Friday, 31 July 2015

HOLLYWOOD ACTORS IN CLASSIC BRITISH FILM NOIR




Name Film Title Year
A
Addams, Dawn  The £20,000 Kiss 1963
B
Basehart, Richard The Good Die Young 1954
Basehart, Richard The Intimate Stranger AKA  Finger of Guilt 1956
Basehart, Richard The Stranger's Hand 1954
Baxter, Anne Chase a Crooked Shadow 1958
Bendix, William Johnny Nobody 1961
Boyd, Stephen  The Third Secret 1964
Brady, Scott  3 Steps to the Gallows AKA White Fire 1953
Brent, George The Last Page AKA Man Bait 1952
Bridges, Lloyd  The Limping Man 1953
Bridges, Lloyd  Third Party Risk AKA The Deadly Game 1955
Brooke, Hilary  The House Across the Lake AKA Heat Wave 1954
C
Cabot, Bruce  Traitor Spy AKA The Torso Trunk Mystery 1939
Cagney, James  Shake Hands with the Devil 1959
Calleia, Joseph The Noose AKA The Silk Noose 1948
Carey, Macdonald  The Damned AKA These Are the Damned 1962
Carroll, Leo G.  So Evil My Love  1948
Castle, Mary  3 Steps to the Gallows AKA White Fire 1953
Clark, Dane Five Days AKA Paid to Kill 1954
Clark, Dane The Gambler and the Lady 1952
Clark, Dane Murder by Proxy AKA Blackout 1955
Cochrane, Steve The Weapon 1956
Colleano, Bonar Escape by Night 1954
Colleano, Bonar Give Us This Day AKA Christ in Concrete 1949
Colleano, Bonar Good-Time Girl 1948
Colleano, Bonar Joe MacBeth 1955
Colleano, Bonar Pool of London 1951
Constantine, Eddie Passport to Shame AKA Room 43 1959
Conte, Richard The Little Red Monkey AKA The Case of the Little Red Monkey 1955
Cotten, Joseph The Third Man  1949
D
Dahl, Arlene Fortune is a Woman AKA She Played With Fire 1957
Dahl, Arlene Wicked as They Come AKA Portrait in Smoke 1956
Davis, Bette Another Man's Poison 1951
Derek, John The Flesh is Weak 1957
Dietrich, Marlene Stage Fright 1950
Dillman, Brad Circle of Deception 1960
Domergue, Faith Solo Incident AKA Spin a Dark Web 1956
Douglas, Paul Joe MacBeth 1955
Duryea, Dan Do You Know This Voice? 1964
Duryea, Dan Thirty-Six Hours AKA Terror Street 1954
Dvorak, Ann Escape to Danger 1943
Dvorak, Ann Squadron Leader X 1942
E
F
Fitzgerald, Geraldine The Late Edwina Black AKA Obsessed 1951
Fitzgerald, Geraldine So Evil My Love  1948
Foster, Dianne The Lost Hours AKA The Big Frame 1952
Foster, Dianne The Quiet Woman 1951
G
Gabor, Zsa Zsa The Man Who Wouldn't Talk  1958
Goddard, Paulette The Stranger Came Home AKA The Unholy Four 1954
Grahame, Gloria The Good Die Young 1954
Gray, Collen I'll Get Your For This AKA Lucky Nick Cain 1951
Greco, Juliette Whirlpool 1959
H
Henreid, Paul Matrap AKA Man in Hiding 1953
Henreid, Paul Stolen Face 1952
Homeier, Skip No Road Back 1957
Homolka, Oscar The Key AKA Stella 1958
Homolka, Oscar The Shop at Sly Corner AKA The Code of Scotland Yard 1947
I
J
Johnson, Van Beyond This Place AKA Web of Evidence 1959
Jurgens, Curt Psyche 59 1963
K
Keel, Howard Floods of Fear 1958
Keel, Howard The Small Voice 1948
Kennedy, Arthur Impulse 1955
L
La Rue, Jack Murder in Soho AKA Murder in the Night 1939
La Rue, Jack No Orchids for Miss Blandish 1948
Landis, Carole The Noose AKA The Silk Noose 1948
Lawrence, Marc Kill Her Gently 1957
Lorre, Peter Double Confession 1950
Lugosi, Bela The Dark Eyes of London AKA The Human Monster 1939
M
Mansfield, Jane  The Challenge AKA It Takes A Thief 1960
Marshall, Herbert The Weapon 1956
