Film Review
If there is just one film noir that
every
film enthusiast should see, this most definitely has to be it.
Out of the Past is the absolute
quintessential film noir thriller, loaded with just about everything
the genre has to offer, all served up with consummate style - haunting
dream-like cinematography, a plot to make your head spin, the most
alluring femme fatale, and the definitive noir hero. This is a
film which shames many earlier film noirs into looking like crude experiments
in a new art form, and it
had a significant influence on all subsequent noir thrillers.
Out of the Past is film noir
Heaven, and one of the treasures of American cinema.
Like any self-respecting film noir,
Out of the Past has a plot so convoluted that you have to watch
the film at least three times to fully comprehend every twist and turn, but given how
beautifully composed and satisfying the film is this is hardly a
chore. The plot may be complex, but the screenplay is
excellent, with far better characterisation and dialogue than in many
B movies of this era. The film was based on the novel
Build My Gallows High (which is the
film's alternative title) by Daniel Mainwaring who, under the pseudonym
Geoffrey Homes, was one of Hollywood's most respected screenwriters.
The film was directed by Jacques Tourneur, who had acquired a solid reputation
in Hollywood for making films of great artistry and impact on very low
budgets. He is perhaps best known for his classic fantasy-horror
films such as
Cat People (1942) and
I Walked with a Zombie (1943).
His distinctive style was greatly influenced by that of his father,
Maurice Tourneur, an accomplished French filmmaker whose films of the
1930s contained many of the elements of early film noir and who could even
be described as the father of classic film noir.
Out of the Past catapulted the
virtually unknown actor Robert Mitchum to stardom in what became his
defining role - the laconic world-weary hero with one fatal weakness -
an attraction for dangerous women. In this film, that femme
fatale is played to perfection by Jane Greer, who wraps her seductive
charm and penchant for deadly deceit tightly in a sleek cloak of
characteristic film noir ambiguity. Mitchum and Greer have a
natural on-screen rapport - they are drawn to each other like the
opposing poles of two magnets - bringing an emotional depth and
sensual realism that is often missing from even the better film noirs.
They would star together in only one other film,
The Big Steal (1949), a not so hot
parody of the film noir thriller. Greer would appear in a
supporting role in
Against All Odds,
Taylor Hackford's vastly inferior 1984 remake of
Out of the Past.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Tourneur film:
Night of the Demon (1957)
Film Synopsis
Jeff Bailey is leading a contented if uneventful life as a petrol
station owner in a backwater town when his murky past suddenly catches
up with him. A stranger appears and asks him to get in
touch with Whit Sterling, one of Jeff's former clients when he worked
as a private detective. Sterling once hired Bailey to track down
his girlfriend, Kathie Moffat, who ran off with a large sum of his
money. Jeff found Kathie in Mexico and fell instantly in love
with her. Their plans to start a new life together were derailed
when Jeff's business partner turned up and was shot dead by
Kathie. Years later, when he meets up with Sterling, Jeff is
surprised that Kathie has returned to her former lover, but he has no
option but to accept his new assignment - to recover tax records which
incriminate Sterling. Unfortunately, it is unclear where Kathie's
loyalties lie and it is quite possible that she might be setting Jeff
up for an almighty fall...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.