Film Review
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye is the
gangster film that James Cagney made immediately after
White
Heat (1949), which rates as possibly the absolute high
point of his long and illustrious screen career. The two films
are readily compared, and indeed
they have a great deal in common. Both portray the gangster world with a
level of violence and vicious realism which was pretty rare in
Hollywood at the time, thanks to the strictures imposed by the Hays
Code. Cagney is at his most sadistic, relishing in the brutality
he metes out to all who get in his way, seemingly untroubled by
conscience or fear of reprisal - a somewhat less sympathetic
gangster portrayal than the one the actor turned in in
The Public Enemy (1931). But whereas
White Heat is universally
acknowledged as a classic,
Kiss
Tomorrow Goodbye is far less well-known and is often dismissed
as just another hard-boiled film noir thriller.
What makes
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
such a great film, what makes it stand apart from the plethora of films
noirs, is that the characters are not just the familiar gangster film
stereotypes but real characters, with real motivations, all trapped in
a world of vice from which there is no escape. It helps that the
performances are of the highest calibre - Cagney is particularly good,
if anything more convincing, more manic, more terrifying than in
White Heat - but the excellent
screenplay and Gordon Douglas's inspired direction are ultimately what
make the film so effective and memorable. Admittedly, the plot
gets a little muddled here and there, but isn't a labyrinthine
storyline part of the appeal of a good film noir?
James Cagney's brother, William, puts in a fleeting appearance in an
uncredited role, playing the brother of Cagney's character.
William Cagney produced this and a string of James Cagney's other films
after the actor's acrimonious break-up with Warner Brothers in the
mid-1940s.
It may not be James Cagney's best film, it may not even be the best
Hollywood gangster film, but
Kiss
Tomorrow Goodbye is still compulsive viewing, an essential film
noir experience for any true aficionado of the genre. And it
offers two stunning femmes fatales (Barbara Payton and Helena Carter)
for the price of one. What is there not to like?
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Ralph Cotter, a notorious gangster, escapes from a prison farm with a
fellow convict, Carleton. Pursued by police, Cotter kills
Carleton to facilitate his own escape and hooks up with Carleton's
sister, Holiday. Assisted by Jinx, another crook, and garage
owner Mason, Cotter raids a large store, but he is forced to hand over
the booty to two crooked cops, Weber and Reece. With the help of
an unscrupulous lawyer named Mandon, Cotter blackmails Weber and Reece
into returning the stolen money and supporting him in his next hold
up. Meanwhile, the gangster has fallen for Margaret Dobson, the
daughter of the most influential man in town. In doing so,
Cotter makes a deadly enemy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.