Marshall, Herbert Wicked as They Come AKA Portrait in Smoke 1956
Mature, Victor The Long Haul  1957
Maxwell, Lois Kill Me Tomorrow 1957
Maxwell, Lois Mantrap AKA Man in Hiding 1953
Maxwell, Lois Women of Twilight AKA Twilight Women 1953
McCrea, Joel Rough Shoot AKA Shoot First 1953
Meredith, Burgess Mine Own Executioner 1947
Merrill, Gary Another Man's Poison 1951
Michaels, Beverly Women Without Men AKA Blonde Bait 1956
Miles, Vera Beyond This Place AKA Web of Evidence 1959
Milland, Ray Circle of Danger 1951
Milland, Ray So Evil My Love  1948
Montgomery. Douglass Forbidden 1949
Morse, Barry Daughter of Darkness  1948
Morse, Barry No Trace  1950
Murphy, Mary The intimate Stranger AKA The Finger of Guilt 1956
Murray, Don Shake Hands With the Devil 1959
N
Nader, George Nowhere to Go 1958
Neal, Patricia Psyche 59 1963
Nelson, Gene Dial 999 AKA The Way Out 1955
Nicol, Alex Face the Music AKA The Black Glove 1960
Nicol, Alex The House Across the Lake AKA Heat Wave 1954
Nolan, Lloyd The Girl Hunters 1963
O
O'Brien, Edmund 1984 1956
O'Brien, Pat Kill Me Tomorrow 1957
O'Donnell, Cathy Eight O'Clock Walk 1954
O'Keefe, Dennis Lady of Vengeance 1957
P
Parker, Suzi Circle of Deception 1960
Parks, Larry Tiger by the Tail AKA Cross-Up 1955
Patterson, Lee The Flying Scot AKA Mailbag Robbery 1957
Patterson, Lee The Passing Stranger 1954
Patterson, Lee Soho Incident AKA Spin a Dark Web 1956
Patterson, Lee Deadly Record 1956
Payton, Barbara The Flanagan Boy AKA Bad Blonde 1953
Pidgeon, Walter Calling Bulldog Drummond 1951
Preston, Robert Cloudburst 1951
Q
R
Rains, Claude The Man Who Watched Trains Go By  AKA The Paris Express 1952
Raft, George Escape Route AKA I'll Get You 1952
Raft, George I'll Get You for This AKA Lucky Nick Cain 1951
Ray, Aldo Johnny Nobody 1961
Rennie, Michael Tower of Terror  1941
Rennie, Michael Uneasy Terms 1948
Rogers, Ginger Beautiful Stranger AKA Twist of Fate 1954
Roman, Ruth Joe MacBeth 1955
Romero, Caesar Street of Shadows AKA Shadow Man 1953
S
Sanders, George Cairo 1963
Scott, Lizbeth Stolen Face 1952
Scott, Lizbeth The Weapon 1956
Scott, Zachary Wings of Danger AKA Dead on Course 1952
Smith, Alexis The Sleeping Tiger 1954
Spillane, Mickey The Girl Hunters 1963
Stanley, Kim Séance on a Wet Afternoon 1964
Steiger, Rod Across the Bridge 1957
Sterling, Jan 1984 1956
Stevens, Mark The Lost hours AKA The Big Frame 1952
Sylvester, William Blind Date AKA Chance Meeting 1959
Sylvester, William Give Us This Day AKA Christ in Concrete 1949
Sylvester, William Incident at Midnight 1963
Sylvester, William Offbeat AKA The incident Inside 1961
Sylvester, William The Stranger Came Home AKA The Unholy Four 1954
Sylvester, William Whirlpool 1959
Sylvester, William The Yellow Balloon 1953
Sylvester, William Portrait of Alison AKA Postmark for Danger 1955
T
Tierney, Gene Night and the City 1950
Tierney, Gene Personal Affair 1953
Toren, Marta The Man Who Watched Trains Go By  AKA The Paris Express 1952
U
V
van Eyck, Peter The Snorkel 1958
Veidt, Conrad Contraband AKA Blackout 1940
W
Wanamaker, Sam  The Criminal AKA The Concrete Jungle 1960
Wanamaker, Sam  Give Us This Day AKA Christ in Concrete 1949
Wanamaker, Sam  Mr. Denning Drives North 1951
Welles, Orson The Third Man 1949
Widmark, Richard Night and the City 1950
Wynter, Dana Shake Hands with the Devil 1959
X
Y
Z

