Film Review
Violent Saturday is a pretty good example of what can happen when
two wildly contrasting genres are brought together without any real attempt
to meld them into a coherent whole. The film begins promisingly enough
as a classic film noir caper movie, but for some inexplicable reason it suddenly
careers off into Douglas Sirk territory and starts to resemble an overly
sentimental, and not very convincing, melodrama. The film then zips
back and forth between the two genres, getting more hackneyed and irritatingly
mawkish as it does so.
The first film that Richard Fleischer directed for 20th Century Fox, this
proved to be such a hit that the director landed himself a contract with
the company. He stayed with Fox for the next fifteen years, delivering
such varied films as
The Girl in the Red
Velvet Swing (1955),
Fantastic
Voyage (1966) and
Doctor Dolittle
(1967). By the mid-1950s, Fleischer had a string of fairly impressive
B-movie noir thrillers behind him, most notably
Follow Me Quietly (1949) and
Armored Car Robbery (1950).
He was now keen to widen his repertoire, and this ambition is painfully apparent
in the somewhat hybrid character of
Violent Saturday.
Fleischer handles the film's thriller and action sequences with his customary
aplomb, but the more intimate sequences are heavy-handed and evoke the opposite
reaction to what is intended. The obvious failings of the lacklustre
screenplay are exacerbated by the mostly undistinguished performances, and
the only member of the cast who does not disappoint is Lee Marvin, who makes
a suitably vicious gun-slinging villain, prefiguring his iconic role in John
Sturges'
The Magnificent Seven
(1960).
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Richard Fleischer film:
Fantastic Voyage (1966)
Film Synopsis
A small Arizona town sleeps, unaware of the heap of trouble that is coming
its way. Boyd Fairchild, the owner of a large copper mine, contemplates
having an affair with nurse Linda Sherman just to get back at his cheating
wife, whilst his engineer Shelley Martin has to endure the contempt of his
son for not winning himself a medal for valour in WWII. Meanwhile,
a seasoned crook named Harper is planning to rob the town's bank with his
two criminal associates, Dill and Chapman. The robbery takes a far
more violent turn than expected and in the ensuing mêlée Fairchild's
wife is killed. Martin has the opportunity to redeem himself in the
eyes of his son by helping his father defeat the bank robbers in a bloody
shootout. Fairfield is left grieving for the wife he loves, but his
loss is compensated by the affection offered to him by Linda.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.