Film Review
Nicholas Ray's debut feature may not have been particularly well
received when it was first released but today it is considered one of
the finest examples of American film noir, even if it does play a
little fast and loose with some of the unwritten rules of the
genre.
They Live by Night
stands apart from most noir thrillers in that the central characters
are genuine innocents who, in no way, deserve the cruel fate that is in
store for them. They are hapless victims of a world that shows
them no mercy and, in the best tradition of film noir, once they have
begun their descent into Hell, there is no reprieve, no way back.
This is film noir with a searing human edge to it.
They Live by Night was based
on Edward Anderson's Depression Era novel
Thieves Like Us, which was itself
inspired by the real-life exploits of Bonnie and Clyde. Although
he had only a few screenwriting credits under his belt at the time,
Nicholas Ray was so keen to adapt the novel as a film that RKO
executive Dore Schary was encouraged to take a gamble and allow Ray to
direct the film. Crucially, Ray was given a level of creative
control over the film that was exceedingly rare in Hollywood at the
time, and this is apparent in the end result, which is as much an
auteur piece as a conventional film noir thriller.
The most significant of Ray's innovations was the use of a helicopter
to shoot the famous tracking shot at the start of the film, where the
robbers are pursued by police after their prison break-out. This
is the first occasion in which a helicopter was used for this purpose
and is one of the elements that contributes to the film's striking
modernity and realism. Ray strives for authenticity throughout
the film and achieves this though naturalistic performances, extensive
use of real locations and some highly inventive camerawork which draws
the audience right into the heart of the action at crucial moments in
the narrative.
Much of the film's impact derives from the contributions from its two
lead actors, Cathy O'Donnell and Farley Granger, who epitomise the
young innocents caught up in a vicious, ugly, vice-ridden world.
Granger, too often cited as an actor of limited ability, is perfect in
the role of the hopelessly naive Bowie and brings a suitably
understated pathos to many of the film's most memorable sequences -
notably the 20 dollar wedding scene and the tragic denouement. It
was Granger's arresting portrayal in this film, arguably one of his
best, that led the actor to being immediately cast in Hitchcock's
Rope
(1948).
The themes of disaffected youth and youngsters unable to free
themselves from the uncompromising adult milieu that surrounds them
would resurface in Nicholas Ray's best-known film a few years later,
Rebel Without A Cause
(1955).
They Live by
Night would be subsequently remade by Robert Altman in 1974, as
Thieves Like Us, although this
scarcely bears comparison with Ray's gripping debut masterwork.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
During the 1930s, three convicts make a successful break from a prison
farm and go on the run in a stolen car. Two of the men are
seasoned bank robbers, Chicamaw and T-Dub; the third, Bowie, is a young
man wrongly convicted for murder. Bowie is determined to hire a
lawyer to establish his innocence but for this he needs money, so he
agrees to help Chicamaw and T-Dub pull a bank robbery. With the
police on their trail, the crooks hide out in a gas station.
Here, Bowie gets to know Keechie, the daughter of the station's
owner. Realising that they are in love, Bowie and Keechie decide
to strike out on their own and start a new life with Bowie's share of
the stolen money. What they do not know is that the police
mistakenly believe that Bowie is the bank robbers' leader and are
determined to capture him, dead or alive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.