sovay: (PJ Harvey: crow)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2024-04-18 09:03 pm
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It must be amateur night on the Milky Way

Said with sincere affection, Why Girls Leave Home (1945) is a crummy little pic. It's all shadows to dress up the cardboard and zingers to pep up the plot. B-noir by way of teensploitation, it crumples its moral panic into a mystery frame and wraps the whole ride up with a twist so delightful, it appalls me that no ritzier noir ever stole it. Not once otherwise along the way does it exceed its brief of a few thousand feet of film cranked out to fill the shorter half of a double bill. It would have been well worth its slice of the dime.

According to the clarinet swing of the credits, the screenplay was co-written by Fanya Ross Lawrence and Bradford Ropes; according to Philip Yordan, he wrote it in less than two days and if so he must have done it coming off a binge of Preminger and Welles. While the doctors wait for a dark-haired drowning victim to regain consciousness and the police look no further than her half-torn suicide note, the reporter who personally fished her out of the river opens his own investigation into her history, convinced she was no random jumper but the frightened whistleblower he had agreed to meet that night at the end of the pier: "I didn't get to her first. Someone else did." He interviews the wilted parents bewildered by their wild child, the squirrelly hipster who inducted her into the jive-jumping life, the cautious operator of the nightclub where she hustled from chorus to star, the tart roommate who fills in the fullest and bitterest picture of a girl who went looking for a career and found a racket, each installment in flashback inexorably advancing the plot to the present day where the bodies are beginning to pile up. The treatment isn't quite the full trouble in River City, but it wouldn't require too much cogitation on the part of the viewer to conclude that 78s of Artie Shaw and Glenn Miller pave the road to hostessing in back rooms where the roulette wheels are gaffed and troublesome marks may find themselves catching fatal doses of lead quicker than a soft-boiled dame can swear, "I'm going to blow the lid off the Kitten Club." If the reporter's right that one or more denizens of this hepped-up demimonde tried to snuff his canary before she could really sing, his inquiries are racing the clock of a second attempt. In the meantime, several musical numbers occur.

More than the pre-printed plot, the cast makes this shoestring confection of gats and gams. One of the ubiquitous faces of film noir before he was an Emmy-winning producer-director of tentpoles of mid-century TV, Sheldon Leonard slouched with equal conviction as mugs and thugs—I always forget I saw him first as Harry the Horse in the 1955 Guys and Dolls—and brings such comfortable cynicism to his crusading as Chris Williams of the Morning Record that he never risks transparent prose, much more resembling one of Chandler's tarnished knights when he encourages one of his seedier sources, "I'll even forget the dough I paid you for that red-hot tip that got me and my paper into a phony libel suit," or bellies up to a suspicious bar in aw-shucks impersonation of a well-heeled cattleman with a drawl that could flatten Ralph Bellamy. The detective lieutenant on the case scoffs after him, "And if you want to be a policeman, get yourself a badge!" but his amateur persistence serves the heroine far better than the official incuriosity of the law. So does the casting of Pamela Blake, whose restlessness lends more than ill-fated innocence to Diana Leslie's drive to escape the sinking middle class of her parents in favor of a little fun, a little money, something to do with her life that isn't waiting for marriage in a dead-end office job. She delivers the age-old plaint of frustrated youth as if she's working up to Mama Rose: "You don't want this, you don't want that—I can't even call my mind my own! Well, this time I'm going to do what I want to and you're not going to stop me!" The slap in the face with which her brother orders her to ditch her professional dreams explains the film's title, after which it feels grossly unfair that he wasn't the one found floating in the river. She shimmies with sheer excitement through her first all-night jam session, gradually cools and hardens into a sharp-shouldered chanteuse as chic and brittle as the cigarette holder she props with fashionable devil-may-carelessness, scornfully brazening out a direct threat, "I know all the angles and I know how to protect myself in the clinches," though if she were really as tough as her talk, she wouldn't care so much who gets capped or groomed or ground to gin-soaked obsolescence in the tinsel mill of the Kitten Club. Filling out the female focus of the story, Constance Worth's Flo offers the wised-up guidance of a pre-Code chorine, Claudia Drake's Marian Mason bears the grudge of a glamorous lush edged out of the spotlight, Lola Lane's Irene Mitchell looks coldly regal on the arm of Steve Raymond who wouldn't win any prizes for probity in show biz even if he weren't played by the chronically shifty Paul Guilfoyle. The standout of the supporting cast may still be Elisha Cook Jr., turning in a performance of unusual sleaze—he gets smacked around just to make sure the audience recognizes him, but Jimmie Lobo isn't just a wolf with a swelled head, never mind the farce of his boast that "Benny Goodman's pretty good, but I think I'm a little deeper in the groove." His presence in the Leslie household is a bad joke, all that fuss over the sophisticated new beau and then he's a shopworn punk with a clarinet. "Solid, honey, solid!" he whoops at the finish of their first duet, manic as a flak-man towing Diana past the ropes of a slumped rehearsal, "I'm telling you, Steve, you're passing up the jackpot—and a voice that'll make any microphone melt." By the time he's running the same serial line on the seminary-fresh sister he's confidentially wheedled as far as the club's always-open door, promising ingenuously that she'll "get a doctor's degree in philosophy much quicker here than in college," any viewer with half-decent defenses will have seen funnier heart attacks. It is totally superfluous under these conditions for the film to introduce a dear white-haired priest for a blarneyish come-to-Jesus moment. The catfight, on the other hand, complete with hair-pulling and handbag-whacking, fits right in.

