Film Review
Of the many great films that Nicholas Ray made none is more
dramatically intense, nor viscerally shocking, than
Bigger Than Life. A gripping
thriller dressed up as a Sirkian melodrama, but with Gothic horror
undertones, it serves both as a timely warning of the shortcomings of
modern medicine - in particular the use of untested drugs - and as the
darkest commentary on the American way of life. The film was
inspired by a real-life case reported by Berton Roueché (
Ten Feet Tall) in a 1955 edition
of The New Yorker and became James Mason's pet project, with Mason
co-writing and producing the film as well as taking the lead role,
possibly the most daring of his career. Because of its highly
contentious subject matter
Bigger
Than Life proved to be a box office flop, but it was
enthusiastically received in some quarters (
Jean-Luc Godard
cited it as one of the ten best films ever made) and today it is widely
recognised as one of Ray's finest films,
This is a film noir bleaker than any that Nicholas
Ray had previously made - bleaker even than his
noir masterpiece
In a Lonely Place (1950).
Even though the film begins as a conventional 1950s Hollywood
melodrama, with its cosy portrayal of a modern American family enjoying
the comforts of the consumer society, the dark undercurrents can easily
be discerned, the first signs of a cancerous growth that threatens
something truly nasty. The main protagonist (James Mason at his
absolute best) has a subtle ambiguity about him, first revealed by the
ease with which he deceives his wife about his second job, and his
marriage soon turns out to be far less secure than we might hope, with
suspicion of marital infidelity dangerously near the surface.
These are the small seeds of doubt that will mushroom into an
escalating crisis as the drama slowly unravels and Mason's character
surrenders himself to the nastiest of Jekyll and Hyde transformations.
James Mason is well-known for playing sadistic villains and mal-adjusted fiends in such films
as
The Man in Grey (1943)
and
The Upturned Glass (1947),
but here is particularly frightening.
Watching him morph from a good-natured, intensely likeable family
man into a potentially homicidal maniac is one of the most terrifying of
movie experiences. Joseph MacDonald's inspired cinematography
renders the transformation particularly frightening with its bold
expressionistic touches - extremely low camera angles and monstrous
shadows projected onto walls, so that Mason dominates the screen and
everyone around him like the most nightmaring-inducing of fairytale
ogres. Even when Mason has become totally overtaken by his
psychopathic impulses he retains something of his erstwhile everyman
charm, and this is what makes his portrayal so utterly
disturbing. There is a reality to the film's depiction of a
drug-induced psychosis that is harrowing beyond belief. The
climactic sequence in which a now totally unhinged Mason turns on his
wife and son with sly murderous intent is probably the most horrific to
grace a Hollywood film of this era, and deserves to be considered the
one that set the whole psycho-thriller bandwagon rolling.
Bigger Than Life is a true shocker,
the stuff of nightmares.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Ed Avery is a happily married schoolteacher who takes on casual work
with a taxi firm so that he can keep on top of the monthly bills.
Suddenly he begins experiencing intense bouts of pain and is diagnosed
as suffering from a potentially life-threatening inflammation of the
arteries. The only treatment available to him is a constant dose
of the experimental hormonal drug cortisone. By taking the drug,
Ed experiences a miraculous recovery but it is not long before the
side-effects begin to hit him. At first he experiences manic
highs which cause him to behave irrationally. He goes on wild
spending sprees and causes offence with his old-fashioned views about
education and family life. To prolong these bouts of elation Ed
exceeds the dose and his mood swings become even more violent.
One minute he is in the grips of a terrible depression, the next he is
the most tyrannical of husbands and fathers. When his wife and
young son defy him Ed becomes psychotically deranged and both their
lives are in peril as the nightmare surges towards its inevitable
climax...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.