In The Days When Parlor
Pink Private Detectives Ruled The Roost- The Film Adaptation Of Crime Novelist Agatha
Christie’s “The Pale Horse” (1997)- A Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Pale Horse, starring
Colin Buchanan, based on the crime novel of the same name by Agatha Christie,
1997
[In the interest of
continuity although this review was written well after a previous one by Sarah
Lemoyne reviewing Dick Powell’s Varsity Show
I have placed it here today with hers since the pair are still in the throes of
their “dispute.” Greg Green, site manager]
This is no pun I am on
my high horse, pale or otherwise, today. No, not about this so-called dispute
between my old friend from high school day Seth Garth’s young protégé or
whatever else they have decided to call her relationship with him Sarah Lemoyne.
Mentor is the word I think they have been using to try to cover up whatever is
going on there. When Seth Garth is involved, as in the interest of transparency
I will admit was true of me as well when I was younger, when it comes to women
younger or older don’t believe a word of “just friends” noise, a word of
denial. That is when you double down on a guy like Seth as I have learned from
bitter experience in the days when he would think nothing of sweeping up some
woman I was interested in with no moral qualms whatsoever. Would laugh at an
expression like “moral qualms” a term unknown to hard corner boys from the old
Acre neighborhood of North Adamsville and by extension in the cutthroat world
of film reviewers where if you don’t cut somebody’s idea, some witty insight, some
weird take on a film then you are not long for the profession. Why else would
anybody put up with such doings when you are only giving your subjective
opinion for the world to feast on (and now on the downside of the Internet experience
have to put up with all kinds of dingbat thoughts from average citizens who
know think that based on having seen a film that gives them the right, the god-given
right to read some of the stuff to bore the rest of us with their ill-considered
“takes” on the spot).
In any case that is not
what I am after today although I continue to steam, mighty puffs of steam, over
the now almost libelous comments Ms. Lemoyne has made about who has, or hasn’t,
written my reviews for me other than myself once I moved up the film review
food chain many years ago. Totally libelous and subject to legal action if I
was that kind of guy but I am not a snitch is the false accusation that long
ago I used the studio press releases as my reviews with just the top snipped
off and mailed in to whatever publication I was writing for at the time. I have
just mentioned the cutthroat nature of our profession, so I am inured to such
misinformation about my career. I will admit Ms. Lemoyne writes good reviews
and had enough sense to go to Seth as a mentor or whatever he is to her at the
office or elsewhere, but I can handle these young and hungry types since that
is exactly where I started out trashing the legendary film critic Walt Wilson
when he was riding high and now nobody remembers his name. What has me burning
up today is one Greg Green’s lame attempt to bring back parlor pink private
detectives with this review of the film adaptation of one of Agatha Christie’s
crime novels The Pale Rider. (Pale
rider a reference from the Bible meaning death a not unimportant part of the
plot line in both the novel and the film which diverts from the novel in
several ways but is on point about the death part, plenty of it and who the
hell the pale rider is when the deal, the final deal, goes down)
Everybody knows,
everybody seriously interested film noir which hinges in many cases on the
plots of crime novels, knows that I have written what many, except apparently
the totally ignorant Ms. Lemoyne who was not even born when I made my big
splash and whom Seth should have wised up, call the definitive book on film
noir. I like to think that the reason for that status was my ground-breaking
work on the private detective novel on film with its moody, dark scenarios and
hang-by the fingernails twists and turns before the crummy felons get some
quick and rough justice from our mere mortal no superhero bombast gumshoes. Moreover that noir explosion and the work of
crime novel writers like Jim Jenson, Jack Cullen, and above all Raymond
Chandler and Dashiell Hammett had put paid to the old-fashioned amateur
detective sitting around waiting for the villain to out of shame or something
throw up his or her hands and come clean, come to justice without so much as by
your leave. Take a warming cell or the big step-off for their errors in
judgment while the crafty amateur goes off to lunch or on holiday after such strenuous
work.
