When The Screw Turns-With Fritz Lang’s Human Desire In Mind
By Zack James
I have been up against some screwy feelings in my time,
thoughts of revenge for some slight, great or small, thoughts about ending it
all, weary of life, wanted to strangle some dame for two-timing me, or worse
three-timing meaning she was two-timing two guys me included but I never did
anything about it. Although maybe on the last one I should have. I always
calmed down a little and figured a way out of the dilemma, figured that
tomorrow was another day and I could regroup a little, get a new start.
Not everybody is like that, not by a long shot, not
everybody can rein in their emotions and do the right thing, or at least not
the wrong thing. Take this film I watched the other night, Human Desire, a film I am watching as part of a series of films by
the great director Fritz Lang, the guy who started everybody getting serious
about film, about using film as more than entertainment, as social commentary, as
commentary on the human condition, as what we would call today social networking,
with that Metropolis
of his. The people in that former film, a film based on a book by Emil Zola,
the guy who stuck his neck out to defend Alfred Dreyfus back when it counted,
are all over the place. Let things mostly get out of hand. Let human desire get
a sad ass workout in a bad way, the baddest way possible, murder, murder, one
when you think about it.
The funny part is that the film, maybe like life starts out
just fine. A guy name Jeff, played by Glenn Ford, just back from the Korean War
is getting back in harness as a railroad engineer and ready to settle down too (who
knows for how long on that sweet engineer’s job given the decline in railroad
traffic and usage in the “golden age of the automobile” in the 1950s). Maybe
with some lady, maybe play the field for a while and then settle down who
knows. Then all hell broke loose. See this roughneck, drunken railroad sot
named Carl (played by Broderick Crawford a perfect roughneck and drunken sot
last seen in this space playing Willie Stark to Oscar-dom in the film
adaptation of Robert Penn Warren’s All
The King’s Men) has this dishy tramp of a wife, Vicki, played in B-film
grandeur by Gloria Grahame, a girl who goes with the highest bidder, a girl
looking out for herself and her own desires, whom he suspects is running around
on him. He was an older guy and she was, well, a dish and so his fears were
well-founded especially when he asked her to ask to pretty please a railroad
executive she used to work for to get his job back after a tiff with his yard
boss who fired him. Up to her old tricks she jumped right back into bed with
that railroad exec which makes you wonder, and you would not have to stretch
your imagination to far what kind of work she did for him back before she
married meal ticket Carl.
One thing everybody knew was that Carl saw red every time a
guy even looked at Vicki so you know that nothing good was going to happen when
Vicki came back late and all in a tumble, lipstick smeared, after “pretty
pleasing” that railroad executive. Carl beat her up just for smiling the wrong
way (poor Gloria, playing plenty of tramp parts, and playing them well, got
beat up plenty of times, or worse one time in a film got hot coffee thrown in
her face by a wise-guy played by Lee Marvin). Then for kicks he Carl killed that
railroad executive while all three were travelling to Chi town. Yeah, Carl
killed him dead, made Vicki watch the damn thing and sign a letter, a letter
that would force her to stay with him. So you saw the downside of the human
condition right before your eyes.
Enter Jeff who had been free-loading a ride on the train
while all this murder and mayhem was going on. Enter Vicki being used to
distract Jeff while Carl made his getaway. When the body was found and there is
an inquest Jeff clamed up to protect Vicki. That started an affair between the
two. An affair and a deranged notion by Vicki that all her cares would be over
if she had that letter, had Carl six feet down in the ground too. So she
recruits Jeff to do the deeded. Another ignoble example in the question of
human desire. But Jeff was tired of
killing, tired of being some fall guy for some off-the-wall dame’s revenge
fantasies. He balked. Problem: Carl suspects that Jeff and Vicki were having an
affair even though Jeff had called the whole thing off when he passed on the
murder one rap he would have been facing just to make Vicki shudder with
delight. He did grab the letter from Carl and gave it to her as a parting present.
Carl was not as forgiving as he strangled the hapless tramp wife Vicki on the train
once he knew she had the letter and he had nothing to hold over her. Jeff went
on his merry way captaining the train while dastardly murder was happening in
the rear. Strange nutty thing human desire when it gets twisted into a guy’s
head-or a gal’s.
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