Desperate (1947)
7/10
Midnight is the time for sychnronicity of death.
9 November 2012
Desperate is directed by Anthony Mann who also collectively writes the story and screenplay with Harry Essex, Martin Rackin and Dorothy Atlas. It stars Steve Brodie, Raymond Burr, Audrey Long, Douglas Fowley, William Challee and Jason Robards Senior. Music is by Paul Sawtell and cinematography by George E. Diskant.

After innocently being roped into a robbery that goes wrong, Steve Randall (Brodie) and his lover, Anne (Long), are forced to go on the run when a vengeful gangster seeks an eye for a eye retribution.

One of Anthony Mann's first forays into film noir, Desperate is a lovers on the run drama instilled with impressive noir touches. Short sharp shock in running time parlance, film takes the form of innocents thrust into a perilous fight to survive. The middle section is a bit too airy and draggy, with a wedding sequence still further pushing the picture away from the brilliant dark tone set up earlier, and for sure the Randall couple are a bit too precious at times, but when it's trawling the alleyways of film noir it's a classy piece of film.

The first third features a quite excellent "beating" sequence that showcases the skills of Messrs Mann and Diskant. Filmed in a darkly lit room, the scene plays out in the fluctuating shadows of a swinging overhead light. This is menacing enough but Mann also introduces some potent close up shots of a fist and a broken bottle to really emphasise grim tones. Then the final third comes back into noir territory where we are indulged in a ticking clock countdown that leads to a finale played out on four stories of shadowy stair wells. With Burr offering up a considerable turn of hulking villainy, there's much to recommend here, where were it not for the middle section then this would be up with the best of Mann's noirs. Still, it's very much one for Mann and film noir fans to seek out. 7/10
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