Film Noir Review: Highway Dragnet (dir by Nathan Juran)


Nifty is not really a word that I ever use, mostly because I’m not 80 years old and I’m not totally sure what the word means.  I’ve always assumed that nifty is way of saying that something is good without being too good and, if that’s true, then I have to say that the low-budget 1954 film noir, Highway Dragnet, certainly is a nifty film.

Highway Dragnet opens with Jim Henry (Richard Conte, who decades later would play the evil Barzini in The Godfather) in Las Vegas.  Jim’s just gotten out of the army and he’s visiting his friend, Paul (Frank Jenks).  Paul is a secret agent who is often unexpectedly called away.  Unfortunately, this means that Paul is not around when Jim is accused of murdering another man.  Since Jim was previously seen hitting on the dead man’s girlfriend, the police naturally assume that Jim’s the murderer.  When Jim says that Paul can provide an alibi whenever he gets back from doing his super secret spy stuff, the cops assume that Paul doesn’t actually exist.

Under the direction of the stern Lt. White Eagle (Reed Hadley), the cops are doing a lot of assuming!  Now, if Jim was smart, he would say, “Hey, White Eagle, you know what?  When you assume, you make an ass out of u and me!”  But Jim’s not smart so he decides to fire a gun at the cops and then go on the run!

Hey, Jim …. none of that makes you look innocent!

Anyway, while making his way across the desert, Jim comes across two women who are having car trouble.  Mrs. Cummings (Joan Bennett, who went from nearly getting cast as Scarlett O’Hara in Gone With The Wind to becoming a low-budget noir mainstay) is a fashion photographer and Susan Willis (Wanda Hendrix) is her model.  Jim fixes their car and then asks them for a ride.  They agree, little knowing that they’re heading straight into a …. HIGHWAY DRAGNET!

Of course, it turns out that Jim’s new friends have a connection to the crime of which he’s been accused.  The plot of Highway Dragnet hinges on a totally implausible coincidence.  This is perhaps not surprising when you consider that the script for Highway Dragnet was written by the legendary Roger Corman.  In fact, it was the first script that he ever sold and, though the film was directed by Nathan Juran, Highway Dragnet feels very much like a Corman quickie.  The plot is whatever it needs to be to get the story from the beginning to the end in 71 minutes.  Whether it all makes sense or not doesn’t appear to be all that much of a concern.

So, here’s what does work about Highway Dragnet.  First off, director Nathan Juran (who was also an award-winning art designer) manages to capture some memorable images of the Nevada desert and the film ends with a wonderfully over-the-top and atmospheric confrontation in a flooded house.  Secondly, Joan Bennett is as passive-aggressively menacing in Highway Dragnet as she would later be in Dario Argento’s Suspiria.  I also liked the performance of Reed Hadley, playing the unstoppable and incorruptible Lt. White Eagle.

Last Saturday, I watched Highway Dragnet with my friends in the Late Night Movie Gang and we enjoyed it.  It’s undoubtedly a minor film noir but it’s still entertaining when taken on its own terms.  If nothing else, the box office success of this low-budget production (which was shot over ten days) reportedly inspired Roger Corman to get serious about pursuing his own career in the film industry and, for that, movie lovers will always be thankful.

The Fabulous Forties #8: The Lady Confesses (dir by Sam Newfield)


Poster_of_the_movie_The_Lady_Confesses

After I watched The Red House, I watched the 8th film in Mill Creek’s Fabulous Forties box set, a 1945 film noir called The Lady Confesses.

Mary Beth Hughes plays Vicki McGuire, who is engaged to marry Larry Craig (Hugh Beaumont).  When we first meet Larry, he seems like a fairly normal guy.  He drinks too much but then again, this film was made in 1945 and it’s totally possible that Larry had yet to see The Lost Weekend.  Before getting engaged to Vicki, he was married to Norma Craig (Barbara Slater).  Norma disappeared seven years ago and has since been declared legally dead.  So, imagine everyone’s surprise when Norma suddenly turns up alive and knocking on Vicki’s front door!  Norma announces that there’s no way that she’s going to give up Larry.

Larry reacts to all this by going out and getting drunk.  He spends a while literally passed out at the bar and then, once he’s sobered up, he and Vicki go to visit Norma and try to talk some sense into her.  However, upon arriving at her apartment, they discover that Norma has been strangled!

