Mar 06 2010

Noir

Published by at 4:59 pm under Movies

It was a dark and dreary day yesterday, the perfect weather for a film noir, especially one from my favorite decade, the 1940s. I love the luscious lines of cars back then, the elegant clothes and hairstyles, the ability to wear furs and diamonds with impunity – pretty much everything except, you know, that tiresome war thing.

Last night’s feature was 1949’s “East Side, West Side”, starring a fabulous cast: Barbara Stanwyck, James Mason, Ava Gardner, Van Heflin, and Cyd Charisse. Not to mention Williams Conrad and Frawley in minor roles, ditto Nancy Davis, not yet Reagan. It’s set in New York’s Upper East Side, which is filmed lovingly in beautiful black and white. It even has a scene where models wander around a dress salon, showing off the latest styles. I wish they still did that. The salon had uniformed maids asking the patrons whether they’d like a cigarette or a drink. Just try smoking at a couturier’s now when they’re showing the new line and see how fast you get ejected.

Stanwyck plays the long-suffering socialite wife whose husband is having an affair with Ava Gardner. Art imitating life, since Stanwyck’s real-life husband at the time, Robert Taylor, also had an affair with Ava Gardner. When you see her sashay out of a phone booth in this movie, you really can’t blame either of them. I imagine Barbara really enjoyed that scene where she slaps Ava.

Mason plays Stanwyck’s tortured husband, torn between lust for Ava and love for his wife. While he’s struggling with that, acclaimed journalist Van Heflin is falling for the nobly suffering Barbara. They both fight their feelings through platonic parties and late-night omelette sessions, while Cyd Charisse pines for Heflin, who she’s had a crush on since childhood. Triangles within triangles.

Barbara has to decide whether to stay or go, and turns to her mother, played by Gale Sondergaard, for advice. Sondergaard refers to herself as an “old woman of 55”, which is slightly alarming to hear when you’re 47. Of course, playing someone’s mother when you’re only eight years older than your on-screen child can do that to a girl. Just ask Jessie Royce Landis, who played Cary Grant’s mother in “North by Northwest” when she was, you guessed it, eight years older than he was.

I’m beginning to be concerned that I’m nine years older than Megan. Does that mean I look like her grandmother?

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5 responses so far

5 Responses to “Noir”

  1. Amberon 06 Mar 2010 at 7:32 pm

    The other day, I ran into my Mother’s moving guy as I was taking my grandmother to the clinic. The man later said to my mother “so, did your sister take your Mom to the doctors?”.

    Didn’t do a damn thing for my ego, that!

  2. Guyon 07 Mar 2010 at 4:54 am

    Everything looked elegant in the 1940’s, people were at war and trying to compensate by wearing elegant clothes and diamonds, I agee that the cars were also very diffent and you could recongnize the difference between a Chev and a Ford. Of course you’re only as old as you want to be, age is waiting for you but one must feel old in order to be old.

  3. suzyon 07 Mar 2010 at 9:28 am

    He was SO trying to flirt with your Mom and butter her up!!

  4. Mikeon 09 Mar 2010 at 10:51 am

    Looking forward to Double Indemnity on Friday!

  5. suzyon 09 Mar 2010 at 7:04 pm

    Such a great movie!!