Film Review
Between
The Lodger (1944) and
The
Locket (1946), his two
best-known films, director John Brahm helmed this supremely atmospheric
noir thriller, adapted from a popular novel by the English writer
Patrick Hamilton. Although the action takes place in gas-lit
bars and concert halls of London at the start of the 20th century,
rather than the more familiar noir territory of dingy neon-lit
backstreets of a 40s American metropolis, the film has all the
ingredients of the classic film noir thriller, and is easily one of the
most compelling and
disturbing the genre has ever given us. The confined
shadow-draped sets, skilful use of the subjective
camera and some suitably nasty plot developments ensure that
Hangover
Square is a film that any film noir aficionado will want to see.
Brahm's direction is as slick and effortless as ever and brings the
maximum amount of
tension and menace to every scene. There is a distinctly
Hitchcockian flavour to Brahm's mise-en-scène, particularly in
the
gripping denouement in which the camera sweeps around a concert hall as
though it were spinning a web around its doomed protagonist. The
Hitchcockian feel is reinforced by Bernard Herrmann's spine-chilling
score, which includes an exquisitely sinister piano concerto
played at the climax of the piece, almost as an exorcism of the dark
forces that have somehow taken control of the main character's destiny
and driven him straight into the abyss.
The film is supremely well cast, with the stunning Linda Darnell
proving her worth as the definitive femme fatale. Laird Cregar
brings poignancy, charm and menace to his character, an English
composer with a split personality that has echoes of his earlier
portrayal in Brahm's equally moody
The
Lodger. To
make his character appear more romantic, Cregar subjected himself to a
crash diet immediately before making the film, something that had
disastrous consequences. After a stomach operation, Cregar
suffered a fatal heart attack, cutting short a promising Hollywood
career at the age of 31.
Hangover
Square was released just a few
months after his death and testifies that his untimely departure was an
immense loss to cinema and the acting profession in general.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the early 1900s, the well-known English composer George Harvey Bone
is working hard to complete his magnum opus, a piano concerto dedicated
to his fiancée. The stress of this undertaking causes Bone
to experience strange lapses in which he wanders around the streets of
London, unconscious of any act he may perform. After one such
lapse, he is convinced that he killed a man, but a friendly doctor at
Scotland Yard establishes his innocence. At a tavern, Bone meets
an ambitious young singer Netta, who is quick to exploit his interest
in her. Infatuated with Netta, Bone begins writing songs for her
which will make her name. But when he asks Netta to marry him,
she turns him down in favour of another man. This rejection
brings on another of Bone's lapses. In a trance-like state, the
composer returns to Netta, intent on murdering her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.