Despite its sometimes reckless disregard for narrative logic, Why Girls Leave Home has a boffo payoff in the identity of its triple-slaying racketeer, revealed at the literal last minute with a gesture as cool as the tapping of a cigarette: damsels in distress who turn out to be femmes fatales may come a yawn a dozen even in A-noir, but the news that the prime suspect of Steve has always been the mere front man for the ruthless mastermind of Irene is a genuine twist, the underworld matriline of Remington Steele. He turns on her with the self-defensive spinelessness of the best stooges while she regards him with dangerous amusement, blurting for the assembled audience of Chris and the cops, "Sure, I'm crazy, being a front for you. This whole racket's her idea. I'm just a dummy working for peanuts . . . I've played clam long enough," at which point his heretofore arm candy removes the pistol from her purse and plugs him with the Cagneyesque epitaph, "You dirty stool pigeon!" It was foreshadowed fairly in that the first time we saw the gangsterish entrepreneur with his apparent moll, she was cautioning him about the publicity his club couldn't afford, but she remained so decoratively secondary in her succeeding appearances, including a brief lapse of flirtation with Chris in his out-of-town sucker persona, the audience had no reason to suspect her of running the show as opposed to occasionally commenting on it. Continuing the charm of the scene, Jimmie Lobo of all people is the one bystander to move fast enough to disarm Irene before she finishes off the half-conscious Diana, an atavism of decency which permits him the grace of an exit Dr. Einstein-style, scooting off the premises before the cops connect him with his more unsavory deeds. "Irene," Chris whistles in disbelief as the petite and cold-blooded criminal is led off by a strapping detective, "the woman higher up!" She flashes an undismayed smile in the direction of the Production Code: "Try and prove it." It's such a nice ending, it partly mitigates the gratuitously sexist crack on which the film goes out in tandem with the implication of romance between Chris and Diana, who presumably formed some kind of psychic connection during their one phone conversation after which she was out cold and he was flatfooting through her life like we learned nothing from Vera Caspary. I prefer to think of her continuing, at some more legitimate nightspot, her career.

