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Scarlet Street
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Directed by Fritz Lang.
Masterfully directed by Fritz Lang, Scarlet Street is a bleak film in which an ordinary man succumbs first to vice and then to murder. Christopher Cross (Edward G. Robinson) is a lonely man married to a nagging wife. Painting is the only thing that brings him joy. Cross meets Kitty (Joan Bennett) who, believing him to be a famous painter, begins an affair with him. Encouraged by her lover, con man Johnny Prince (Dan Duryea) Kitty persuades Cross to embezzle money from his employer in order to pay for her lavish apartment. In that apartment, happy for the first time in his life, Cross paints Kitty's picture. Johnny then pretends that Kitty painted to portrait, which has won great critical acclaim. Finally realizing he has been manipulated, Cross kills Kitty, loses his job, and because his name has been stolen by Kitty, is unable to paint. He suffers a mental breakdown as the film ends, haunted by guilt. Kitty and Johnny are two of the most amoral and casual villains in the history of film noir, both like predatory animals completely without conscience. Milton Krasner's photography is excellent in its use of stark black-and-white to convey psychological states. Fritz Lang is unparalleled in his ability to convey the desperation of hapless, naïve victims in a cruelly realistic world. ~ Linda Rasmussen, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Scarlet Street (1945, USA, Frit ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"The idea behind most noir, as explained wonderfully by my pal Eddie J. Oslan, is "a guy falls for a girl, does something really dumb and gets caught." That's true in Scarlet Street, another great film from the German master Fritz Lang, but there's a crucial difference- we want the guy to suceed, as what he want is resonable. Watching this movie and seeing the protogonists' mistakes was almost painful, which was offset by the fact that the movie is also very funny. Edward G. Robinson stars as Christopher Cross (wipe the smirk off your face, I'm not making any adult comptemporary jokes), a cashier for a big corporation who lives a really hellish life. He's in a loveless marridge, has no real friends and only finds solace in his hobby, painting (he originally wanted to be an artist). What makes Chris different from so many other noir characters is that he we feel for him because he has done everything right- he tries to provide for his wife, do a good job at work, and his life stil ... " [More]
JimBellJimBell Scarlet Street
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
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"Scarlet Street (1945) is a well-made movie, a classic non-detective film noir. Here’s the set-up. A lonely and good middle-aged cashier and Sunday painter, Christopher Cross (Edward G. Robinson) “saves” an attractive young woman, “Kitty” March (Joan Bennett) from being beaten by a guy who is actually her boyfriend, Johnny Prince (Dan Duryea). When the old guy lets her think he is an established and successful artist, her con-artist boyfriend starts scheming to take advantage of the innocent. The suspense is whether the various cons and extortions will work. And how will Chris react? In a desperate attempt to win her friendship and love, Chris steals. He sets her up in a Greenwich Village apartment where he can paint, and where Johnny always seems to be around. Johnny’s get-rich-quick scheme is to sell the paintings and tell Chris they are in storage. At this point, many things could go wrong with the movie and create a flop, but director Fritz ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
German-American master Fritz Lang produced and directed this gritty film noir for Universal Pictures, notable as the first Hollywood feature in which the real criminal goes unpunished. When a mild-mannered cashier (Edward G. Robinson) becomes enamored with an amoral woman (Joan Bennett), she ensnares him in an embezzlement scheme which leads to a murder. Her lover is fingered and executed for the murder, while Robinson's character gets off free. Lang's daring, almost assaultive imagery divided critics and audiences who might have expected less Gothic melodrama. Robinson and Bennett are chilling villains in an era when it was rare not to tack on a happy, or at least moralistic, ending. The script was adapted by Dudley Nichols from a French play filmed by Jean Renoir as La Chienne. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
 



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