Angels Flying Too Close To The Ground-I Hear The Noise Of
Wings-A Drifter’s Tale-Alice Faye And Dana Andrews’ “Fallen Angel” (1945(-A
Film Review
DVD Review
By Seth Garth
Fallen Angel, starring Alice Faye, Dana Andrews, Linda
Darnell, directed by Otto Preminger in his prime, 1945
I am not going to fall all over myself spending good
cyberspace getting into the thick of the “dispute,” nice tame word for a civil
war, that has flared up at this publication. That is the dispute between young
Sarah Lemoyne, who in the interest of transparency which seems to be a by-word
these troubles days when nothing seems to be what it is on its face, or at
least people want to suspect some deeper motive I have given some advice about
how to handle my old corner boy from back in North Adamsville high school days
her sparring partner Sam Lowell. Grandfatherly advice is the way Sarah put and
that seems about right except to the gossips who think “something is going on”
between us which is ridiculous although I would have to admit that if I was
younger I wouldn’t be late taking a run at her assuming that I was between one
of my three marriages not made in heaven. Sam, if he were honest which is not
likely these days, would have too although if Laura Perkins sees this I am only
kidding. All of this to say I am glad, lemmings to the sea glad, to be doing a
film noir review after some time away beating down both Sherlock Holmes’ door
and young fellow reviewer Will Bradley’s as well. What has happened is that Sam
is so wrapped up in his dispute with Sarah that he let this one get away and
Greg Green, our esteemed site manager, tagged me for the assignment. But
enough, to the chase.
My mother, rest her soul, maybe, when I was a kid, when
her brood of five boys and two girls were growing up warned me, us against
drifters, grafters and grifters, especially the latter since they will take all
your money and laugh on the way out of town. Naturally I ignored that warning
when I came of age and was totally enchanted by these guys, mostly guys then
anyway although more than one woman acquaintance did me worse than any grifter
ever did, and had done my fair share of drifting especially after Vietnam did
me in about what was what in this wicked old world. So from minute one of this
film Otto Preminger’s Fallen Angel
when Eric, lets call him Eric, Eric Stanton since that was the name he used
when he grabbed a marriage certificate in his big end around on-screen scam,
played by 1940s heartthrob Dana Andrews, got hauled off a Greyhound San
Francisco bus by the world-weary driver after pulling the oldest trick in the
book-the sleeping passenger who overshot his ticketed destination- I was all
in. Not only pulled off that freaking bus in the dead of night by that bastard
driver but wound up in some Podunk town, the name does not matter since such
towns were, are, legion the exception being that this Podunk is along the
Pacific Coast Highway with nice views of the Pacific heading to the Japan Seas.
Eric, with a solo buck in his pocket heads to the
all-night diner one can find in even the crankiest of towns. The joint, Pops
Eats, it figured right will become headquarters for a time for Eric as he tries
to turn that dollar bill into some working capital. Yeah, Eric is down and out
right this moment but he is a big idea man, some working, some no but in the
drifter, grifter racket you play the percentages and watch out for the dirty
coppers who want to spoil your play. Here is Eric’s problem, a problem which
will dodge him the rest of the film so you know it had to be a woman. A
freaking waitress named Stella, played by saucy Linda Darnell, who has half the
guys on the West Coast crawling up walls and spending sleepless nights trying
to get into her bed (implied remember this is Code Hollywood). This Stella to
my mind is nothing but a tramp, maybe not the worst round heels that has hit
the streets but working her way up the food chain. Any man’s woman is what we
called it back in the day, hell, whore and heart-breaking ball-buster if you
really want to know.
Frankly a self-starter like Eric doesn’t figure to get
into the claws of a she-devil like Stella (or maybe she was just a girl looking
out for herself in a hard-ass world not selling her good looks and trophy wife
aspect too cheaply). Maybe I missed something in her allure to the male sex but
even senior citizen Pops tried to take a run at her, a run at his employee
serving them off the arm at his joint (although her attendance record left
something to be desired when she was out with some guy, who knows who, much to
Pops’ chagrin). In any case Stella did get her claws into Eric and had him
running through hoops to marry her. Problem-no dough. That is when after
getting a little working capital doing a promo job for a fakir, a fly-by-night
fortune teller, he gets the bright idea of going off and romancing the younger
sister, June, played by fetching Alice Faye, who seems to be more his speed but
who knows what churns a guy up, of one of the town’s leading families. The play
is to marry her, grab her share of the family dough and then divorce her. I
liked the play even if it seemed to have too many moving parts.
I need not have worried because dear sweet Stella turned
up dead, very dead, one late night after Eric had married June (and had taken
off on his wedding night to see, well, to see Stella bad play, very bad). Guess
who the number one fall is? Yeah, Eric has to think quickly because otherwise
he will take the big step-off at the Q some forlorn midnight and then he really
would hear the angelic noise of wings, hear them loud and clear. He and June
take off for Frisco town to grab the dough since no matter what he has done she
loves the guy, wants him to be whatever he wants to be, no questions asked.
While in Frisco June gets picked up by the coppers and sent back to Podunk to
put the squeeze play on Eric. This is where this seemingly naïve small-town
girl with stars in her eyes shows her grit though. She doesn’t knuckle under,
doesn’t rat him out to the local coppers. Meanwhile Eric has finally put two
and two together since he didn’t do it. George a guy from Stella’s old home
town of San Diego who had dated her on the night she was murdered. No. Pops.
Come on. No, it was an old New York City ex-cop named Judd who had been kicked
off the force for being too rough on the clientele. He had been sitting in Pops
all along seeing what a tramp Stella was, seeing her moving toward Eric and
that was that. So, yeah, Judd will be hearing the noise of wings. As for June
and Eric, Christ he finally woke up to June’s charms for their own sake. About
time. This film and review was certainly better than dodging the Sarah-Sam
dispute.
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