COMPILED BY 
GARY DEANE






Monday, 15 June 2015

POSTMARK FOR DANGER aka PORTRAIT OF ALISON (1955)


By Gary Deane


For some, there’s the country in which they were born, and then there’s the country in which they wish they’d been born.

British director Guy Green's country of choice was the United States – to the extent that it would not be England, but California, where he'd reside for forty years prior to his death in 2005. However, long before coming to the US, Green had made clear his affinity for both American actors and the more expansive Hollywood film style. 

Green began his film career as a cameraman, then director of cinematography who'd work on such classic British titles as The Way Ahead (1944), The Way to the Stars (1945), Oliver Twist (1948), and The Passionate Friends (1949). In 1947, he received an Academy Award for his filming of David Lean’s Great Expectations made the previous year.

Green's first assignment as a director was River Beat (1954), an involving crime thriller with American actress Phyllis Kirk embroiled in the investigation of a smuggling racket. He followed with several solid British B-noirs, including Tears for Simon (1956), Postmark for Danger (1956), Triple Deception (1958), The Snorkel (1959), S.O.S. Pacific (1960), and The Angry Silence (1961), all featuring US-born or naturalized actors. Among them was Stuart Whitman, who'd win an Academy Award nomination for The Mark (1962).



While still in England, Green helmed several large-scale American productions for MGM, including Light in the Piazza (1962) and Diamond Head (1965).  He then moved to the US to direct his best known film as a director, the interracial love story, A Patch of Blue (1967), which garnered a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for Shelley Winters, plus four other nominations.   

More interesting to film noir audiences, however, is Green’s Postmark for Danger (aka Portrait of Alison, its British release title). Based on a novel by Francis Durbridge, creator of the Paul Temple series, Postmark is a tense Hitchcockian tale featuring double-crosses, a mistake in identity, and a comely female in trouble who’s rescued by a reluctant hero. It also comes with a McGuffin.  

Portrait artist Tim Forrester (Robert Beatty) learns from his brother Dave (William Sylvester), a charter pilot, that their younger brother Lewis, along with an American actress, Alison Ford (Terry Moore), has been killed in a car accident in Italy.  Both the Italian police and Scotland Yard, however, believe that Lewis, an investigative journalist, was murdered as a result of a story he was doing about an international diamond smuggling operation.  

The police are interested in a postcard that Lewis may have sent to Tim which might contain clues to the mystery. However, they become more involved when a) Tim's favorite model (Josephine Griffin) turns up dead in his apartment and b) he claims that Alison is alive and that she suspects her father to be part of the smuggling ring. Tim was once sought out by Alison’s father who had commissioned a painting of her. It was completed working from a photo in which she appears to be wearing the same dress as found on the dead model.


With distant echoes of Laura, Postmark for Danger unfurls in a tantalizing mist of eerie and unlikely coincidences, before settling in as a fraught police procedural based on a script by Ken Hughes. Green’s high-impact direction and the emphatic lensing of cinematographer Wilkie Cooper give Postmark for Danger its luminous look and feel, free of the kinds of restraints, both visual and dramatic, that can hobble British B noirs. It's also good to see fist fights that are staged and not choreographed. Postmark for Danger remains one of Guy Green’s most resilient films. 

However, after his moment in the Los Angeles sun with A Patch of Blue, Green went on the squander his reputation with The Magus, one of the most critically vilified films of all time. Green never recovered, becoming involved in other ill-considered projects such as Jacqueline Susann’s Once is Not Enough and a host of so-so made-for-television movies. Nevertheless, in 2004, the director was awarded the Officer of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth for his lifetime contributions and services to cinema. He would die the following year.


Monday, 8 June 2015

I, JANE DOE (1948)


By Gary Deane

“Whenever I‘m unhappy with a performance, I look through the TV Guide and try to find a Vera Hruba Ralston picture to watch," because I know, no matter how bad a performance I may have given, I could NEVER be as bad as she was!” Maureen Stapleton to Johnny Carson, 1962.


In the late 1940s and early ‘50s, Republic Studios wrote the book when it came to smart, well-crafted B thrillers, with I, Jane Doe one of its choicest chapters. In it, a mystery woman, ‘Jane Doe’ (played by the aforementioned Miss Ralston), is arrested for the murder of Stephen Curtis (John Carroll), recently returned to the US from service in France. Jane is brought to trial without information as to who she is, what her relationship with Curtis might have been, or any suspected motive for the killing. After refusing to speak in her own defense, she's convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to the electric chair. 

Circumstances later bring about a second trial in which some of the details of Jane’s story are revealed during the proceedings. As it turns out, Jane's new attorney, Eve Meredith Curtis (Ruth Hussey) is the wife of the man whom Jane is charged with having killed. Hence, her carefully orchestrated defense of Jane becomes a cause célèbre. The lawyer makes it clear she has her reasons, though it’s not apparent what they really are -- apart from her curious empathy for the accused. However, as the trial progresses, it becomes obvious that Stephen Curtis, were he not dead, would have a lot to answer for,  both to Jane Doe and his wife.


