder John Barrymore as beleaguered and oft-exasperated colonel) that never misses a beat of the script's expert pace. If there is a fault with the film, it's that the villains are a bit forgettable, but with everything else so memorable, Bulldog Drummond's Revenge serves as an excellent introduction to the series (though I'm not really remembering any point at which he needed, wanted, or got any revenge) and the characters, even if it's not the first in the series. Bravo, old chap!

Bulldog Drummond Escapes
Bulldog Drummond's Revenge gave us a snappy, high enjoyable mystery movie in which the titular character never really seeks out any revenge. We follow up that movie with Bulldog Drummond Escapes, a movie in which Bulldog Drummond does escape something at one point, though it's hardly so important an escape that it warrants naming the movie after the act.

This time around, ace busybody and amateur sleuth Bulldog Drummond is played by none other than Ray Milland, looking fit and handsome and for more respectable than he did in The Thing with Two Heads and The Premature Burial. If you watched either of those films and wondered why anyone thought Milland was dashing or talented, then Bulldog Drummond Escapes might clue you in a little better. He's top notch here in this great little movie.

Bulldog Drummond Escapes finds Drummond back in England to witness the birth of his best friend, Algy's (Reginald Denny -- who would reprise this role in seven other Bulldog Drummond films throughout the 1930s), child. Drummond's presence comes much to the exasperation of Colonel Nielson (Guy Standing, who died shortly after this film's completion in 1937), since Drummond seems to spontaneously generate mysteries and mayhem. Sure enough, despite Nielson's pleading with Drummond to get lost, Drummond soon stumbles upon a mystery involving an heiress imprisoned in her own home by a gang of unscrupulous relatives and hangers-on who plan to steal her fortune. The young woman is no other than Phyllis Claverling, who will become Drummond's put-upon fiance in future films as they develop the running joke that she and Bulldog are on their way to be married when they are diverted by some new mystery that must be solved. Actress Heather Angel plays Phyllis in this entry into the series, as well as most of the future entries, though Louise Campbell played her in Bulldog Drummond's Revenge.

As with the previous film (at least in the order I watched them), the script is fleet-footed and consistently witty. There's no real mystery presented to the viewer -- we know who the villains are and what they want -- but that doesn't detract from the fun of watching Drummond, Algy, and Drummond's trusted butler Tenny (E.E. Clive) run about getting knee-deep in mysterious hijinks. Milland's performance is enthusiastic and engaging, and a fella like me can't help but empathize with Drummond's enthusiasm at getting caught up in such a case. There's a great scene where Milland basically goes giddy as a schoolgirl as he points out the drooping trees, the foggy night, and just how perfect it all is for sleuthing.

His gung-ho performance is buttressed expertly by a cast of experienced character actors who know exactly what to do and when to do it. E.E. Clive is possibly the best wise, adventuring butler ever put on screen -- and yes, weirdly enough, there are a lot of wise, adventuring butlers (Alfred from the Batman stories would probably be the highest profile these days). Both the action and comedic timing is perfect, and Bulldog Drummond Escapes is simply another immensely enjoyable old-fashioned potboiler with a healthy helping of wit and winking.

Bulldog Drummond in Africa
Bulldog Drummond in Africa takes our intrepid adventurer (John Howard, who plays Drummond in just about all of the Bulldog Drummond films) and thorn in the side of the stuffy Colonel Nielson (played this time by H.B. Warner) to, as you may surmise from the title, Africa. Morocco, in particular. We first meet Drummond at home in England where and his butler, for some strange reason, have no pants on and pass the day playing the bagpipes and doing a wee bit o' Highland dancing. Turns out this was a plot devised by Drummond's beloved fiance (once again played by Heather Angel) to ensure that he can't go out and get involved in some new mysterious adventure that further delays their impending wedding. Naturally, even without their pants, Drummond and Tenny (who is played once again with impeccable hilarity by E.E. Clive) manage to get caught up in dastardly shenanigans when they discover a treacherous spy from the colonel's past has returned and kidnapped Nielson in hopes of dragging some information regarding a new super weapon out of the old man. It's up to Drummond, Tenny, Phyllis, and Algy to fly to Morocco and rescue the colonel.

