NIGHTMARES IN SHADOWS AND SUNLIGHT
Here’s what happens when the need to see takes over
and I start pulling DVDs off the shelf with only my dark heart as a guide…
The
sleazy, claustrophobic, catch-as-catch-can transience of the carnival world,
with its ever-changing roster of freaks, geeks, disappointed con men and women
with few options, all clinging to shreds of dignity and eyeing a better life
while digging themselves deeper into the one from which they want to flee,
seems a naturally cinematic subject. Yet there are surprisingly few movies that
have ever captured the symbiotic push-pull of vibrant show-biz fakery and dark
personal obsessions that lurk behind the curtain, beyond the barker’s call.
Somewhere between the boy’s wish-fulfillment of Toby Tyler and the
mind-wrenching funhouse mirror reflections of Tod Browning, Tobe Hooper and Rob
Zombie, Edmund Goulding’s film of W.L. Greshman’s Nightmare Alley (1947), from a script by Jules Furthman
(reportedly quite faithful to the novel), captures the attraction of the
fairway for the suckers and the sham artists running the games, as well as the
desperation to trade the sawdust floors of tented arenas for brighter, shinier
halls where the sheep waiting to be fleeced have thicker wool and far deeper
pockets.
Watching Nightmare
Alley today, it’s plain to see that while the divide between the carnies
and the upper classes awash in dough is as marked as ever (maybe more so), the
desperation for recognition, for reward, is no longer a simple symptom of
poverty. But in 1947 it must have been quite a shock to see a handsome star
like Tyrone Power give himself over to a role for which audiences wouldn’t have
been expected to have much empathy. Power’s opportunistic Stan Carlisle is so
thoroughly at home amongst the shadows and hidden compartments of the carnival
setting that it’s almost a surprise to hear that he has aspirations
beyond it. However, his eagerness to expand his talents to more sophisticated
scams for more sophisticated targets soon sucks in both the essentially
good-natured Zeena (Joan Blondell) and the relatively innocent Molly (Colleen
Gray) into a world where the lies get bigger, thornier, more perverse, and the
inevitable fall back to earth is all the more devastating.
Cinematographer
Lee Garmes brilliantly conjures the film’s first half in chiaroscuro patterns
and recesses formed by the impermanent tents and wagons, all of which coexist
almost subconsciously with the ballrooms and theaters of the slightly less
compelling second half. But Nightmare Alley’s central power lies in the
faces of its actors, the carnival life lived as painted in the creases on their
faces, in smiles and banter meant to hide the truth, in haunted looks and,
conversely, averted eyes. Joan Blondell is smashing as Zeena, accidentally
widowed by Stan’s (subconscious?) enabling of her alcoholic husband. She
carries the weight of an entire disappointed life in her big, beautiful, forlorn
eyes.
As for
Power, he couldn’t have been, and probably never was better than he was in this
movie. Critic Charles Taylor observes about Power’s towering performance that
the actor conjures Stan’s essence in that “he manages always to look away from anyone
declaring any tenderness for him… His gaze is always fixed on where he’s
going.” The commitment which Power, Goulding and Furthman show toward Gresham’s
concept of Stan’s corruption is that which Hitchcock could not follow through
on in flirting with villainy for Cary Grant in Suspicion. The
blasphemous blackness in Stan’s heart is given near full reign down the darkest
nightmare-fueled alleys in the film; it sticks its chilling effect in our
hearts like a stake pounded into soft ground, a stake meant to anchor a
carnival tent in place long enough to provide cover while the movie takes us
for all we’re worth.
Electra
Glide in Blue (1973)
has the trappings of an action movie, but the crime investigation at the center
of its plot feels more like a Macguffin, a concession to genre that more
effectively plays as a diversion leading toward the movie’s ambient
incertitude. Its real subject is the tug of war internalized within John
Wintergreen (Robert Blake), a Vietnam veteran who returns to life as a
motorcycle cop and is (like we are) seduced by the cold sheen imagery and
laconic bravado surrounding his post-war profession. Wintergreen is torn
between sympathy for the freedom of outlaw bikers and structure and discipline
of police work, and Blake’s well-modulated performance—gritty, funny,
sympathetic, but hardly pleading—suits the humor and the toughened mettle of a
man who may not be big enough (or paranoid enough) for the job.
