Film Review
It was a brave but somewhat eccentric decision by director Maxwell
Shane to remake
Fear in the Night (1947) just
nine years after he made that film, the one that launched the career of
Star Trek actor DeForest
Kelley. Maxwell retains pretty well all of the plot of Cornell
Woolrich's novel
Nightmare
but this time gives it a more realistic, modern feel, making it very
different from the oppressively stylised
Fear in the Night. Both films
are respectable forays into film noir but Shane's first attempt clearly
stands head and shoulders above its bigger budget remake, its darkly
expressionistic feel being better suited to Woolrich's gloomy novel
than the slicker, more prosaic look of the later film.
Where
Nightmare matches its
predecessor is in the quality of the performances from its lead
actors. Kevin McCarthy, whose big screen career had recently got
off to a flying start with Laslo Benedek's
Death of a Salesman (1951) and Don
Siegel's
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1956), is a worthy successor to DeForest Kelley in the lead role, and
is just as effective in conveying the anguish of a man realising that
he is no longer in control of his life but at the mercy of invisible
malignant forces. Edward G. Robinson is well-cast as the
tough but humane police officer who takes it upon himself to solve the
mystery - his is a solid performance which anchors the highly
implausible narrative in a concrete modern reality.
With this, the last of the five films he directed, it looks as if
Shane's inspiration and enthusiasm for the job are fast deserting
him.
Nightmare has none
of the inventive flair of his earlier noir offerings and it reduces
Woolrich's novel to a comparatively routine murder mystery. It's
jazz musical interludes lend the film the modernity that noirish dramas
of this era felt they needed to attract audiences but these feel like a
lazily stappled on addition to a film that is struggling to find some
form of identity and a deeper meaning. Although far less chilling
than
Fear in the Night, which
deserves to be recognised as one of cinema's best adaptations of a
Cornell Woolrich novel, it still manages to be an engaging piece with
some very disturbing undertones.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Stan Grayson, a clarinet-player in a New Orleans band, awakes from a
dream in which he sees himself murder another man in a mirrored
room. On his neck there are obvious bruise marks and he notices a
key identical to the one in his dream. After a day of soul
searching he decides to seek the advice of his brother-in-law
René Bressard, a homicide investigator in the state
police. René persuades Stan that he has been overworking
and invites him to spend a day in the country, in the company of his
wife and Stan's girlfriend Gina. Caught in a violent downpour, the
party takes refuge in a remote and seemingly deserted mansion.
Stan finds the house strangely familiar and is surprised when he comes
across the mirrored room in his dream. A police officer shows up
and explains that two murders have recently been committed in the
environs of the house. One of the murders seems to fit exactly
the pattern of Stan's dream...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.