Category Archives: 1-By Laksh

All these articles are from Laksh’s desk

‘The Stranger’

Source: Wikipedia

One of the striking features of ‘The Stranger’ is the characterization and enacting of lead character (Franz Kindler/Professor Charles Rankin)by Orson Welles. As a man who is lost in his own world of what is right and wrong, hence disconnected with reality, he brings in a tormented yet fatalistic feature to his portrayal. Had he played the character like a true diabolic mind, it would have come out flat. Instead, he digs deep into the psychological aspect of a devil, and presents himself as someone who is evil alright, but as if he is forced to, like a puppet handled by invisible strings, like a moth drawn to a flame.

A must watch for all Orson Welles’s fans.

Here are a few interesting tidbits (Source: Wikipedia)

  1. Welles was given the chance to direct the film and prove himself able to make a film on schedule and under budget—something he was so eager to do that he accepted a disadvantageous contract. In September 1945 Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth signed a guarantee that Welles would owe International Pictures any of his earnings, from any source, above $50,000 a year if he did not meet his contractual obligations.
  2. Welles had endeavored to personalize the film and develop a nightmarish tone.
Shot where Wilson plays checkers with Potter…
  • …you can look behind Potter and see a mirror behind him, and through the mirror see Potter and Wilson again, and then see the window behind the camera, and see through that window to cars, buildings and natural sunlight. It’s truly radical.

Related Links:

Wikipedia on The Stranger

The man who cheated himself

Lee J.Cobb is etched in our minds as the Juror #3 from Sidney Lumet’s ’12 Angry Men’. He is immortalized as a highly prejudiced and cynical individual, who wouldn’t give up his version of truth till the last minute. ‘The man who cheated himself’ is probably like an origins story, where all of his cynicism began 🙂
As a loving brother and a man desperate to win his lady love, and torn between the affections, he gives a brilliant performance. From the first shot, to the last, with his wry comment of ‘she got under my skin’, he holds your attention. Ably supported by other cast and crew, the film is a must watch for all the fans of noir genre.

Here’s an interesting tidbit about the producer Jack M. Warner

In 1958 Warner was dismissed from his position at Warner Bros. by his father. The two had become estranged after the elder Warner divorced his first wife Irma, Jack’s mother, in 1935. Jack was never reconciled to his father’s new wife Ann Page. The son learned only through announcements in the film industry’s trade press that he had lost his job. He later wrote a novel Bijou Dream based loosely on his relationship with his father, who died in 1978.

Source: Wikipedia

Too late for tears

By United Artists – Film Noir of the Week, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3417089

Through a fluke circumstance a ruthless woman stumbles across a suitcase filled with $60,000, and she is determined to hold onto it even it if means murder.

IMDB.com

The movie is engaging throughout, with enough twists and turns. What’s interesting is the take-off the film in the opening scene itself, where in we get a sense of the lead character’s motivation and the plot’s movement. Very rarely do we see this kind of speed in story telling.

Related links

Mubi.com
Body Heat