I, Jane Doe offers a surprisingly modern take on its female protagonists -- their sense of themselves, their place in the world, and their relationships with men and each other. Though the women carry the dramatic and moral weight in I, Jane Doe, sexual equality appears to be assumed. Eve Meredith is a sophisticated, successful Manhattan lawyer, with nothing more or nothing less made of that fact. Her assistant, Phyllis, is just as smart and has a wit not limited to wisecracks. While Jane's case is sad, she's not given to wearing the mantle of victimhood. Whatever she's done, she's acted out of conviction, justifiable or not.  

Equal parts romantic melodrama and noirish thriller, I, Jane Doe turns on a clever screenplay by Lawrence Kimble (San Quentin, 1946, Criminal Court, 1946, Mystery in Mexico, 1948). Kimble toiled in the Hollywood trenches for over three decades both in film and television, retiring with nearly 150 screenwriting credits under his belt. Nicknamed, ‘Nimble’, he was known for his imaginative plotting and penchant for adult dialog, both in evidence in I, Jane Doe. Though director John H. Auer (The Flame, 1948, City that Never Sleeps, 1953, Hell’s Half Acre, 1954) has directed more stylishly, he still knows how to tell a story.  

Oscar-nominated Ruth Hussey was well-suited to the role of Eve Curtis. Hussey brings the same unmannered crispness and charm that she did to movies for which she’s better known: The Philadelphia Story, 1940, The Uninvited, 1944, and The Great Gatsby, 1949. A persuasive actress, Hussey elevates I, Jane Doe with her certainty 


As for Vera Hruba Ralston, few Hollywood stars have ever suffered as much scorn. Her acting was wooden, her accent thick, and everyone in town knew she was married to the head of Republic Studios, Herbert J. Yates, who insisted on foisting her on an unwilling public as well as fellow actors. John Wayne, her co-star in The Fighting Kentuckian (1949), threatened to leave the studio if ever forced to work with her again. Sterling Hayden reportedly demanded and received a healthy bonus to appear opposite her in Timberjack in 1955. However, to her credit, the Czech-born Ralston was cooperative, hardworking, and eager to please; over time, her acting improved. Though she's emotional and weepy in I, Jane Doe, it’s because the part asks her to be. And, as Annette Dubois (Jane’s real name) is a foreigner, Ralston’s accent isn't as distracting. There are no grounds for conviction on that count. 


Rounding things out is Adele Mara as a brassy showgirl, Marga-Jane Hastings, who goes to see Eve about a breach of promise suit against a man, at first unnamed -- though we have our suspicions. Right off, she's told that such suits are not legal in the state. Mara, playing her part to the hilt, responds, “You mean a guy can take me around, tell me he’s not married, promise me the moon with a blue ribbon around it, get me to quit my job so he can spend more time with me, and then just kiss me and not pay for it? I don’t believe it!


However, I, Jane Doe finishes with a bravura, operatic reckoning -- and the satisfaction that comes with seeing everyone, for better or worse, getting exactly what they deserve. C'est la vie, c'est le noir.


Gary Deane

Wednesday, 3 June 2015

ESCAPE (1948)



"There is nothing more tragic in life than the utter impossibility of changing what you have done"  

John Galsworthy


An improbable, pedestrian fugitive-on-the-run story, 'Escape' is saved by the appeal of its English-born leads 'Sexy Rexy' Harrison and Peggy Cummins, now enshrined for her part as the fetishistic femme fatale in 'Gun Crazy'.

Matt Denant (Harrison) is sent to jail for three years for the assault and inadvertent killing of a police officer. Dora Winton (Cummins) offers Denant both the benefit of the doubt and her only too-willing assistance after his escape from prison.

Harrison is his usual disarmingly louche self and Cummins is engaging as the headstrong young woman. Also good is William Hartnell as a police inspector, a part he played to great effect in countless British crime dramas.

Based on a play by John Galsworthy, 'Escape' also benefits from a literate script that offers a thoughtful meditation on justice and its sometimes difficult and uneven administration.

In the end though, the parts don't come close to adding up to a whole. Directed by Joseph. L. Mankeiwicz, 'Escape' deserved to be a bigger picture but ended up writ small, unable to overcome its theatrical origins and dictating lack of passion. 

Pity, that.



NIGHT EDITOR (1946)

By Gary Deane Director Henry Levin never met a film genre that he didn’t like or — perhaps more accurately — that didn’t like him. Though ta...