Film Review
The film which catapulted Alan Ladd to stardom at the age of 28 was
this respectable adaptation of the popular Graham Greene novel
A Gun for Sale. One of the
best of the early film noir thrillers, it had an enormous influence on
subsequent films of the genre. The moral ambiguity of police and
outlaws, the solitude and ruthlessness of a marginalized killer,
notions of honour, betrayal and revenge - these are all themes which
would provide the bedrock for the classic film noir crime thrillers of
the 1940s and '50s. French director Jean-Pierre Melville drew
heavily on this film for his existential 1968 policier
Le
Samourai, in which Alain Delon plays a lone hit man who is
virtually a carbon copy of Alan Ladd's character in this film.
Interestingly, Alan Ladd was not Frank Tuttle's first choice for the
part of Raven. Originally, Robert Preston was considered for the
role, before Tuttle decided to take a gamble and gave the part to the
comparatively unknown Alan Ladd. The actor was required to dye
his blond hair black, to match his character's name. Whilst the
film was being shot, Ladd was suffering from pneumonia - something
which adds greatly to his character's chilling lack of emotion and a
sinister aura of repressed malice.
Although he received fourth billing for the film's initial release -
after Veronica Lake, Robert Preston and Laird Cregar - Alan Ladd
dominates the film throughout. In some sequences, when the
psychotic nature of his character becomes apparent, he is terrifying;
in others, a gentler persona can be glimpsed, making Raven a
sympathetic yet genuinely disturbing anti-hero.
As a standard Hollywood femme fatale, Lake fails to have the impact she
has in many of her other films of this period, and, totally eclipsed by
Ladd's performance, Preston is reduced to a supporting
role. The bear-like Laird Cregar gets to play the second
most interesting character in the film, the peppermint chomping villain
Gates, who, with his gutless immorality, infantile cowardice and chubby
appearance, looks suspiciously like a comic book caricature of
Mussolini.
The Ladd-Lake pairing was one of the reasons for the success of
This Gun for Hire. The two
actors would appear together in a few other films:
The Glass Key (1942),
The Blue Dahlia (1946) and
Saigon (1948). As Lake's
career dwindled, Ladd became a major star in Hollywood, his most
memorable roles being in
The Great
Gatsby (1949) and
Shane
(1953).
Whilst
This Gun for Hire
discards the darker, sadistic elements of Greene's novel, it retains
much of its atmosphere (even if the main setting is shifted from a
dreary English provincial town to sunny Los Angeles). The
film also downplays the novel's subversive political subtext. In
both the novel and the film, the killer Raven ends up as an unwitting
instrument of the State, effectively an unpaid assassin. He
brings about the downfall of a dangerous traitor not through noble
ideas of patriotism but through the baser motive of revenge. The
irony of this is somewhat lost in the film; instead, the screenwriters
skewed the narrative slightly to slip in some clumsy wartime propaganda
messages. Yet, in spite of this, the film holds together very
well and, if you can forgive the obligatory twee ending, is one of the
most enjoyable and stylish of the early film noirs.
James Cagney remade the film in 1957 as
Short Cut to Hell, the actor's
one and only directorial credit.
© James Travers 2008
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