The Nighttime Is The ….-Fritz
Lang’s Film Adaptation Of Clifford Odets’ “Clash By Night” (1952)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
[Recently in this space
we announced with the review of 1956’s Giant
that that was the first film review by long time film critic Sam Lowell using
the honorific emeritus- in short he had decided to put himself out to pasture.
He will still provide his reviews but will no longer be the primary, or as in
earlier times, the sole film critic here.
For now we will go with
several reviewers starting with Sandy Salmon whose has had a by-line for years
in the American Film Gazette. Good
luck Sandy-Peter Paul Markin]
Clash By Night, starring
Barbara Stanwyck, Paul Douglas, Robert Ryan, Marilyn Monroe, directed by Fritz
Lang, from the play by Clifford Odets, 1952
Sometimes a little gem
of a film, a black and white film from the 1950s like the one under review
here, Clash by Night, just kind of
sneaks up on you. Frankly in all the years I have been reviewing films I was
totally unaware of this beauty although I admit that unlike other reviewers I
have never been that enamored of the film noir genre and so missing it probably
was not that serious a sin of omission. But if you think about the matter a bit
when you put a serious star like Barbara Stanwyck (she of that ankle bracelet
shot coming down the stairs in Billy Wilder’s screen adaptation of James M.
Cain’s Double Indemnity which was
enough to hook Walter, a convenient insurance salesman, and lead him down the garden path, lead him
to a couple of well-placed slugs in the gut too), gruff Paul Douglas, 1950s
handsome Robert Ryan, and upcoming world icon Marilyn Monroe with top rank noir
director Fritz Lang (think The Big Heat
where Glenn Ford takes down a whole corrupt operation almost single-handedly)
and a screenplay based on a hot shot playwright Clifford Odets (he of Golden Boy and Waiting For Lefty) you are bound to produce a great cinematic
effort. Plus place the whole thing in olden days post-World War II Monterey out
in California when that town produced oodles of sardines-and John Steinbeck-
and there you are.
The strongest part of
this effort is the emotions that the interplay between the various lead players
bring out in a story line that is frankly about ordinary people, their ordinary
dreams, and their extraordinary passions and predilections. Those emotions get
carried forth, create the clash of the title, in some of the strongest dialogue
that I have seen produced in film about the travails of people who are pretty
lost in their own small world. Let me explain that idea via a look at the
plot-line something I have been doing more recently with older films that I
have reviewed.
Mae, played by Ms.
Stanwyck, has come home to working class Monterey after having been out in the
big wide world and gotten her younger dreams crushed. She is now world weary
and wary. She returns to her small family home where her brother, a commercial
fisherman, remember old-time Monterey was the sardine capital of the world, is
enthralled by Peggy, played by Marilyn Monroe, who is a lot more forgiving
about the fate of a lost sister than he brother who nevertheless lets her stay.
While keeping a low profile as something of a home body her brother’s boat
captain, Jerry, played by gruff and throaty Paul Douglas, a regular stiff comes
a-courting. After a while, succumbing to a strong desire to have somebody take
care of her, to be settled she accepts Jerry’s offer of marriage. Even in
accepting Jerry’s proposal though she warned him that she was spoiled
goods.
Things go along for a
while with Jerry and Mae, about a year, during which they have a child, a baby
girl, but Mae begins to get the wanderlust, begins to get antsy around the very
ordinary and plebian Jerry. Enter Earl, or rather re-enter Earl, Jerry’s
friend, who had been interested in Mae from day one when Jerry introduced them.
He, in the meantime, was now divorced and takes dead aim at Mae. And she takes
the bait, falls hard for the fast-talking cynical Earl. They plan for Mae to
fly the coop with the baby and a new life. Not so fast though once they
confront Jerry with their affair, with his being cuckolded. This is where the
dialogue gets right down to basics. Mae gives Jerry what’s what about her and
Earl, about her needs. Jerry, blinders off, builds up a head of steam and in
another scene almost kills Earl before he realized what he was doing.
This is the “pivot.” Jerry
takes the baby on his boat. Mae suddenly realizes that the baby means more to
her than Earl who as it turned out didn’t give a rat’s ass about the child.
Having been once bitten though when Mae goes to Jerry to seek reconciliation he
is lukewarm but as she turns to leave he relents. Maybe they can work things
out, or at least that is the look on Mae’s face when she is brought back into
the fold at the end of the film. You
really have to see this film to get a sense of the raw emotions on display, and
on the contrary feelings each character has about his or her place in the sun.
Nicely done Fritz and crew, nicely done.
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