***Out In The 1950s Crime Noir
Night-"Come On Now, Get With The Program- Crime, I Repeat, Crime Does Not
Pay"- Richard Basehart’s “Tension"
But see the story would become really tedious if somebody didn’t kill somebody, and so old Barney winds up dead. And of course Warren (or his changed identity self, Paul) is fit six ways to Sunday for the frame. Someone is going to the chair for this one, this murder one job, and Warren better start making a list of his last requests.
DVD Review
Tension, starring Richard Basehart, Audrey Totter, Barry Sullivan, Paramount Pictures, 1950
Tension, starring Richard Basehart, Audrey Totter, Barry Sullivan, Paramount Pictures, 1950
No question I am a film noir,
especially a crime film noir, aficionado. Recently I have been on a tear
reviewing various crime noir efforts and drawing comparisons between the
ones that “speak” to me and those that, perhaps, should have been left on the
cutting room floor. The classics are easy: films like Out Of the Past, Gilda,
The Lady From Shang-hai, and The Big Sleep need no additional
comment from me as their plot lines stand on their own merits. Others, because
they have a fetching, or wicked for that matter, femme fatale to muddy
the waters also get a pass, or as in Gilda a double nod for the plot and
for the femme fatale. (Be still my heart, at the thought of Rita
Hayworth, ah, dancing and singing, okay lip synching, and looking, well,
fetching while doing those difficult tasks.) The film under review, 1950’s Tension,
falls somewhere in the grey area, the plot line while it started out with a
certain amount of promise got dragged in the end toward a standard police
procedural, a kiss of death for most crime noir films in my book. And
the femme fatale is neither fetching (a la Rita) nor wicked (except for
an involvement in murder and mayhem, but they all, the femme fatales
that is, are involved in that, one way or the other, it comes with the
territory).
A quick review of the plot will
explain my bewilderment at where to place this one in the crime noir
pantheon. Warren (Richard Basehart), a Walter Middy-type, married to Claire
(Audrey Totter), a second-rate gold-digger who attached herself to Warren in
harder times (her harder times) out in Southern California when that locale was
becoming the homeland of the dreams- the post-World War II suburban
sun-drenched tract dreams. And Warren is a prime number one prospect for that
dream working nights like a mad man to get Claire those things he promised her,
or half of them anyway. But Claire, the little round-heels, is looking for
speedier stuff now that she is settled into a good thing, and a plaint husband.
And sweetheart Claire is flouting her stuff right in front of Warren with a guy
of unknown resources (Barney) with some dough, a nice car, and a place on the
beach in up-scale Malibu to sun herself. Well, a girl has to look out for
herself, a round-heels girl anyway, right?
The plot thickens when Warren, no
longer content to be a door-mat, decides to kill Mr. Somebody over this
transgression (Barney, heaven’s no, not lovely, wicked, maybe just
misunderstood Claire). The long and short of it is that after planning the
perfect murder by changing his identity (new idea, right?) he gets cold feet,
as Walter Middys do, or maybe a slug of rationality that maybe, just maybe,
sweet Claire ain’t worth it and good riddance. Especially after, as part of his
change of identity, he meets a honey, Mary (played by the leggy Cyd Charisse),
who is more his speed and, well, is happy to think about that suburban house
and that white picket fence with 2.2 kids, and a dog, one dog.
But see the story would become really tedious if somebody didn’t kill somebody, and so old Barney winds up dead. And of course Warren (or his changed identity self, Paul) is fit six ways to Sunday for the frame. Someone is going to the chair for this one, this murder one job, and Warren better start making a list of his last requests.
Except of course, crime noir or not, guys who don’t
commit murder and mayhem are not stepping off for such crimes, at least in
1950s movies. And that is where the tedious police procedural aspect of this
film meets low-rent femme fatale when L.A.’s finest get on the case and
“entrap” if you can believe that about the police in 1950, or now, everybody
connected with the crime (except of course, the deceased Barney, although he
too might have had a motive, who knows). And guess who is going to take the
fall for this one? Well, guess. But you could see where this one was headed
from a long way off.
Hey didn’t Phillip Marlowe work these same slumming L.A.
streets in those days. Often taking a little off-hand beating before swinging
the scales of justice back where they belong. He could have been used here to
tell Claire what’s what, and to spice this one up.
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