Why Girls Leave Home was directed by William Berke for Producers Releasing Corporation, the type specimen of Poverty Row, and even the low-lit photography of Mack Stengler cannot confuse it for a movie with budget; I discovered it on rarefilmm in a format so ground down and jittery it could advertise for generation loss. Its opening scenes of fog-bound waterfront at night are all the more mysterious for being so hard to make out, a drive after dark could be radio even when it crashes, frame-skips punctuate the action and at one point the picture flips briefly upside down for the full experience of watching late-night TV on the fritz. I hope the Film Noir Foundation has it on their docket of restorations, both for its own sake and for the trivia that this unprepossessing object garnered two Oscar nominations. It lost in both cases to the heavyweights of Miklós Rózsa and Rodgers and Hammerstein, but Walter Greene did get the nod for Best Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture and so did Jay Livingston and Ray Evans for Best Original Song in their first of seven nominations with three eventual wins. It hasn't entered the American songbook in the same way as "It Might as Well Be Spring," but "The Cat and the Canary" is a chipperly catchy little number packed full of tongue-twister internal rhymes of which my favorite is a musician with ambition to audition for her hand, although never knew a fellow half as mellow who could sell a melody gets the extra holorime in there. The composer's demo charms me as much as Kander and Ebb doing "New York, New York." The ironic slant the song casts on its performers is just as noir as sharp lines like "Gin and high C don't mix." You get enough singers, songwriters, musicians in film noir, I hope someone's run a series of them sometime. This groove brought to you by my solid backers at Patreon.
moon_custafer: sexy bookshop mnager Dorothy Malone (Acme Bookshop)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2024-04-19 12:43 pm (UTC)(link)
In the meantime, several musical numbers occur.

*cheers*

The standout of the supporting cast may still be Elisha Cook Jr., turning in a performance of unusual sleaze—he gets smacked around just to make sure the audience recognizes him

Mr. Cook’s presence always improves whatever script he’s fallen into

picture flips briefly upside down for the full experience of watching late-night TV on the fritz.

SOLD! If I weren’t already
asakiyume: (good time)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2024-04-21 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
In the meantime, several musical numbers occur.

That was the first line I was going to make a note about! Made me laugh.
theseatheseatheopensea: Sabine Wren's Loth-cat. (Loth-cat.)

[personal profile] theseatheseatheopensea 2024-04-19 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I think I first heard about Why Girls Leave Home via one of Mark Fertig's blogs--possibly it was one of his very last posts! :(

You get enough singers, songwriters, musicians in film noir, I hope someone's run a series of them sometime.

I hope so too! I'm always here for music-centric noir! <3
theseatheseatheopensea: Lyrics from the song Stolen property, by The Triffids, handwritten by David McComb. (Default)

[personal profile] theseatheseatheopensea 2024-04-20 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
I will have to read that. I had never heard of the film before deciding to try it, which I continue not to regret.

Found it! (I've watched a bunch of Berke's movies, but I also hadn't heard of this one!)

I am now inevitably thinking about what I would include in such a lineup. Top of the list would be Black Angel (1946). I know Hell's Half Acre (1954) uses a song as a recognition token, but I still haven't managed to see it!

:D My first thought was "Phantom lady"!

ETA: sorry about that, I didn't see your edit! XD That blog was so good!
Edited 2024-04-20 00:18 (UTC)
theseatheseatheopensea: Annabelle Hurst from Department S holding a book. (Annabelle.)

[personal profile] theseatheseatheopensea 2024-04-20 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Gilda absolutely rules this list! <3 Maybe also "Party Girl"? Oh and "Blues in the night"? Hangover Square? I'll have to think about this a bit more, when I have more brain!
alexxkay: (Default)

[personal profile] alexxkay 2024-04-20 04:14 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure if it quite counts as noir, but I have fond memories of Song of the Thin Man, which features Keenan Wynn as an extremely hep cat.
gwynnega: (Basil Rathbone)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2024-04-20 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
You had me at "Elisha Cook Jr., turning in a performance of unusual sleaze."
asakiyume: (black crow on a red ground)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2024-04-21 02:43 am (UTC)(link)
a sharp-shouldered chanteuse as chic and brittle as the cigarette holder she props with fashionable devil-may-carelessness --is also an excellent line. Devil-may-carelessness. A new noun for the taking!

"She flashes an undismayed smile in the direction of the Production Code" is also good, and I laughed again at the notion of Chris and Diana forming "some kind of psychic connection during their one phone conversation"