Film Review
It was early in his career, whilst he was struggling to make a name for
himself in Hollywood, that Joseph Losey accepted an invitation from
Columbia Pictures to direct this remake of Fritz Lang's 1931 classic
thriller
M.
Losey had little enthusiasm for the project, which was initiated by
Seymour Nebenzal, the man who had produced Lang's film, and his film
proved to be a spectacular critical and commercial failure. The
film's controversial subject matter (child killings, hoodlums taking
the law into their own hands, audience identification with the killer)
made it a hard sell (predictably, the film was banned in several US
states) but what sank it was its pretty blatant commentary on the
anti-Communist hysteria that was, at the time, sweeping across America.
It is not hard to make the connection between the film's depiction of a
frenzied pursuit of a serial killer and the insane Communist witch hunt
that was in progress whilst the film was being made. Not long
after completing the film, Losey was himself called to account for his
left-wing sympathies before the House of Representatives Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC). Although Losey was never formally
blacklisted, he subsequently found it hard to find work in Hollywood
and was soon driven to leave the country and restart his career in
Europe, which he did with remarkable success. Losey was not the
only film director to have his Hollywood career destroyed by the
anti-Communist paranoia of the 1950s.
Losey's remake of
M is not
only a brave and insightful commentary on American society in the early
1950s; it is also a superb example of film noir - a stylish mix of
suspense thriller and police procedural drama that is every bit as
tense and imaginatively crafted as Lang's original film (albeit
slightly less grimly atmospheric). The film's
cinematographer Ernest Laszlo was a favourite of film noir filmmakers,
his credits including such noir classics as
Impact (1949),
Manhandled (1949) and
D.O.A.
(1950). The film's distinctive visual design undoubtedly owes as
much to Laszlo as it does to Losey, and its extensive use of real
locations (in downtown Los Angeles) gives it a realism and pace that
many thrillers of this era lacked. The last two reels of the film
contain some of Losey's most inspired work - a nail-biting manhunt
across town that culminates in a dramatic showdown within the
claustrophobic confines of a shopping complex. David Wayne's
harrowing portrayal of the victimised killer is just as authentic as
Peter Lorre's in Lang's film, and the spectator cannot help but
sympathise with him when he falls foul of the vengeance-hungry mob and
pleads pitifully, not for mercy, but for understanding.
The film's central moral is powerfully presented in the mock-trial
sequence at the end of the film, and it still has an extraordinary
resonance. Given the era in which the film was made, it is hardly
surprising that its thought-provoking message fell on deaf ears.
What is surprising is how relevant the film still is, how little things
have really changed. Even in our enlightened times, it is still too
easy to pluck out scapegoats and pin all of society's failings on them;
it is much harder to pinpoint the real problems and determine how these
might be resolved to make a real difference rather than just a feeble
token gesture. The persecution of an individual by the unthinking
mob would figure in some of Joseph Losey's subsequent films - most
notably
King and Country
(1964) and
Monsieur Klein (1976) - but
never with the intensity and sense of injustice and outrage that we
find in his all but forgotten film maudit,
M.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Joseph Losey film:
The Sleeping Tiger (1954)
Film Synopsis
In downtown Los Angeles young children are being abducted and murdered
by a mysterious killer. The only thing to link the crimes is that
the killer steals the shoes of each of his victims. Soon the
entire city is gripped by panic. Parents are terrified of allowing
their children out to play in the streets and anyone offering help or
treats to a child is immediately suspected of being the killer.
Working under intense public pressure, the police turn their attention
to the city's criminal fraternity and are soon raiding gambling dens in
a desperate attempt to find a lead. One crime boss, Charlie
Marshall, conceives a plan that will not only get the cops off his back
but will also make them beholden to him. He will organise the
city's mobsters and petty criminals into a gigantic informer network,
with the aim of capturing the anonymous killer. Meanwhile, the
police investigation is proceeding apace and the most promising suspect
is a man named Martin Harrow who has recently been released from a
psychiatric institution. Will the police get to Harrow before the
hoodlums? And what kind of justice can the killer expect when he
is caught...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.