The visions coaxed to life by Conrad
Hall justify Wintergreen’s shifting self-regard— the celebrated director of
photography conjures motorcycles cruising through air, warped by heat and
compressed by long lenses-- images which have energy and forward thrust, but
which are also powered by the ethereal beauty of strange, misplaced beasts in
motion. Hall teases out the iconography of motorcycle-powered justice toward a
much more ambiguous, unsettling end, intimating a very uneasy ride just ahead.
But director James William Guercio’s
movie (his one and only, shot between gigs as producer of the music group
Chicago, and featuring some of the band members in minor roles) finds just as
much potency in immobility. It’s there in the looming monuments of the country
through which those Arizona highways snake and wind. It’s there in the moments
of repose when Wintergreen and his partner Zipper Davis (Billy Green Bush) are
parked by the side of the asphalt, thinking and talking about everything and
nothing. (Hall finds poetry in close Panavision glimpses of the hard gravel and
sagebrush along the edges of the highway —you can almost smell the desert dust
and feel the heat radiating off the pavement, warping the relentless sunshine.)
And it’s there in the movie’s horrifying final image, in which a cop is
installed on the road like one of those monuments looming behind him, perhaps
as yet another reminder of a bloody American past and the many fallen,
aggressors and victims who couldn’t reconcile themselves to a country bent on
tearing itself apart. Electra Glide in Blue refashions the
countercultural martyrdom of Easy Rider into a blunt blow toward an
entire nation profoundly divided, the darkest fate reserved for those who see
both sides yet end up in the middle of the road.
Maniac
Cop 2
(1990; William Lustig) is mostly disposable junk—it has that signature blue
steel sheen once fetishized by John Carpenter and James Cameron and a script
that, to my tin ears and eyes at least, makes close to no sense. But even though
it was partially shot in Los Angeles, it also makes good use of its nighttime
New York City locations. It’s like a time capsule glimpse back to a city that
no longer exists, at least not in precisely the same way, and it has a
pleasurably scuzzy 42nd Street vibe. How could it not with Robert
Davi’s gruff detective skulking around alleyways, investigating the apparent
reappearance of the titular imposing figure of menace? (Davi is so tough, he
smokes in hospitals!)
Fortunately,
there’s also Claudia Christian as Davi’s antagonist, a sympathetic cop
psychologist who comes to believe the wild stories about a wronged, killed and
resurrected cop who’s out there taking out innocents and baddies alike; Bruce
Campbell reprising his role as the lead investigator from the first movie (he
doesn’t last quite so long this time); Michael Lerner picking up a (small)
check as the corrupt police commissioner; Clarence Williams III finding one
good note and playing it into the sunset as a loony death row inmate; and Leo Rossi
hamming it up as a bushy-haired serial killer who befriends Cordell, the Maniac
Cop, essayed as always (there was a third one, you know) by B-movie stalwart
Robert Z’Dar, he of the hulking frame and XXL lantern jaw. Z’Dar sports the
worst scary makeup job of all time, but at least he-- or, more accurately, his
stuntman-- gets in some top-notch asbestos suit time when he gets set on fire
near the end of the picture.
(Asbestos
suit stunts are among my favorites, yet another harkening back to a more
"innocent" age of filmmaking where if you wanted to show a guy on
fire, you couldn’t decorate him with pixels, you had to really set him on fire…
and all that protective outerwear still makes a giant like Z’Dar’s Cordell look
like going up in flames somehow caused him to instantly gain about 75 pounds.)
Christian--
or, more accurately, her stuntwoman— also gets a rousing action set piece about
half an hour in when the Maniac Cop handcuffs her to a steering wheel and sets
the car in high-speed motion down a crowded boulevard. It’s easily the
highlight of the movie, especially if you don’t stop to think about who’s
keeping the car hurtling forward with their foot on the gas. (Answer: no one.)
