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| Index | 104 reviews in total |
57 out of 70 people found the following review useful:
You're too marvelous, too marvelous for words...., 22 May 2005
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
"Dark Passage" offers a different take on the San Francisco noir genre.
This is a movie in which we get to know about the story that unfolds in
front of us told in narrative style by the hero, who is never seen
until about one hour into the picture. Delmer Daves, adapting the David
Goodis novel has created something seldom seen in this type of films,
in which, the hero's presence is required at all times.
The film has a great style, as it offers a view of the San Francisco of
the 1940s in ways that hadn't been seen before. The director was lucky
to be able to open up the book in excellent ways to keep the viewer
hooked from the start. The 'moderne' style of that era is seen in
glorious detail, especially Irene's apartment, where much of the action
takes place. The effect of the glassed enclosed elevator makes a
dramatic contribution to the look of this movie.
The story of an innocent man, falsely condemned to prison for killing
his own wife, parallels other movies. What's unusual here is that the
presence of this convict is seen in another light with his own slant in
to what really happened to the dead woman. There are other elements in
the film that make it appealing. as the relationship between the
escaped man, Vincent Parry, and the woman who rescues him, Irene
Jansen.
Sidney Hickox's stylish cinematography is one of the best assets of the
film. The crisp images that one sees of the city, or the surrounding
areas, add to the enjoyment of watching the mystery unfold. The mood is
set by the swing music of the time as Frank Waxman's score is heard.
Richard Whiting contributes the great song one hears in the background.
The film is dominated by Humphrey Bogart, which says a lot about his
power as an actor, and as a personality. When one considers he is
actually not seen completely until after an hour into the movie, it
speaks volumes of how the actor and the director were able to pull it
through. The Irene Jansen of Lauren Bacall is another of the things
that work in the film. Ms. Bacall's radiant beauty dominates every
scene she is in. This actress had such a style that no matter what she
is doing, she pulls our attention to her. The camera loved Ms. Bacall.
The other best thing going for the film is the strong performances Mr.
Daves has obtained from his cast. Agnes Moorehead makes a phenomenal
appearance as the evil Madge Rapf. Her last scene with Mr. Bogart
stands as one of the best moments in a film noir of the era. Ms.
Moorehead's expressions as she is confronted with the facts, keep on
changing as she absorbs everything being thrown at her. Clifton Young
who plays Baker, the opportunistic would be criminal, is also
effective, as he adds a layer of intrigue with an angle we didn't
figure out existed. His fight with Parry at the bottom of the Golden
Gate bridge is beautifully choreographed. Finally, the kind cab driver
Sam, who helps Parry assume a new identity, as played by Tom D'Andrea
is one of the highlights of the film, as well as the plastic surgeon,
portrayed by Houseley Stevenson.
This film, while not perfect, shows how well Delmer Dave's gamble paid
in his conception for the film.
49 out of 63 people found the following review useful:
Saving Face, 18 July 2004
Author:
Ben_Cheshire from Oz
Bogey is an escaped prisoner. Bacall helps him stay escaped. To maintain his
anonymity he has a face-change operation.
It is a gimmick film, but the gimmick doesn't just serve its own purpose -
it highlights a theme of faces, and what faces tell you about the person
beneath.
You can tell when something is being explored onscreen for the first time -
its done more thoroughly and more excitedly than it ever will again. Think
back to that first film about the phenomenon of email (Disclosure) or the
internet (The Net), or what about the first film exploring
chronology-changes (Citizen Kane) or hide-the-protagonist (The Third Man),
or the excitement of acting (Streetcar Named Desire). That initial
excitement is never really matched again - after that it becomes just
another device, or a reference. The thing here is partly first-person
narration (this came out the same year as Lady in the Lake), but wholly
plastic surgery, the idea of changing your appearance.
