In The Time Of The
Soviet-American World War II Friendship-With Edward Myrtryk’s Seven Miles From Alcatraz In Mind
By Film Critic Emeritus Sam
Lowell
Okay, okay regular
readers of this space (and of the on-line version of the American Film Gazette) know that I have, how did Pete Markin put
it, oh yeah, put myself out to pasture. In other words retired from the day to
day grind of film reviews what with the inevitable deadlines sneaking up and
giving me heartburn when I haven’t figured out a “hook” to tie the review up
with and Pete is e-mailing every other minute I had had enough. I had conned my
old friend, colleague and competitor Sandy Salmon (from that same American Film Gazette where he was a
regular film critic with a by-line long before I began to occasionally write
for the publication) into doing the yeoman’s work until he in his turn will
retire and let younger hands get their chance. I also mentioned in that notice
of retirement that I would occasionally comment on whatever I felt like
commenting on as long as I didn’t have to meet some damn deadline.
I have of late been
impressed by some of Sandy’s reviews which are pretty good and which I have no
quarrel with. What I have noticed when he reviews older films which is what
this space is more and more dedicated to is that some remark he makes or some
insight of his gets me to the computer to make a comment. That is what I am up
to today in regard to a recent review he did of a 1940s World War II film, part
propaganda, part action thriller entitled Seven
Miles From Alcatraz. The “hook” for me was not the fact that it was
directed by Edward Myrtryk who would after the war be red-baited and
scapegoated as one of the Hollywood Ten, guys who wouldn’t snitch on their
fellows who might have in the past been reds, you know, communists . Honorably
done at the time although unlike Howard Fast and Dalton Trumbo he eventually
spilled his guts to whoever would listen to save his career. That direction
might have been part of what I was looking at which I will explain in a minute
since the thrust of the film fit in very well with what the American Communist
Party on orders from Moscow were doing to help the war effort once the Soviets
became allies in 1941.
No, what got me about
this film was that even hardened criminals could under the story-line presented
aid the war effort, could in this case be anti-Nazi fighters. My first reaction
was WTF, yeah, that is exactly what I thought. Here is the gist of the story. A
couple of hard cases tired of Alcatraz, the “Rock”, the supposedly inescapable
Rock out in the dangerous Frisco Bay escaped to a lighthouse out in the harbor,
out by the Japan currents from what I could gather. At that lighthouse there
was the lighthouse keeper (an important job in the treacherous waters in the Bay),
his daughter and a couple of other guys, one a goof but the other who just so
happened to turn out to be a Nazi spy. A Nazi spy who is connected in with a
group of fellow conspirators who have plans to blow up half of Frisco town once
they grab a submarine off that lighthouse and get back to the Fatherland.
Naturally they get nowhere once these cons get their patriotic fervor up after
they “realize” that if Frisco town goes the Rock goes too if they get captured
and are returned there before that event takes place. The conspiracy and the
sub once the military gets a fix on them from the lighthouse keeper after the
cons struggle with the Nazi agents trying to get back home goes to the briny
deep. Fair enough nobody liked the idea, least of all me, of half of Frisco
town being blown up.
What is really galling
though is the idea that these hardened hoods were to be considered
cinematically part of the great united front to wipe the Nazis and their allies
off the face of the earth. Such guys from Steubenville, Ohio and Hazard,
Kentucky who were itching to volunteer once the Japanese did their dastardly
deeds at Pearl Harbor I understand as part of the front. Guys building ships,
welding like crazy on three shifts to produce a ship a day I get it. Rosy the
riveter picking up the slack when the menfolk went off to war great. Granny
planting her Victory Garden, nice work. Kids running around getting string and
aluminum foil for the war effort good young citizens. But cons who would as
soon as put a slug in you, hey, in that light-keeper if it came to it before
they “got religion” on what was what with the damn Nazis no I cannot buy that.
What was Dmytryk thinking anyway when he took on this film.
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