Bulldog Drummond in Africa is a small step down from the previous films I watched, but just by a little. It's still a wonderfully breezy, frequently funny, and occasionally thrilling mystery adventure. Howard was tailor made for the role of Bulldog Drummond, and as much as I enjoyed Ray Milland's turn in the role in Bulldog Drummond Escapes, Howard just owns the character the same was Basil Rathebone owned Sherlock Holmes. Once again, the entire cast is in top form, bouncing witting banter off one another with breakneck speed. I don't know if the entire Bulldog Drummond series maintains this high a standard, but after three delightful films, I'm still excited to find out.

Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police
Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police finds ace busybody and freelance adventurer Captain Hugh "Bulldog" Drummond and his beloved Phyllis sequestered away in Drummond's home on the eve of their wedding. This would be about the ten thousandth attempt they've made at a getting married, only to have each wedding spoiled by some crazy mystery or adventure that sends them off solving a murder, combating spies, or some other activity far more fun than getting married. But Phyllis is determined to see that nothing gets in the way of this wedding.

Unfortunately, if Drummond doesn't go looking for a mystery, one is sure to come looking for him. And sure enough, it arrives in the form of a bumbling professor who happens to have knowledge of a secret treasure hidden in the catacombs of Drummond's very own home. When a murderous assistant shows up to off the prof and claim the booty as his own, Drummond and the usual crew of Phyllis, stolid Scotland Yard inspector Nielson, goofball best friend Algy, and well-armed war veteran butler Tenny find themselves hunting for the killer and the treasure when they were supposed to be memorizing vows and preparing the soup for the wedding.

Bulldog Drummond films are perfect Saturday afternoon/late night fare. They movie quickly (most of them, including this one, clock in at barely an hour), boast scripts that are jammed with witty dialog and exchanges, and sustain themselves with a steady diet of shenanigans and intrigue. Even the comedy is usually pretty funny, which is a rare thing for comedy to be. Like many long-running film series, they can tend to get repetitive, relying on cookie cutter plots that are tweaked just slightly enough to pass for a new movie, but this really doesn't bug me since the end results are always so much fun. Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police is another winner, and the do-or-die treasure hunt beneath Drummond's estate is a swell setting for lots of adventure, booby traps, and guys falling into underground rivers. The cast is familiar with their roles by this point, and they perform admirably. As Drummond, John Howard positively bursts with enthusiasm. Drummond is a man who absolutely thrills like a child at the scent of an adventure, and Howard conveys that perfectly. Here's hoping he and Phyllis never get married.

Bulldog Drummond Comes Back
The action continues with Bulldog Drummond Comes Back, though this is a film that falls much earlier in the chronology of the series (as Drummond has proposed to the first time to Phyllis, I assume it immediately follows Bulldog Drummond Escapes). When a nemesis from the past shows up and kidnaps Phyllis, Drummond, Algy, and Tenny find themselves on a wild goose chase around town, following one seemingly pointless clue after another, with Inspector Nielson close behind in a variety of silly disguises. The simple plot allows for the film to sort of meander around as Drummond and his friends go back and forth listening to photograph records and deciphering riddles, but once again, it's a lot of fun and, as the film is only an hour long, the cat and mouse game hardly wears out its welcome before Drummond finds himself in a house of traps, struggling to save his beloved from certain doom.

Once again, the cast is superb, but this film really belongs to the venerable John Barrymore (yes, of THAT Barrymore family) as Colonel Nielson. Forbidden by Drummond's nemesis to get involved, Nielson decides to fall back on his old theater days in order to meddle without being detected, assuming the secret identity of a drunken hobo and a corncob pipe puffing salty old fisherman. And as always, Algy falls down and Tenny gets hit on the head.

So far so good. I can't imagine going wrong with Bulldog Drummond. Even the relatively middling films in the series are a great deal of fun.