After that it’s pretty much downhill (the movie, not the car—that would’ve
explained things) straight toward the rote gory shoot-‘em-up, stab-‘em-up,
set’-em-on-fire conclusion, which is topped, as many thought-disabled genre
pictures have been since Carrie White and Michael Meyers and Jason Voorhees
rose from the dead, by the usual jolt that screams "Sequel!"
Maniac
Cop 2 isn’t
even close to good, but it’s the most well-paced and acted of the movies in the
Cordell saga made so far, and its violence, though ridiculous and once
considered on the extreme side, now seems almost period quaint. (Rumors that
Nicholas Winding Refn was set to direct a Maniac
Cop prequel seem to have dissipated, maybe because the grue-minded auteur
never figured out a way to one-up the original’s enthusiastic scuzz factor.)
You could chuck a dismembered limb or flame-charred skull in any direction and
hit a far better movie, but as brainless, gory action-horror hybrids go you
could also hit far worse (like Maniac Cop 3, for example). For all its
clunky echoes of The Terminator and scores of other superior low-budget
action thrillers, Maniac Cop 2 does manage to leave some grimy stains
and a not entirely unpleasant aftertaste of its own. It's the B-movie
equivalent of a bong shot of Ripple guzzled near a Dumpster behind a strip bar,
which at times, by the adjusted standards of the grindhouse anyway, gets
within shouting distance of mean, dirty, stupid fun.
A night
flight through a darkened wood opens Georges Franju’s Eyes Without a Face (1960) with a heightened pulse—a woman
races down a deserted highway eyeing her rear-view mirror, fearful of the
intent of cars approaching from behind but also keeping an eye on the passenger
in the back seat. Soon the passenger, hidden in a too-big trench coat and hat,
slumps forward, and the movie begins its steep descent into the interior of a
twisted morality well worthy of being cloaked in a dark forest of secrets. A
French-Italian coproduction released in Europe in 1960 (the same year Psycho
was released) but not seen in the U.S. until two years later, Eyes Without a
Face plays like a Grand Guignol fairy tale with imagery that, unlike the
unforgiving slashes and sharp angles of Hitchcock’s landmark, seeps into the
viewer’s subconscious with poetic assurance and smears the boundaries of our
sympathies at the same time.
In an
isolated mansion somewhere in that darkened wood a surgeon (Pierre Brasseur)
familiar with past glories has instigated an escalating series of skin graft
experiments in a desperate attempt to restore the face of his young daughter
(Edith Scob), horribly disfigured in a car accident. The surgeon kidnaps young
Parisian girls to use as unwilling epidermal donors with the help of his
devoted assistant (Alida Valli), a former patient whose own successful facial
reconstruction has blinded her to her savior’s madness. Given the elusive,
seductive strangeness of the movie’s surrealist mise-en-scène, 21st-century
viewers might be surprised at the film’s notorious centerpiece, a shockingly clinical
surgical scene in which Franju’s camera barely glances away from the horrific
procedure being performed, and then only to scan the landscape of moral
conflict glistening like cold sweat across the faces of the doctor and his
helper. But perhaps even more unsettling and ultimately frightening is the
degree to which Franju allows us access not only to sympathy for the victims,
but also for the daughter, whose dawning realization of what her father is
doing might be as devastating as her own disfigurement, and even for the
surgeon and his assistant, their genial manner and misguided, sincere love for
the girl incapable of coexisting with their heinous deeds.
The movie
is a masterpiece of raised goose flesh. Even during the film’s most ostensibly
placid moments Franju burrows under our skin with image and sound— over
unadorned tracking shots of the girl moving aimlessly through the empty halls
of the house a faint, insistent, inexplicable barking can be heard, soon
revealed as coming from the basement of the house, where the doctor’s very
first victims are still penned. If Eyes Without a Face ends on a note of
release best suited for a fairy tale it is a grim tale indeed, tainted by
blood, destroyed loyalties and the prospect of a bleak future of isolation, as
if a masked, faceless sleeping beauty had escaped the evil queen and made her
way into the woods to find only suffocating darkness where magic should reside.
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