The police automatically suspect Larry of being the murderer but he has an alibi.  He was drunk.  He was passed out at the bar.  And the only time he wasn’t at the bar, he was sleeping on a couch in the dressing room of singer Lucille Compton (Claudia Drake)…

Wait!  Larry was sleeping on another woman’s couch?  Well, Vicki isn’t necessarily happy to hear that but she still believes that her fiancée is innocent and she’s willing to do whatever it takes to clear his name, even if it means going undercover and working at a nightclub.  Vicki and Larry suspect that nightclub owner Lucky Brandon (Edmund MacDonald) is the murderer.  Can they prove it or, waiting around the next shadowy corner, is there another twist to the plot?

It’s not a spoiler to tell you that there’s another twist.  In fact, for a film that only runs for 64 minutes, there’s a lot of twists in The Lady Confesses.  The Lady Confesses is an entertaining film noir, one that gives B-movie mainstay Mary Beth Hughes a rare lead role.  As well, if you’ve ever seen an old episode of Leave It To Beaver, it’s quite interesting to see Hugh Beaumont playing a somewhat less than wholesome character.  Director Sam Newfield, who directed over 254 films during the course of his prolific career, keeps the action moving and provides a lot of menacing and shadowy images.

Though it may not be perfect (for one thing, we never learn why Norma disappeared in the first place), The Lady Confesses is a watchable and atmospheric film noir.  And you watch it below!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu6VvnIkMyM

 

Back To School #1: I Accuse My Parents (dir by Sam Newfield)


I_accuse_my_parents

Do you know what time of year it is!?  Well, yes — it is August and soon it will be September.  But even more importantly, it’s back to school time!  Summer is over and, all across the country, children and teenagers alike are getting ready to return to school.  Some schools in America have already opened.  In my part of Texas, school is officially starting on August 25th.  So, what better time than now for the Shattered Lens to go back to school?  Over the next 8 days, we’ll be taking a chronological look at 76 films about teenagers and high school.

And what better film to start with than the low-budget 1944 look at juvenile delinquency, I Accuse My Parents?  Well, technically, there’s probably a lot of better films that I could start with but, to be honest, I just love this film’s title.  I Accuse My Parents.  It’s just so melodramatic and over the top, much like this film itself.  And yet, the title also carries a hint of the truth.  After all, who hasn’t accused their parents at one point in their life?

I Accuse My Parents opens with Jimmy Wilson (Robert Lowell) standing in a courtroom and being addressed by a stern-sounding judge.  Despite the fact that Jimmy appears to be in his early 30s, the film continually assures us that he’s a teenager.  He’s been accused of manslaughter and, as the judge tells us, he has apparently failed to provide any help to his defense lawyers.  Does Jimmy have anything to say in his defense?  Jimmy looks down at the floor, obviously deep in thought.  Finally, he looks up and says, “I accuse my parents.”

“OH MY GOD!” everyone in the courtroom says in unison.  Or, at least, they would have if this film hadn’t been made in 1944.  Instead, they simply gasp in shock.

It’s flashback time!  We see that before Jimmy became a murderous criminal, he was just your normal 30 year-old high school student.  He even won an award for writing an essay about how wonderful his parents were.  Little did his fellow students suspect that Jimmy’s mom was actually a drunk and his father was more concerned with business than with raising his son.  When Jimmy’s mom showed up at the school drunk, all of Jimmy’s friends saw her and laughed.  Jimmy’s essay of lies had been exposed!

Even worse, when Jimmy got an after-school job as a shoe salesman, he met and fell in love singer Kitty Reed (Mary Beth Hughes).  Little did Jimmy suspect that Kitty was also the mistress of gangster Charles Blake (George Meeker).  Blake recruited Jimmy to start delivering stolen goods.  Unfortunately, award-winning essay aside, Jimmy was a bit of an idiot and never realized, until it was too late, that he was being drawn into a life of crime.  Even worse, his father was too busy working and his mother was too busy drinking to see what their son was getting involved with.

I have a soft spot in my heart for films like I Accuse My Parents.  These films take place in a world where the worst thing that can happen will always happen.  Being neglected by his parents doesn’t just leave Jimmy feeling angry or resentful.  Instead, it leads to him meeting a gangster and becoming a criminal.  And while most of the on-screen evidence would suggest that Jimmy’s main problem is that he’s a little bit stupid (and that would certainly explain why, despite clearly being in his 30s, Jimmy is still a senior in high school), the film wants to make it very clear that all of this could have been avoided if only he had better parents.

Add to that, it’s interesting to see that, even in the 1940s, it wasn’t easy being a teenager!

Finally, it should be noted that the film ends with a note letting us know that the producers had shipped copies of the film off to our fighting forces in Europe, which I think was sweet of them.  (Though I have a feeling that the soldiers might have preferred something featuring Lana Turner…)

Feel free to watch I Accuse My Parents below.

Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2b-H4Y8190