***Out In The B-Film Noir Night-
Strange Illusion
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
DVD Review
Strange Illusion, starring Jimmy
Lydon, Warren William, 1945
Any mother or father of a college
student would be justly proud of, and consider it money well spent, if her of
his son or daughter used his or her college career wisely and pursued one of
the learned professions, doctor, lawyer, professor, and the like. And any
mother of a college student would be justly proud of, and consider it money
well spent, if her son used his college career wisely and was, beside the pursuing
the rigors of intellectual studies, doubling up as an amateur sleuth to figure
out who killed his father. All without showing from the film’s beginning to end
any signs of cracking a course book, or getting his suit and tie all messed up.
That mythical search for his father’s killer, like something out of the Greek
mist of time, is what drives the suspense in the film under review, Strange Illusion. Beautiful work,
beautifully done and then back to the books if such mundane tasks will even
appeal to him then.
Our college student, Paul, our 1945
college student and therefore more likely to be from the upper crust in the
days before the colleges opened up a more democratic vista, and at a time when
half the graduating class of any high school could have been covered by the
cost of tuition of one student today ( a little topical social commentary,
sorry) had a vision, a vision from beyond the grave that his father, a stern
old Puritan judge, who had supposedly
been killed in an accident but had actually been murdered. Murdered by a man, a man
about town, Bret, who was courting his mother with designs on marrying her. No,
Paul was not crazy if that is what you think, not certifiably so anyway, since
as it turned out Bret was in fact out for revenge on the judge for sending him
up to stir on what he considered a bum rap. Of course Bret had a little extra problem,
he liked young women, no, not under age, just young like every guy dreams about
grabbing, and then moves on. Brett is, ah, more active than that and it turned
out to be part of his undoing.
See Bret was not the main guy
pulling the strings to marry Paul’s poor widowed mother and grab her dough. He had
a confederate in a quack shrink, a doctor running a rest home for the mentally
weary who needed some dough to maintain his lifestyle. Our boy seer Paul
smelled a rat, and was hip to what was
up from about minute one, and so was the suspense except an off-hand grope of
Paul’s sister and a couple of slugs to the heart for Bret. All in a day’s work
for a college guy. Now get back to the damn books.
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