Film Review
Ruthless is perhaps the
unlikeliest film to come out in late 1940s America, a country gripped
by anti-Communist paranoia. A flagrant assault on capitalism, it
is a film that dared to pour scorn on the American dream by showing the
downside of a free-market, winner-takes-all economy. The film was
directed by Edgar G. Ulmer, an Austrian émigré who had
previously distinguished himself at Universal Pictures with such films
as
The Black Cat (1934), his
best-known work. A romantic indiscretion with the wife of the
nephew of Universal's top honcho Carl Laemmle resulted in Ulmer being
blacklisted from the main Hollywood studios and much of his subsequent
work is, consequently, of little interest.
Ruthless is an exception, a slick
film noir that portrays capitalism as a modern social evil, practically
akin to Fascism of the 1930s.
The central character, a driven money man named Horace Vendig, is every
inch the Nietzschen superman; his pursuit of wealth makes him totally
blind to the things that really matter in life: the loyalties we owe to
others and our wider social responsibilities.
Ruthless is the closest that
Hollywood ever got to making an outright riposte to McCarthyism, at a
time when its leading lights were being dragged before the House
Committee on Un-American Activities to answer questions on suspected
Communist activity. Today, the film has perhaps an even greater
resonance, as we can readily identify the main character with the
money-obsessed individuals who very nearly wrecked the world banking
system in 2008.
As well-cast as the lead roles are - Zachary Scott is an admirable
choice for the part of the central villain of the piece, odious and yet
strangely likeable at the same time - it is the supporting cast that
gives the film most of its charm and colour. Diana Lynn brings an
angelic innocence to her character which immediately establishes Vendig
as a rotter of the first order. Lucille Bremer makes a more
sensual femme fatale, and it is heartbreaking to see her end up as yet
another broken rung in Vendig's social climbing ladder. Dennis
Hoey, famous for his portrayal of Inspector Lestrade films in
Universal's
Sherlock
Holmes films of the 1940s, puts in a respectable character turn as
the benevolent family man who adopts Vendig, and Raymond Burr is as far
from Perry Mason as you can imagine as Vendig's washed-up natural
father.
The most enjoyable, most intense and most nuanced performance is
provided by Sydney Greenstreet - this was one of his last screen roles
and he puts everything he has into it to become a formidable avenging
angel against the worst excesses of capitalism. Greenstreet's
final confrontation with Scott is as dramatic as any shoot-out in a
classic western, and yet it also provides a potent reminder of the
sickness that lies at the heart of the capitalist system, where an
individual's right to pursue happiness and prosperity for himself
inevitably comes at the expense of someone else.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When he saves his well-to-do neighbours' daughter from drowning,
pre-teen Horace Vendig soon has his first opportunity to move up the
social ladder. Leaving his widowed mother, he allows his
neighbours to become his adopted parents, and through their kindness he
wins a place at university. Horace then receives another stroke
of good fortune when he meets a successful financier. Abandoning
his studies, and the girl he had promised to marry in his home town, he
sets himself up as a stock broker and within no time he is richer than
he dared to imagine. Still this success does not satisfy him, and
if he must betray the ones who trusted him and supported him in the
past, so be it...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.