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Saturday, October 13, 2007

The Shanghai Gesture

If you ever want to see a scene that perfectly captures a heady air of decadence and mania without going all over the top and Caligula on you, look no further than the scene in Josef von Sternberg's The Shanghai Gesture that introduces us to the opulent gambling parlor operated by the enigmatic Mother Gin Sling (Ona Munson). Centered above the main gambling floor, the shot assumes a bird's eye view of the hall and its inhabitants as it spiral downward into the fray, where people drink, gamble, and flirt with an orgiastic glee as the delirious music swells. It's an incredibly effective and a perfect way to sum up this oddball noir drama set in the indulgent underbelly of Shanghai just prior to World War II.


Shanghai at that time was the hub of Asia, a rich seaport that every country wanted to control and where every two-bit con artist, hustler, adventurer, gambler, mercenary, and romantic could go to chase their dreams of fame, fortune, and power. It was Weimar Germany in Asia, complete with a citizenry too bleary-eyed from the decadent lifestyle prevalent in the city to realize that fascism and war was knocking on their door. The city was split up among various foreign powers all vying for increased control of the city. France had their own concession, but the International Settlement was the hub of Shanghai, and it was controlled largely by the British tai pans with input from American and French representatives as well as, as the war progressed and Japan expanded its conquest of China, Japan and Germany. The Chinese inhabitants were largely second-class citizens banned from entry into the city's most popular places, though a number of the country's most powerful and most famous native criminals flourished. The population of Shanghai was truly diverse, comprised of the aforementioned nationalities as well as a massive number of Indian Sikhs, Russians and Eastern European Jews seeking asylum from the Communist Revolution and escalating Nazi persecution, respectively.

Set against this backdrop is the story of The Shanghai Gesture, the archetypal story of a collection of "damned souls" collected together to smoke and betray one another. Sitting in the center of the web is Mother Gin Sling, owner of one of the largest gambling and drinking establishments in the city. Ona Munson is obviously not Chinese, but if you watch old movies dealing with Asian characters, that's nothing out of the ordinary. However, The Shanghai Gesture opts for an almost absurd approach to itself. Everything is larger than life and informed by von Sternberg's penchant for the highly stylized, artistic approach of German expressionism. Thus Ona Munson isn't just a Caucasian actor in fake eyelids. She's an over-the-top near-parody of the commonplace Caucasian actor masquerading as an Asian character. Her costumes are wild, her hair and eye makeup greatly exaggerated. I doubt this was any sort of political or social commentary on whites playing Asians as much as it was simply part of von Sternberg's overall absurdist aesthetic.

Enter into the picture British tycoon Sir Guy Charteris (Walter Huston), who wants to shut Gin Sling's debauched palace down to make room for his own developments and plans for the city. Rounding out the cast of characters caught in the web are Charteris' naive daughter (the always intoxicating Gene Tierney) who becomes corrupted by the pleasures and sins offered at the nightclub, brassy blonde Dixie (Phyllis Brooks) who comes to Shanghai and ends up getting a job at the nightclub, and suave ladies' man and con artist Doctor Omar (Victor Mature -- young and dashing enough to demonstrate why he was, at one time, considered a matinee idol), who seduces both Phyllis and Victoria Charteris -- who goes by the nickname Poppy, as a not-too-subdued allusion to an addiction and to the original story's opium den setting. Sir Guy and Mother Gin Sling try to outmaneuver one another, resulting in a Lunar new Year's feast in which Gin Sling calls together to corrupted souls that form the nucleus of the story (as well as a few random others just to fill out the place settings) and reveals a series of dark secrets that she hopes will keep everything and everyone under her control.

