Film Review
When he first wrote the storyline for
The
Three Strangers after a stay in London, John Huston conceived it
as a direct sequel to
his earlier film
The Maltese Falcon (1941). with
Humphrey Bogart, Sydney Greenstreet and Mary Astor reprising each of
their respective roles. Things did not work out as planned -
Warner Brothers had by this stage lost the rights to Dashiell Hammett's
characters and, owing to his military obligations, Huston was
unavailable to direct the film. In Huston's absence, the
directing duties fell to Jean Negulesco, who was shaping up to be one
of the
studio's most successful directors in the crime-mystery genre.
Huston may not have directed the film but he (in collaboration with
Howard Koch) furnished it with a
superlative script which, with its plot convolutions and assortment of
colourful and interesting characters, can hardly fail to sustain our
interest.
The
Three Strangers is unquestionably one of Warner Brothers' more
enjoyable (and
eccentric) excursions into film noir territory, and if only Huston had
been around to direct it (with his usual flair for atmosphere and
twisted irony) it might even have been a masterpiece.
As on his previous crime-mystery offering,
The Mask of Dimitrios (1944),
Negulesco was blessed with having Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre,
two of the most distinguished (and certainly most recognisable)
character actors working in Hollywood at the time, in the principal
male roles. In the last but one of their memorable screen
pairings (the two first appeared together on the set of
The Maltese Falcon), Greenstreet
and Lorre form a wonderfully weird double act. In the film's most
memorable scene towards the end (with Greenstreet going completely off
the rails and Lorre looking scarily calm), they spark off each other
as if they had been working together for decades. Here Lorre is
cast against type as the romantic lead, in an unusually sympathetic
role which allows him to reveal a side to his persona that is very
different from the one we are more familiar with. Lorre's scenes
with Joan Lorring (well-suited to play his adoring girlfriend) are
especially poignant and are among the most touching in his entire
repertoire.
Greenstreet is on far more familiar ground as a money-obsessed
scoundrel, but again he is cast more as a victim of circumstances than
an outright villain, becoming increasingly funny and increasingly
tragic as his world collapses around him. Despite going
outrageously over the top in some scenes, Greenstreet never fails to
hold onto our sympathies, and if we have any contempt and loathing, we
reserve these for the savagely heartless femme fatale of the piece,
played to perfection by Geraldine Fitzgerald (probably the only actress
who could get into a cat fight with Joan Crawford and stand any chance
of surviving). Despite a deliciously wicked turn from
Fitzgerald the film is mercilessly stolen by Lorre and Greenstreet in
its final tragi-comic act. This magnificent duo
would work together on one more film, Don Siegel's debut feature
The Verdict (1946), bringing to an
end one of Hollywood's finest and most unlikely screen partnerships.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
London, 1938. Crystal Shackleford, a mysterious young woman,
lures two complete strangers - solicitor Jerome K. Arbutny and
small-time crook Johnny West - back to her apartment so that she can
offer them a fantastic proposal. Crystal possesses a statuette of
the Chinese goddess Kwan Yin which, she claims will grant them a shared
wish that evening, at the start of the Chinese New Year. The only
thing the three people have in common is an urgent need for money, so
Crystal has purchased a sweepstake ticket for a horse race which, if
Kwan Yin does her work, will make the three strangers fabulously
wealthy. But events are fast conspiring against all three of
them. Crystal's husband is planning to start a new life with
another woman and is tempted to kill her if she does not agree to a
divorce. Arbutny faces ruin and disgrace when some dodgy
speculations backfire and leave him with a huge financial
shortfall. Johnny is in greatest peril - wrongly arrested for
murdering a policeman, he is likely to be hanged in a few days' time. It
seems that all three strangers are set on a course for destruction from
which there is no escape, but not so. The inscrutable Kwan Yin
has a few surprises in store...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.