Nicholas Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to literature,
history, popular culture and the arts. You are free to agree or disagree with him.
VIGOROUS CRAP
It’s a slow
evening and I have about 80 minutes to kill, so I turn to one of my newer toys
– the Youtube function on my computer – and I watch a complete old cheapie
movie.
Shield for Murder, a B-feature made in
1954. Black-and-white, of course, as all good noirs were and as all cheapie movies had to be in the early 1950s.
Jointly directed by its star Edmond O’Brien and by Howard Koch. Its lead actors
are people who would appear only in supporting roles in A-productions. Edmond
O’Brien, Carolyn Jones, John Agar, Marla English.
Plot – in a
dark night-time alley, crooked police detective Edmond O’Brien shoots a bookie
in the back and steals $25,000 from the corpse. He then loudly shouts “Stop, or I’ll shoot!” and fires two
shots in the air to give himself an alibi should anyone be listening. When
uniformed cops turn up, he claims the bookie was killed by a warning shot that
went wild. They seem to believe him, especially the idealistic younger
detective (John Agar) whom O’Brien once trained.
But the
bookie’s gangster employers want their lost money back and they don’t believe
O’Brien’s story when it is reported in the press. They send their stand-over
men after him. Worse, there was a harmless old deaf-mute witness who saw
O’Brien commit the murder. O’Brien traces this nice old witness and rubs him
out. We were at least a tiny bit on his side in the earlier parts of the movie,
because his motive in stealing the money was to buy a home in a nice new
suburban sub-division and settle down with the innocent young thing (Marla
English) he was courting.
But now we
can see he is an irredeemable thug.
So can the
unbent cops, including a disillusioned John Agar. In the upshot, and after a
frantic chase, they track their rogue colleague to the spot where he has hidden
his stolen loot. They line up accusingly. The bent cop fires first, so the
unbent cops are justified in firing back. They become an execution squad. Bent
cop goes down in a hail of bullets and dies ironically in front of the suburban
home he dreamt of buying.
End of
movie.
Nope, not
High Art by any manner of means, and I am not the sort of chap to fetishize
crap old films because of their very crumminess (like those pretentious nouvelle vague French directors who
would make hommages to Monogram
Pictures and the like). My basic aesthetic code says that crap is crap. But
then there is such a thing as entertaining
crap, and this is it.
Watching Shield for Murder, I was aware of its
glaring faults as drama. In every sequence set in the police station, there’s a
wise old pipe-smoking crime reporter who seems to have nothing to do but stand
around offering homilies on what an evil thing it is that there are bent cops –
just in case we don’t understand this ourselves. O’Brien sweats, rants and
puffs as he usually did (there were some honourable exceptions in his long
acting career). The acting of Agar, English and the police captain would make
wood look like a fluid substance. The structure is strictly formula: crime,
chase, retribution.
And yet –
dammit – I can see some merit in the argument that says B-features in Old
Hollywood were often more sprightly and less encumbered with style than A-features.
And they could get away with stuff A-features wouldn’t touch. If Shield for Murder had had a bigger
budget and an A-director, its trim 80 minutes would probably have been padded
out with redundant things to suggest more complex motivation in its simplistic
characters. The bent cop’s one-dimensional nice-girl fiancĂ©e would have been
turned into a femme fatale of the
sort that haunts most noirs. And
there would have been a softened version of the louche sequence where a barfly
whore makes up to O’Brien when he’s on the lam. She’s played by Carolyn Jones
with fake blonde hair and a big visible bruise on her arm to suggest the
rougher encounters in her trade. I can’t imagine that in Technicolor in 1954.
This is
crummy movie-making, but it has a direct sort of honesty to it.
Then
there’s the unnerving rough poetry of the final shoot-out scene, filmed at
night of course (this is a noir) and
on location in what looks like a real suburban sub-division. I believe if I had
seen this movie as a kid, this final sequence would have scared the crap out of
me. It’s so like the night-time denouement of Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil which really did scare the crap out of me when I saw
it, in the local parish hall, at the age of nine or ten.
What does
this tedious review of an old movie prove?
Nothing
really, except that vigorous old B-movie crap can kill the time very handily.
And that, of course, is more than most movies can do.
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