I have to file a strong dissent
on this one. While Nicholas Ray’s THEY LIVE BY NIGHT is pretty much universally
loved by critics and scholars of film noir, it’s a movie which has always left
me cold.
The film starts strongly,
with a much admired helicopter shot of three escaped convicts hightailing cross-country
with a kidnapped motorist. They ditch their hostage and his car once it blows a
tire, and they take off on foot. There are two older men — seasoned cons — and
a much younger man, a kid named Bowie. The kid has a bum foot, so the older
fugitives leave him behind a road sign and tell him they’ll send help. Once
night has fallen, help arrives in the form of a girl named Keechie — the tomboy
niece of one of the convicts. When the boy meets the girl it’s pretty much love
at first sight.
These opening scenes all
work. Bowie is played by Farley Granger — film noir’s resident misunderstood
youth — and the convicts are played by Howard da Silva and Jay C. Flippen.
That’s a killer trio by anyone’s estimation and all three are excellent — especially
da Silva as a blustering, one-eyed mass of insecurity named Chicamaw ‘One-Eye’
Mobley. One-Eye doesn’t much like that the papers use his nickname, which he
resents. He likes it even less when they start referring to the kid as the
leader of the gang.
If the movie had stayed
with the conflicts between these three mismatched criminals, I probably would
have enjoyed it. Alas, it doesn’t. Instead, it focuses on the romance between
Bowie and Keechie (Cathy O’Donnell), and this is where it loses me. They fall
for each other right away, have some discussions about their screwed-up
childhoods — Bowie explaining how he wound up in jail for murder, Keechie
expressing contempt for her degenerate drunk of a father — and then, in short
order, they get married and take off for a honeymoon. Unfortunately for them,
both the cops and Bowie’s convict buddies are hot on their trail.
Because the relationship
between Granger and O’Donnell sits at the center of the story, how you feel
about it determines how you feel about the film as a whole. THEY LIVE BY NIGHT
is essentially a juvenile delinquent romance utilizing the film language and
tragic fatalism of noir to help it tell its story. There’s nothing wrong with
that combination on paper, but the young lovers — Keechie in particular — have
been softened considerably from Edward Anderson’s source novel, THEIVES LIKE US.
The resulting romance is the same old soppy Hollywood melodrama full of soft-focused,
dewy-eyed close-ups and page after page of yearning speechifying. And I’ll be
honest, I just find O’Donnell to be a lot to handle. She’s a regular fixture in
noir, but she’s usually cast as a dollop of creamy innocence. Her work here
isn’t as syrupy as her turn in SIDE STREET, but it’s pretty bad. More than
almost any other actor I can think of O’Donnell embodies the female-virgin
ideal that one finds in a lot of movies from the forties and fifties. One of
the great virtues of noir, however, is that you don’t usually have to spend much
time with this kind of emotionally-stunted woman-child. One of the reasons that
noir has emerged as the most durable genre of the classic era is that it doesn’t
worship at the altar of sexless virtue, and Cathy O’Donnell always seemed to
have wandered in from Louis B. Meyer’s imagination.
(The notable exception to
the argument above is her work for William Wyler on dramas like THE BEST YEARS
OF OUR LIVES and DETECTIVE STORY, leading me to think that the fault rests with
the writers and directors rather than O’Donnell herself.)
Stories of misunderstood
youth were, of course, a specialty of Nicholas Ray. He directed KNOCK ON ANY
DOOR in 1949 and then made the ultimate 50s teen rebellion flick, REBEL WITHOUT
A CAUSE in 1955. These films are interesting and important, but they’re also
relics of their time in a way that Ray’s noirs of the same era (IN A LONELY
PLACE, ON DANGEROUS GROUND) are not. His teen pictures are rendered campy by the
movie conventions of their era, while the noir pictures still play for adults
and still have an edge. The exception to this is THEY LIVE BY NIGHT (his debut
film) which tries to have it both ways. There’s no denying that Ray broke
ground in the area of onscreen youth angst with this material, and THEY LIVE BY
NIGHT is certainly an antecedent for REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.
But, god, is it soppy.
1 comment:
You nailed it, Jake. THEY LIVE BY NIGHT is a film only for hardcore noir fans. And even for them, one screening is enough. Neither Ray nor Robert Altman in 1974 got the book right. Anderson’s THIEVES LIKE US is a good crime novel of the Depression era.
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