The Shanghai Gesture was originally a play set in an opium den, but when it made the leap to the silver screen, censors balked at the idea of having it set in such an unsavory place. Since gambling was considered a more Hayes Code-friendly vice than opium smoking, they made the switch. Beyond that, I'll confess total ignorance of the contents of the play, and so won't comment on how the movie compares. As a movie, though, it is fabulous. Von Sternberg, who honed his skills at creating decadence in films like The Blue Angel, expertly creates an air of sated over-indulgence in which sin and seduction has become so commonplace that the inhabitants of the city have lost all moral bearing. The sets are grand and spectacular despite this being a relatively low budget production filmed entirely on sound stages. Nothing is realistic, but everything is believable. It has a tremendous sense of style that creates grand scope where there might otherwise be none, and not until In the Mood for Love would a period film set in a not-too-distant Chinese city create such fervor for art and fashion. If you are ever searching for a great theme for a party, look no further than this movie. Ona Munson's Gin Sling wardrobe is outlandish and gorgeous, and Victor Mature looks picture-perfect as the chain-smoking Arab playboy in a smart slim-cut suit and fez. Walter Huston also appears every bit the staunch and condescending British authoritarian, though he manages to invest his character with a sense of dignity and reserve that keeps him from becoming unlikable. This is largely a plot and character driven piece, and the actors have complete command of the characters and dialogue.

Despite the machinations and air of decay, there is also a sweeping sense of romance, though it's hardly the sort of romance that makes the covers of romance novels. The Shanghai Gesture exaggerates the state of Shanghai at the time, but only just, and the whole thing take son a dreamy, almost narcotic appeal. It's hard not to want to lose yourself in the neon-drenched back alleys and glittering nightclubs, even though you know it's ultimately going to destroy you. There are worse ways to go, after all. More than anything else, this movie is about creating a particular atmosphere. You can't take your eyes off the movie. It completely pulls you into this bizarre Sodom and Gomorrah of alcoholics and romantics, crushed souls and vengeful rivals.

The Shanghai Gesture isn't an especially well-known title these days, even with the noir revival that has been brought on by the release of so many old films on DVD. But don't let its obscurity relative to something like The Maltese Falcon fool you. It deserves much more attention than it gets, and it illustrates one of the forgotten traits of a lot of great noir films; the willingness to be experimental and completely weird in a way that makes everything seem absurd yet somehow still utterly believable.

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Monday, October 1, 2007

Macao

Macao starring one of our favorite half-asleep actors, Robert Mitchum, is an exceptionally good thriller, not exactly a noir film but a solid old school crime thriller with good pacing, cool characters, and a great twist. Despite the exotic setting, it doesn't bank too heavily on the "shadowy Chinatown" style of filmmaking, and there are no Caucasians in fake eyelids parading about. Actually, no, there is apparently one, but it's so well done that i didn't even notice. In fact, there are very few Asian characters at all, other than a couple of assassins and a lot of background extras. Instead, the film focuses on a small group of ex-patriots who have converged on the infamously decadent and borderline lawless Portuguese colony.


Big time crook Vincent Halloran runs an upscale gambling parlor in the colony, where he must stay, a spider trapped in his own web, for fear of the British police waiting to arrest him for a whole host of crimes committed in Hong Kong, the most recent of which involved the murder of an undercover cop from New York. Unfortunately for the Brits, they have no jurisdiction in Macao, and the corrupt Portuguese officials are happy to have Halloran in their country. Enter a trio of Americans who arrive via steamer for a variety of reasons. Tough talking brunette Julie (Jane Russell) is looking to start over as a singer, after wandering the world and becoming disillusioned with its inhabitants. Goofy salesman Lawrence Trumble (William Bendix) is looking to set up shop and make some cash selling an array of junk. And mysterious wanderer and ex-soldier Nick Cochran (Mitchum) doesn't seem to have any real purpose in Macao, though the fact that he is from New York clues Holloran and his toadie police chief Sebastian (Thomas Gomez) into the fact that Cochran is there looking to take Holloran down for the murder of the other New York cop.

