Film Review
Towards the end of his twenty-year long soujourn in Hollywood, director
Fritz Lang had become a marginal figure, having little control over the
choice of films he was required to direct and next to no creative input
at the pre-filming stage. In the hands of a lesser director,
The Blue Gardenia would doubtless
have been a bog standard B-movie thriller, the cinematic equivalent of
a trashy pulp fiction novel. A low budget production, Lang had
just 20 days to shoot it, but the end result is one of his most
interesting films, one that offers a pretty savage critique of American
society beneath its ludicrously contrived, cliché sodden murder
mystery plot. What Chaplin attempted, with only marginal success,
in his
A King in New York (1957) Lang
does far better in this equally sour film - a subtle but bitter attack
on the soulless commoditisation of culture and the erosion of moral
standards in a society that is beginning to succumb to the tawdry
allure of consumerism.
Despite the lack of resources available to him, to say nothing of the
ridiculously tight shooting schedule, Lang was rarely more inspired,
nor more imaginative, as he was on this film. Using a new fangled
crab dolly, Lang was able to shoot scenes quickly and achieve a
remarkable fluidity, with long takes and elegantly crafted sequences
that seem to melt into one another to give the impression of an
oppressive, unending nightmare. The film's distinctive noir-style
cinematography was provided by Nicholas Musuraca, who had previously
distinguished himself on such bleakly atmospheric films as Jacques
Tourneur's
Cat People (1942) and Robert
Siodmak's
The Spiral Staircase
(1945). The most visually striking sequence - the one in which
heroine Anne Baxter lunges at an over-sexed Raymond Burr - harks back
to the stark expressionism of Lang's early films. We see the
attack only fleetingly, reflected in the shattered fragments of a
mirror, just as Norah's world suddenly dissolves in
confusion.
For the most part, Lang uses more subtle visual cues to add substance
and a deeper meaning to the trite plot. Lang's assault on America's
cultural decline is more playfully comedic than despairing, evidenced
by his canny juxtaposition of Richard Wagner's Liebstod from
Tristan und Isolde with Nat King
Cole's
Blue Gardenia.
The musical dichotomy provides not only the key to resolving the murder
mystery but also the key to Lang's ambivalence for 1950s America.
(Wagner seems a deeply ironic choice for a man who fled Nazi Germany in
the 1930s.) Can it be a coincidence that the murder victim is a
talented artist who gladly prostitutes his talents for easy
celebrity? (You can't help wondering if Lang sees himself in the
same light.) And what of the other characters - do any of
them have any redeeming features?
Norah's willingness to be deceived by anything in long trousers, even
when they are obviously skunks, makes her a pathetic rather than tragic
figure, a wry symbol of a society that has lost the wherewithal to
recognise moral virtue and attaches too much significance to those
things that corrupt and demean the human spirit. Her two female
flat mates appear to be almost clones of her - they look the same, have
the same appetites, do the same job: production line dolly birds. None
of the male characters is shown in a better light - all appear to be
cut from the same cloth: opportunistic scoundrels intent only on
gratifying their own base needs and advancing their careers.
Although the principals Anne Baxter and Richard Conte succeed in making
their characters likeable, Lang does his best to show what they really
are, and what they truly represent: the superficially attractive face
of a decaying society that is in danger of losing its moral
compass. It is a theme that the director would develop further,
in a far darker vein, in his next film,
The
Big Heat (1953), the last truly great classic film noir.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Fritz Lang film:
Human Desire (1954)
Film Synopsis
When her fiancé writes her a letter ending their relationship
Norah Larkin accepts a dinner date invitation from artist Harry Prebble
at the Blue Gardenia night club. In a state of total
intoxication, Norah allows the sweet-talking artist to take her back to
his apartment. When Prebble makes his move Norah tries to defend
herself with a poker, but passes out just as she strikes her
assailant. When she comes to in her own apartment Norah has only
a hazy recollection of the events of the previous night. From the
morning newspaper she learns that Prebble has been murdered, beaten to
death with a poker. Casey Mayo, an unscrupulous journalist, takes
an interest in the case and soon discovers that Prebble's killer was
most probably the woman he was seen dining with at the Blue
Gardenia. Mayo publishes a letter in his paper inviting the
murderer to come forward, offering her his protection. Convinced
of her guilt, Norah hesitates over whether she should take Mayo up on
his offer...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.