As Zack James, my and
Seth’s old friend Alex’s youngest brother, has made clear in a number of
astounding crime short stories about real private detectives this is no
business for amateurs. I heartily agree since that profession is mainly about
“repo” work the professional repo men can’t handle, bogus insurance claims,
missing husbands or wives, looking for lost animals, dogs and cats mainly, and
in the old days, peeping Toms on divorce cases involving sultry adultery (and
which saved many a struggle P.I. before no fault divorce and just living
together destroyed that part of the market leaving some guys, mostly guys, with
nothing but hanging around a beaten down desk taking generous slugs from the
low-shelf whiskey bottle in that bottom desk drawer). But on the screen, and in
crime novels, those gumshoes, those peepers get the royal treatment, get the
royal treatment if they are hard-nosed, tough, wind-mill chasers,
skirt-chasers, heavy smokers and drinkers, and not afraid to take a slug or
two, a roughing up for the good of the cause. Lenny Larkin was the epitome of
the type who was also not afraid to whiplash a guy for looking at him the wrong
way. Naturally when you mention Raymond Chandler’s Phillip Marlowe chasing a
million wind-mills for some old general, or looking for some lady in the lake,
or looking for big Moose’s lady friend comes to mind. Sam Spade of course from
the Dashiell Hammett stable not only chased skirts, took a few punches for her,
but when it was him or her he sent her over, sent her to the big step-off and
the fuck with the stuff of dreams trying to own some freaking fake bird.
Which brings us to this
little film. What we have here, a guy named Eric somebody does the last name
matter since he is not going into the annals of private detection, no way. A
damn sculptor, not even an amateur detective but a guy who makes art, modern
art and not bad from the quick looks we get when he is around his art gallery, a
guy who is trying to keep the noose from around his pretty head when he is accidently
involved in a murder when he looked too much like the real felon and the
coppers, the public coppers, as they will grabbed him and were ready to call it
a day on the case. Sent him off with a smile claiming he wasn’t much of a
sculptor anyway. Case closed.
They set this film in
1960s London so you get a modish crowd as background including two young women,
one very rich and proper taking a ride down in class to give our Eric a run for
his money but whom he spurns and another, Rhonda something does it matter her
last name since she will not go down in the annals of private detection, no
way. The latter he met at a funeral after her friend had died from what
appeared to be some natural cause disease. The connection. The priest who was
supposed to bring a message to a third party as the deathbed wish of another
women who also appears to have died of natural causes is the guy whom Eric is
supposed of have murdered and Rhonda friend’s name was on that message. Rhonda
is not buying natural causes and so she is on board as an assistant sleuth. No
femme fatale not at all but another freaking amateur detective to gum up the
works.
Later naturally as well
there will be a love interest between these two and I can’t blame Eric on that
score since she is one of those fetching types, yes, the ones who are not ice
cold beautiful with personalities to match but the ones who an hour later you
wonder what they are doing and are willing to do it with you. But just as
naturally in these parlor pink private detection novels there is a red flag,
although I hesitate to use that expression now that it is a catch word among
the world’s growing population of conspiracy theorists. A prime suspect for
this gumshoe pair centered on an eccentric wealthy art collector who had been
chair-ridden since youth with polio. That was a ruse though, a cover for a very
successful bank robbery in which the plotline involved taking the robbery
proceeds and investing in art. Investing in a time when the art market was
exploding, and he actually when “outed” as prime suspect for a while got to
keep his ill-gotten gains. No, the real villain, the guy who in his
psychopathic mind went over the edge was the attending physician of a number of
patients who had been involved in what turned out to be an insurance fraud
scheme with a few modern-day witches a la Macbeth
and a bookie covering the insurance angle and the good doctor subtlety
poisoning them using ordinary consumer goods like toothpaste as the murder
weapons.
Nice play, nice racket
which any old Acre corner boy would appreciate but when Rhonda became the
subject of the scheme and nobody knew how to cure her you know that mad monk
doctor was doomed. It was the toothpaste, stupid. Get the freaking antidote asap.
In the end Eric and Rhonda go off in the sunset their amateur private detection
minute over. Not a minute too soon either.
No comments:
Post a Comment