Film Review
Despite its modest budget and comparatively short runtime,
Journey
Into Fear manages to be one of the most stylish and entertaining of
the classic film noir thrillers. The pace is unrelenting
and the tension doesn't ease for a
moment as the hero (superbly portrayed by Joseph Cotten) is dragged
further and further into a deadly game of political intrigue from which
there is, in true noir fashion, no possibility of escape.
Yet there is also a thick underbelly of dark humour to this film which
can only really be appreciated after repeated viewings.
The absurdity of the situation becomes apparent when we realise that
the principal baddy is not a lithe Alain Delon-style sharpshooter but a
myopic pie-loving slob in a trench coat - something that makes the
climactic denouement, a showdown on a ledge a few hundred feet above
street level, both comical and thrilling. There is also fun to be
had in Orson Welles's comic book portrayal of a Turkish police
official, which looks as if it may have been inspired by a Tintin
story. Oddly, this intrusion of humour into the morass of
espionage-themed thrills adds to the suspense, since the audience is
never quite sure of the extent of the peril that confronts the hero as
he wends his way down a path strewn with bizarre personalities and
improbable plot twists. Some may appreciate this as a slick,
masterfully composed example of film noir; others will undoubtedly
enjoy it as tongue-in-cheek parody of a familiar genre.
There has been considerable speculation over the extent of artistic
input Orson Welles had into
Journey
Into Fear. Although Norman Foster (the prolific
actor-director, not the award winning architect) receives sole
directing credit, the film clearly has Welles's sticky fingerprints all
over it, his auteur touches (unusual camera angles and
chill-inducing use of shadows) recognisable to anyone who has seen
Citizen
Kane (1941) and
The Lady from Shanghai
(1947). Foster was himself an accomplished director and had
recently scored a notable success with his
Mr Moto thriller series, which
featured Peter Lorre playing Japan's answer to James Bond.
The obvious stylistic differences from Foster's other work suggests he
may have been adhering religiously to storyboards produced by Welles.
Welles frequently denied that he directed any part of the film except
for the pre-credits sequence, which mirrors the opening to
Citizen Kane. The film's
murky, Kafkaesque feel is typical of American film noir of this period
- a sympathetic hero is caught up in a web of intrigue and threatened
by an anonymous, all-powerful opponent - and may be considered a dry
run for Welles's subsequent
The Trial (1962).
Although Orson Welles produced and co-scripted
Journey Into Fear (with actor
Joseph Cotton), he had to give up the directing job to Foster so that
he could concentrate on his next project,
It's All True, the South
American folly that was ultimately aborted after Welles lost both
control of the budget and the confidence of his bosses at RKO.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
During WWII, American armaments engineer Howard Graham travels to
Istanbul with his wife to attend a conference. One evening, he
meets up with a business associate who persuades him to visit a
nightclub. Here, shortly after being charmed by the seductive
dancer Josette Martel, Graham is roped into performing a conjuring
trick, during which an attempt is made on his life. Colonel Haki
of the Turkish police tells Graham that his technical expertise is of
vital importance to the Allied war effort and that the Nazis have hired
assassin Peter Banat to kill him. Convinced that his life is in
danger, Graham accepts Haki's advice to leave town on a tramp
steamer. But, during the boat trip, he discovers that Banat is
one of the passengers...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.