Watched: 06/10/2022
Format: TCM Noir Alley
Viewing: Second
Director: Budd Boetticher
This movie is here to put the lie to the 1950's being a more innocent time. It's dark and brutal and feels like a gritty novella of the era (which should also tell you that if you think the 1950's were what you saw on TV re-runs, you're a remarkable idiot). This film mostly made it past censors as near as I can tell because the antagonist as the Hays Office would have seen it gets shot to hell in the final reel. But that's missing the drifting shades of gray of *everyone* in the movie, including and especially out lead cop.
I watched this one about seven years ago, and it's interesting to return to films I haven't seen much now that I know the actors and noir a bit better. I have a better feel for Joseph Cotten, Wendell Corey, Rhonda Fleming*, Alan Hale Jr., and even Virginia Christine.
Anyway - it's a good ticking time bomb of a movie. Wendell Corey plays a bank employee who seems to be trying to thwart a robbery, but the cops figure out he's involved. When they come for him, Joseph Cotten accidentally kills his wife. Seeing Cotten's wife, Rhonda Fleming, at his trial, he vows revenge in the form of murdering Fleming.
He escapes (via murder) an honor farm and he begins his pursuit. Fleming and Cotten battle over what it means to be a cop's wife and what she's going through worrying about him constantly and what he feels is his duty. In a curious turn for the era, the movie refuses to give us an answer if either of them are right. But as a potential target, it really brings the debate to a boil.
Give this one a shot some time. It's a quick watch, but gets the job done. And you'll never look at Wendell Corey the same again.
*I mean, let us be honest - I tend to say "okay" if a movie has Rhonda Fleming, and this one does.
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