Film Review
This quintessential film noir thriller brings together legendary
performers Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake for the third time, following
their appearances in two other film noir classics:
This Gun for Hire (1942) and
The Glass Key
(1942). As in their previous eventful rencontres, Ladd is
the cute hardboiled hero who has a habit of getting into fierce brawls
with trigger-happy lowlife, while Lake is the smoulderingly seductive
femme fatale who looks as if she is about to spontaneously combust at any
moment. An explosive combination.
The taut, well-structured screenplay was written by the celebrated
crime writer Raymond Chandler, and was in fact the only one he wrote
especially for the screen. Thanks to a severe case of writer's
block, he was still typing out the script whilst the film was being
shot. In typical Chandler-esque fashion, the plot is a dense and
labyrinthine morass of intrigue and duplicity, lightened by shots of
dark humour.
Although not as stylish or intense as other film noir thrillers from
this period,
The Blue Dahlia
is an enjoyable example of the genre, well-directed, well-acted and
imaginatively shot. It is somewhat unusual in that it is
constructed as a traditional murder mystery, which broadens its appeal
somewhat - although anyone who manages to correctly identify the killer
deserves to be appointed Head of Scotland Yard.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Naval officer Johnny Morrison returns home after serving in the war
with two of his colleagues, George Copeland and Buzz Wanchek. On
his arrival at the family home he chances upon a party hosted by his
wife Helen and her new boyfriend Eddie Harwood, the owner of a swanky
nightclub
The Blue Dahlia.
When Helen admits to having been drunk on the night she killed their
infant son in a car accident, Johnny walks out on her. On his
way, he hitches a lift from an attractive young woman named Joyce who
is glad of his company. The next day, Johnny learns that his wife
has been murdered and that he is the prime suspect. Johnny is
convinced that Harwood killed her to prevent her from exposing his
murky past, so he is taken aback when his friend Buzz confesses to the
murder...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.