So begins a cat and mouse game involving guys in awesome old suits. Halloran hires Julie to sing in his nightclub and tries to pay Cochran to get the hell out of town. Cochran never seems overly interested or disinterested in Halloran's offers, but the two become wary business partners when Trumble -- who seems to be slightly more crooked than his "golly gee" exterior lets on -- brings Cochran in on a deal to sell a posh diamond necklace to Halloran. The only hitch is that the necklace is in Hong Kong, and if Halloran leaves Macao, the Hong Kong cops will nab him as soon as he's three miles off the coast. The only problem Cochran runs into with the deal is that Halloran recognizes the diamonds as coming from a necklace he himself is the owner of.

I'm frequently impressed by how lean yet well-developed the plots of so many old movies are. I mean, this is a pretty basic story: gangster kills a cop, hides out in a lawless haven, and another cop goes in to bring him out. And yet the plot is so expertly executed, the dialog is so good, and the actors are so committed to their roles that the movie becomes substantial. Modern movies rely heavily on convoluted, tangled plots and sub-plots to flesh out running time and compensate for bland or shallow characters. In Macao, the plot is secondary, just a way to explain why these people are here. The movie belongs to the actors, and it's a pretty fabulous cast. Russell is picture perfect as the femme fatale of the piece, tough and sassy but also kind and romantic when the time is right. She plays the disillusioned woman of the world well, never veering into the realm of caricature or over-the-top cartoonishness. She's thoroughly believable as Julie. Ditto our man Mitchum. Robert Mitchum is probably my all-time favorite actor. Everything about him is cool, and no man ever made high-waist pants look so slick. When he was younger, my grandpa Harley used to style himself after Mitchum as much as possible: same style of clothes, same hair, same swagger, and I have to say, if ever there was a man worthy of emulation, Robert Mitchum was certainly him. Brad Dexter is deliciously sinister as the big boss, who is equal parts businessman and gangster, more than happy to avoid conflict if he can bribe his way out of it. Rounding out the core cast, William Bendix is great as the amiable traveling salesman who is revealed to be more than he seems.

Mitchum and Russell were the reason the movie was made. After their successful pairing in His Kind of Woman (which is similar to Macao in some ways and features an outstanding performance by Vincent Price, among others), legendary producer and batshit insane dude with Kleenex boxes on his feet, Howard Hughes, was keen on making the most of the success of and chemistry between the two -- though it would seem that his primary goal was oriented far more around Russell than Mitchum, who was already an established leading man's man. And most of Hughes interest in building up Russell seemed to be focused on his enormous bustline rather than her acting prowess. Russell does a good job here, despite where Hughes' eyes may have been. I referred to her as a femme fatale, but that's not entirely correct, just as Macao isn't really film noir. She's not there to lead the hero to his destruction or anything. If the film has anything close to a femme fatale, it's Gloria Grahame as Holloran's number one dice thrower. For my money, Grahame's looks blow Russell out of the water, and her character here is a good mix of femme fatale and wounded lover. I would have loved to see her get a more substantial role in this movie.

And this movie belongs to them, the actors, not to the plot. This is definitely an actor's film, and the story is there to serve the development of these characters and their interaction with one another. The only real subplot involves Margie (Gloria Grahame), a woman in the employ of Halloran and who seems to be in love with her dashing but dangerous boss. She is none too happy when Julie shows up and catches Halloran's eye. But other than that, screenwriters keep things nice and streamlined.

