Watched: 03/22/2024
Format: TCM
Viewing: 3rd? 4th?
Director: Joseph H. Lewis
Selection: 'tis I
Sometime in my 20's (I'm now dangerously close to the end of my 40's) in trying to read up on and learn about film noir, I came across a single still image:
I mean, that is noir in a single frame there |
Whether you are into film noir or not, it's possible you've seen this still, pulled for the final minute of The Big Combo (1955). Upon learning the film's name, I went and found the movie. It was one of the first things I'd call "film noir" which I intentionally watched on my path to better-knowing what we meant by "noir".
And, hey, it was a really good picture to stumble into somewhat by accident. If you're looking for something to tick all the boxes I tend to think of as elements of noir, it's hitting a lot of them - all except a true femme fatale. We'll leave discussion of Out of the Past or Angel Face as prime example of the fatal-ist of femmes for another time (I have no quibble with Stanwyck in Double Indemnity, but she manages to somehow remain a bit sympathetic in her way, to me).
We get:
- obsessed detective
- "pure" woman promising hope (and who is being corrupted!)
- you're putting everything on the line for a girl
- suffering in style, as Mueller would say
Upon a first viewing, I wasn't familiar with any of the players except Lee Van Cleef, and of course now know who Cornel Wilde, Brian Donlevy, Richard Conte and others are, and am a fan of their work on various levels (I really like Conte). I had never heard of director Joseph H. Lewis, but more importantly, I was unfamiliar with the work of John Alton, director of cinematography.
The story is a post-Laura tale of an obsessed cop (Wilde), but in this film, two obsessions, intertwined. He wants to take down mobster "Mr. Brown" (Conte), but in his investigation, he's come across Brown's ladyfriend, Susan (Jean Wallace), who seems to be now more of an object or bit of property to Brown than a girlfriend, and she can't escape, constantly wrangled by Brown's two lackeys (Van Cleef and Earl Holliman). Susan is spiraling as she deals with the hopelessness of her situation, and our cop, Diamond, is starting to crack a bit himself, as his own department thinks this is a wild goose chase and a bad way to spend funds. And, of course, his boss says "well, you're in love with the girl," which is maybe true.
There's an ex-girlfriend of Diamond played by Helene Stanton who only did a handful of pictures, but she's honestly really good in this movie.*
Look, I don't want to spoil the whole story. It's a twisty crime yarn with all sorts of good stuff, and what I think are stellar performances by everyone involved. Wallace kills it as a Susan, I absolutely believe Wilde in this movie, and Conte is fan-fucking-tastic. You will hate Mr. Brown! Even if you kind of like his two pet psychos.
The movie is a really good entry point for how you got sex and violence into Hayes Code-era films, with what's clearly one of the dirtiest shots in 50's-noir (I just learned thanks to TCM's Dave Karger that Wilde was super-pissed his wife was in the scene). And it features two gunmen who are clearly more than just pals.
All of this is great stuff, and worthy of study. But if I was going to tell you "watch this film" for a particular reason, it's going to be the cinematography. This is sort of the apotheosis of noir light and shadow. Sure, maybe Double Indemnity technically has some better tricks up its sleeve, or James Wong Howe is going to bend your mind a bit - and no shade on any of that work. But, The Big Combo is here to show you how it's done with light and shadow, close-ups and wide shots and doing more with less. It probably doesn't hurt that director Joseph H. Lewis was famed for finding interesting set-ups and angles, and this movie is full of them. There's the assassination of McClure and Rita that stick out, Susan's attempts to escape, the dramatic lighting of the hospital room as Diamond tries to get to the bottom of things... and of course the barely consensual encounter between Brown and Susan. And of course I'd call out the entire final sequence where light is practically a character.
Even if the story isn't your thing, or you can't hack 50's-era acting styles and narrative, it's worth seeing what John Alton did with some Klieg lights, some flags, some night shots, and a great eye.
A lot gets thrown around as "this is noir!" by folks who have some specific ideas that are usually just scraping at the surface. And I'm not saying you need Alton on a film or its not noir (or even the expressionistic use of light and shadow), but, got-damn, when he is the DP on one of these things, the results are stunning and it helped define a whole visual language we're still trying to grapple with.
Anyway, no mistake he gets a big ol' credit at the head of the movie.
*and, my dude... by the evidence presented, you may have made a mistake breaking up with Rita