Out
In The Be-Bop 1950s Cold War Night- Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer Is On The
Case- “Kiss Me Deadly”- A Film Review
From
The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin
DVD
Review
Kiss
Me Deadly, Ralph Meeker, Cloris Leachman, directed by Robert Aldrich, 1955
Sure
I‘m a film noir buff. And sure I like my film detectives that way as well, Sam
Spade, Nick and Nora Charles, Phillip Marlowe and so on. Normally Mickey
Spillane and his 1950s-style detective, Mike Hammer, would no hit my radar
though. Believe me I did, however, spent many a misbegotten hour reading
Spillane’s detective stories, maybe as much for cover art work that ran to
provocative bosomy, half-clothed femme fatale dames in distress as for the insipid
story line that ran heavily to Mike’s anti-communist warrior pose ready to
smash heads at the drop of a hat, and grab an off-hand kiss from every dame he
ran into along the way. Aside for the question of that scurrilous (now
scurrilous, maybe) cover art that is better left for another day my tastes in
detectives were more to the “highbrow” Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett
and their more knight-errant-worthy story lines, and a little more reserve in
the fist department, although for a damsel in distress they were ready to duke
it out with anyone, and gladly.
That
said, now along comes this classic 1950s film noir Mike Hammer story line, Kiss
Me Deadly, and I was hooked, well, maybe
not hooked so much as intrigued by it. Moreover, director Richard Aldrich seems
to have had a flair for catching the essence of the noir genre, from those
black and white filmed shots of streets scenes in the seamy Los Angeles be-bop
night (and day too, come to think of it), to an incredible be-bop jazz bar
scene, complete with “torch” singer where after the loss of a friend Mike gets
plastered (drunk), to the endless line-up of high end “golden age of the
automobile” cars on display. Of course there is the normal bevy (maybe two
bevies, I didn’t count) of alluring, mysterious women just waiting to fall into
Mike’s arms when he comes within fifty paces of them, and he is, as usual,
ready to put on his white knight uniform when he senses that something is evil
in the world, and he most definitely is willing to thumb his nose as the
governmental authorities who are always just a step, or seven, behind the flow
of the action. But most of that is all in a day’s work for a noir detective.
What makes this one stick out is the doom’s day plot.
Of
course, the 1950s was not only about the rise of the “beats” and of teen
alienation and angst-driven rock and roll but the heart of the international
Cold War, a scary time no question, where if things had taken a half-twist things
could have turned out a different way. Who knows, but it was not going to be
pretty. And part of that Cold War, a central part, was the presence of the
“bomb,, and for those who are too young to remember that was nothing but the
atomic and hydrogen bombs that could, at any non-be-bop minute, blow the planet
away.
And
it is that threat that underlines old Mickey Spillane’s tale. See, with that
kind of threat, but also the power potential, private parties, evil private
parties could think of all kinds of nasty ways to wreak havoc on the world. If
only they could get just a little of that bomb power. And that lust, that
seemingly eternal lust, for power by certain of our fellow humankind is where
we are heading. See, someone privy to the atomic secrets had a little pot of
the stuff ready for the highest bidder. And the highest bidder, so to speak,
also happens to be a guy with plenty of dough to buy a ton of modern art (and a
fondness for classic quotes). I knew there was something funny about those post-Impressionist
modern art collecting guys. Didn’t you?
And
all it takes to spoil that nefarious plan is one Mike Hammer. Now, and here is
the beauty of the Spillane method, this is not for governmental agents to
handle, as one would think in trusting 1950s America, although they are hot on
the trail but one thread worn detective. Thread worn? Yes, threadworm. See Mike
is nothing but a low-rent, dirt-peddling divorce work detective (in the days
when such dirt was necessary to get that desperate divorce into court), working
this racket with his girl Friday (and lure), Velda. But see maybe Mike just
fell on hard times and needed some dough (although his car, office set-up,
digs… and fetching Velda belie that). But once Mike gets on the case, and only
when he knows in his gut that something is wrong and he had that feeling here,
then they are no limits. He faces off the mob (naturally, if there is something
evil to broker they are in on it), half-mad women (one that he picked up on the
hitchhike road, kind of, and her roommate) and that relentless modern art
collector before he is through. I could go on but, really, this is one you have
to see. And add to your list of film noir be-bop nights.
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