If I haven't mentioned it before, I really dig old black and white "Chinatown intrigue" movies. I've gone over the key ingredients before: secret passages, elegant gambling clubs, sinister assassins with curved daggers lurking in the shadows. I can watch pretty much anything that contains these elements. Related to these Chinatown movies were movies set in China, usually in Hong Kong, with its intriguing blend of ancient Chinese mystery and recognizable to the West imperial British rule. You could spice up a mundane thriller pretty well if you simply plopped it down in "the Orient." Macao was directed by Josef von Sternberg, last seen here as the director of another fabulous "Orient noir" set in a lawless Casbah-esque location, 1941's The Shanghai Gesture. The two films would make a fabulous double bill (one could imagine that you'd catch a steamer from Shanghai to Macao and find it captained by Clark Gable a la China Seas). As with The Shanghai Gesture, and as with all of his films, von Sternberg applies meticulous detail to the look of his film. Despite the title and the setting, Macao is not steeped in Orientalism or exoticism. The key locations are a hotel and Halloran's nightclub, and although both bear the obvious stamp of being Chinese in design, neither is excessively so. The primary function of Macao isn't to be alien or exotic; it's to serve as a criminal haven. One could have just as easily set this film in The Casbah, or 1930s Shanghai, or any place where the threads of international law begin to fray and those who would cut them are able to find sanctuary. Unlike The Shanghai Gesture, Macao doesn't revel in or become intoxicated by the decadence of the setting. It is fairly sedate by comparison, though this shouldn't imply that it is in any way less elegant in its design. The men all look sharp, clad in tuxedos and pale, tropical weight suits. Jane Russell parades through the film in a number of swanky looking dresses and ornate pieces of jewelry.

Where as the casino in The Shanghai Gesture was a hallucinogenic, near dreamlike palace of vice and shady, doomed souls, Halloran's casino in Macao is much less symbolic affair. It is, by and large, simply a casino, treated by the art design as a place of business rather than as some twisted den of pleasure and destruction. Halloran's office is an office. It has nice decor, but it's just an office -- a far cry from Mother Gin Sling's ornate office that bordered on throne room. But both settings serve their inhabitant well. Halloran is, after all, a very real-world crooked businessman, and his main concern is maintaining his power and making cash. Gin Sling was a half-mad woman bent on revenge, and her primary goal was to destroy in the most elaborate way possible those she saw as having ruined her. Running a casino was little more than a means to the end of revenge.

I said earlier that Macao, despite coming from the era of the noir film and being a film about cops and criminals, isn't exactly noir. It certainly has elements of the noir film -- the mysterious and flawed protagonist, the powerful businessman/criminal, crooked cops, and a hard-as-nails dame -- but it lacks a certain claustrophobic bleakness (and close-ups of the faces of sweating guys in undershirts) that informs the noir film. We may have haunted characters, but they are not hopeless or self-destructive. Von Sternberg infuses Macao with less a sense of desperation and more a sense of adventure. Julie and Nick Cochran would be more at home among the ranks of globe-trotting thrill-seekers than they would the damned and depressed denizens of noir, and Macao has more in common with high-spirited adventure fare like China Seas than with noir films like A Touch of Evil. Despite being a crime film, Macao is just too snappy, and too much fun, to really be considered noir. It also sports a sense of humor, though it's hardly a comedy. Bedix's Trumble is the closest thing the movie comes to having a comic relief character, and he's hardly comic relief. He just gets in a few jokes. What comedy there is, is subdued and pretty effective. And there are no "wacky Oriental" characters (just an assassin and an old man), and at no point do I recall that musical snippet -- you know the one -- that usually plays whenever an Asian character enters a scene.

This was von Sternberg's final film, and by all accounts, it was a troubled production. Von Sternberg himself hadn't worked for a while when the infamous Howard Hughes tapped him as director for this film. Von Sternberg found Hughes an impossible producer who forced too many "meddling clowns" into the affair, and both Mitchum and Russell developed an intense dislike for von Sternberg on account of the way he treated his crew. Things got so bad that, at some point, Mitchum flat out refused to work with von Sternberg any further, and von Sternberg was summarily dismissed and replaced by top notch noir director Nicholas Ray (They Live By Night, In a Lonely Place, and later Rebel Without a Cause and King of Kings). Despite this, the film still remains largely the vision of von Sternberg. As with The Shanghai Gesture, it seems Macao is largely overshadowed by what many critics dwell on as his signature masterpiece, The Blue Angel.

Despite the troubled production and the need to call in Ray to finish (and reshoot much of) the film, I found Macao to be an extremely enjoyable adventure film, with a decent sense of romance, nice sets, and great cast anchored by the chemistry between Mitchum and Russell. A snappy script with a good sense of humor and a great (and surprising) twist make it, if not must-see swanky cinema, then at least should-see cinema.

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