Film Review
Just as Mervyn LeRoy kickstarted the American gangster movie of the
1930s with
Little Caesar (1931), so he
would provide impetus to the hardboiled crime drama of the 1940s with
this equally influential film noir. Pairing Lana Turner, the
seductive blonde who had debuted in LeRoy's
They Won't Forget (1937), with
matinee idol Robert Taylor was inspired and allowed both actors to
gravitate to more substantial roles in the years that followed.
Turner sizzles with the charisma and sensuality that would ignite many
of her subsequent films, most famously the superlative film noir
The Postman Always Rings Twice
(1946). As the cynical and apparently heartless gangster lead,
the devastatingly photogenic Taylor proves that he can handle more
serious and darker dramatic roles whilst retaining his audience's
sympathy. What makes
Johnny Eager so memorable is the
electrifying on-screen chemistry between Turner and Taylor
("T'n'T are dynamite!" one poster humorously proclaimed),
an iconic screen coupling which proves to be more than adequate compensation for the convoluted (and
pretty nonsensical) plot. The film also offers some exceptional
supporting contributions, from such talented performers as Edward
Arnold and Van Heflin - the latter of whom won the Best Supporting
Oscar for his scene-stealing portrayal of Johnny's melancholic
sidekick.
LeRoy directs the film with his customary flair, establishing most of
the conventions of the film noir gangster film whilst also investing
the film with an emotional heart which is seldom glimpsed in the
tougher noir crime dramas.
Johnny
Eager is essentially an old-fashioned morality tale in which a
thoroughly nasty piece of work (who might have turned out differently
if he had had a dog when he was a boy) is redeemed by the love of a
good woman, although, in the best tradition of film noir, this act of
redemption comes at a terrible price. One of the few films noirs
made by MGM,
Johnny Eager is a far glossier production than the
similarly themed noir B-movies that would be churned out by the other
Hollywood studios over the next decade, although the film's polished
look does slightly denude it of the dark and sinister atmosphere that
we associate with classic film noir. That said, the film's
spectacular denouement is one of the most dramatic and heart-wrenching
the genre has given us, every bit as shocking as the ending that
LeRoy served up for Edward G. Robinson in
Little Caesar, but with a
deliciously ironic twist.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Mervyn LeRoy film:
The Devil at 4 O'Clock (1961)
Film Synopsis
Recently released from prison, former gangster Johnny Eager convinces
his parole officer he has gone straight by masquerading as a taxi cab
driver. In truth, he has resumed his illicit activities and hopes
to make it big when he opens his greyhound track. One thing
stands in his way: district attorney John Benson Farrell has raised an
injunction to prevent the track from opening. Fate throws Johnny
a winning card, in the guise of Farrell's stepdaughter Liz
Bard. Realising that Liz has fallen in love with him, Johnny cons
her into believing she has shot a man to save his life. This
allows him to put pressure on Farrell to achieve his aims. But
when he realises the consequences of his actions, Johnny decides he
must put Liz's best interests before his own, but at a far greater
price than he imagined...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.