Film Review
One of the all-time classics in the film noir gangster genre,
The Big Combo marked a career
highpoint for director Joseph H. Lewis, who had spent most of his
career making low budget B-movies, and doing so with considerably more
class and ingenuity than most of his contemporaries. This film,
together with Lewis's other film noir masterpiece
Gun Crazy (1949), exemplifies
American film noir at its best, stylishly shot in high-contrast black
and white, using shadows and silhouettes to create tension and menace,
and featuring the familiar assortment of hardboiled cops and hoodlums
locked in a fierce orgy of self-destruction. For all true film
aficionados, this is film noir heaven.
The Big Combo is particularly
noteworthy for its graphic violence and overt sexuality, both of which
came close to making a mockery of Hollywood's self-imposed production
code. Although mild by today's standards, there are sequences in
this film which would have been considered sadistic at the time of the film's
release - for example, the scene in which the hero, Lieutenant Diamond,
is viciously tormented with (wait for it) a hearing aid. Later,
the same seemingly innocuous device provides a truly inspired touch for
the film's most horrific murder scene - horrific not because it is
particularly graphic, but because it catapults the spectator into the
place of the victim. The final shoot-out sequence is equally as
arresting, one of the most imaginatively lit scenes of any film noir,
and one that pays a respectful homage to another great gangster film,
Mervyn LeRoy's
Little Caesar (1931).
The film noir thrillers of this era were noted for their subtle erotic
tension, but here the animal attraction between males and females is
far more explicit. The sequences in which Cornel Wilde gets up
close and personal with femme fatale Jean Wallace (luckily they were
husband and wife at the time) have a flagrant sultry sensuality that,
again, would have shocked contemporary audiences. And there is
even the suggestion that two of the gun-toting gangsters have been
carrying on a gay love affair. Could such a film really have been
made in Hollywood in 1955?
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Police Lieutenant Leonard Diamond is determined to bring the notorious
gangster boss Mr Brown to book. For Diamond, this is no longer
work but a personal crusade against evil. The lieutenant's
dedication to the case is strengthened when he falls for the gangster's
mistress, Susan Lowell. In an act of foolhardy bravado, Diamond
authorises a round up of Brown's gang members, but has to release them
through lack of evidence. Just when all appears to be lost,
Diamond learns about a missing woman named Alicia, who turns out to be
Brown's wife. Convinced that Brown murdered Alicia, Diamond steps
up his investigation, certain that he will soon find the evidence that
will incriminate Brown and put him behind bars. Mr Brown is a
resourceful man, however, and is not willing to go down without a
fight...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.