Film Review
Beat the Devil is a
wonderfully tongue-in-cheek yet totally bizarre concoction of screwball
comedy and film noir adventure thriller, which manages to be
irresistibly funny in spite of a plot that is childishly absurd and at
times unfathomable. Director John Huston intended it to be a
spoof of his earlier noir films, particularly
The Maltese Falcon (1941) and
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
(1948), and he succeeded admirably.
The film's production was problematic, with Huston working under a
tight time constraint and writer Truman Capote busy churning out pages
of screenplay whilst the film was in the process of being shot.
Indeed, some of the dialogue is improvised, which adds a certain raw
realism to some scenes. The humour is often so subtle that the
viewer is occasionally wrong-footed into thinking this is a straight
film noir, but then a sudden burst of slapstick quickly reminds us that
it really is a comedy.
Beat the Devil has an
extraordinary cast - possibly the most impressive cast line up of any
of Huston's film. There is Humphrey Bogart subtly parodying his
own classic film noir persona, Gina Lollobrigida showing a surprising
aptitude for comedy, Robert Morley and Peter Lorre making an effective
double act as two comical gangster-types (an obvious parody of the
Greenstreet-Lorre pairing in
The
Maltese Falcon), and Jennifer Jones and Edward Underdown as the
quintessentially English upper crust couple who are anything but.
The film was ill-received when it was first released, and Bogart
loathed it (partly because he was unable to recoup the huge sum of
money he sank into it), but it rapidly acquired a cult status and today
it enjoys much of the popularity and acclaim of Huston's other great
films. If you're going to send up film noir, this is definitely
the way to do it.
© James Travers 2008
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Next John Huston film:
Casino Royale (1967)
Film Synopsis
Billy Dannreuther and his wife Maria are on their way to make their
fortune in Africa, but are held up in an Italian port whilst their
steamboat undergoes some repair work. Here, they meet an
eccentric English couple, Harry and Gwendolen Chelm, and a strange
foursome led by a man named Peterson. It gradually becomes
apparent that they all have one thing in common - to secure the rights
to land that is reputed to be rich in uranium ore. The question
is - which of them will get there first...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.