First-person narration is actually quite rare in cinema. Lady in the Lake is
one of the only examples where they stick with it for an entire picture,
resorting to gimmicks like having Robert Montgomery looking in a mirror. Its
used to great effect in the first half of Dark Passage, in order to hide
Bogart's face. It was partly mechanical. Its a face-change movie. Instead of
starting with Bogart and changing his face to a different actor, they wanted
to pretend he looked like a different person (which we only see in a few
photographs), and then after the operation he just looks like Bogart. But
what the device of hiding his face does is create suspense, and focus on the
issue of faces, which is a recurring theme throughout.
And it works to the positive for this film: what's the best way to hide
someone's face? Put us behind their eyes! You never see your own face unless
you're looking in the mirror. So until his operation, we see through Bogey's
eyes - and the result is quite cinematic. It really frees up the movie,
unshackling it from the static trappings of most studio pictures of this
era. Instead of us just looking on from the edge of a set, which ends up
looking like a stage, we're really taken into the action - its
marvellous!
And, to save the best till last - Bacall absolutely burns up the screen in
this. She sets the celluloid on fire. Any single shot of her in this movie
is magic. Just being onscreen and being magic, its the definition of the
X-factor.
9/10. What a star-vehicle for Bogey. This was his Third Man. And Bacall is
sensational!
40 out of 50 people found the following review useful:
Dark Passage is a forgotten masterpiece, 21 December 2004
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Author:
terryduffy from United States
Dark Passage is a forgotten masterpiece and a personal favorite. Delmer Davies captures the 1940's magic of San Francisco from hill hugging wooden stairs to fog horns to shrouded atrium elevators to some of the best character acting I've ever seen. Tom D'Andrea and Housely Stephenson are wonderful as the so smart but so decent cabbie and the end of the dark ally plastic surgeon. Agnes Morehead is persistent annoyance morphed into utter villainy personified. She is nails scraped on a blackboard good and you can't take your eyes off her Madge. Becall and Bogie tie it together with fine understated grace. The flick ends and you want to go find that little beach front café in Peru.
49 out of 68 people found the following review useful:
This is a GREAT MOVIE!!!, 24 May 2000
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Author:
inframan from the lower depths
Bogart made three unforgettable landmark films: Maltese Falcon, Big Sleep, and Dark Passage. Of the three, Dark Passage is the least known, which is tragic, because it measures up to the other three and in many ways surpasses them for atmosphere, characterization and psychological mood. Based on a novel by David Goodis, who also wrote the novel that Shoot The Piano Player was based on, it hits top marks in rankings of films in the categories of Film Noir, Existentialism, Dostoyevskian outlook and Kafkan world-view. Filled with forever unforgettable scenes and quotable lines, heart-wrenching views of fog-bound 1940s San Francisco and characters who seem to be stand-ins for the all our own private inauspicious never-to-be famous or successful friends and acquaintances, it's a brilliant metaphor for that dying species: the "individual". Also, of all the Bogart/Bacall pairings, it was the softest, tenderest & most romantic. Movies like this should be on some kind of everybody's-required-viewing-list.
40 out of 52 people found the following review useful:
Supporting Actors Outshine Two Stars, 9 March 2006
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Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from United States
Watching a "feature" on the DVD the other day after viewing this movie,
it was interesting to hear that "Dark Passage" was never a popular film
despite the headliners being Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall.
That was because studio head Jack Warner was displeased that Bogart's
face wasn't shown for the first half of the film and so he didn't give
the movie much publicity. The fact Bogey's face didn't appear for quite
a while apparently didn't settle well with the public, either.
That was their loss: this is a fine film. The stars of it, really - the
actors who put the spark in the story - aren't Bogey and Bacall anyway
but the supporting actors. I can't recall a movie where the supporting
cast was so good, so entertaining, as in this film.
Before naming them, let me preface by saying Bogart and Bacall still
give good performances and Bacall still had a face in those early days
that was mesmerizing BUT the people who make this movie click are:
Tom D'Andrea as the cab driver; Houseley Stevenson as the strange and
extremely interesting plastic surgeon; Clifton Young as the
blackmailer; Tory Mallison as Bogart's old best friend and Agnes
Moorhead as the villainous snoop. These people are fantastic.
As an escaped convict on the run, we only see what Bogart sees until
plastic surgery turns him into the familiar face we recognize. That
sort of thing - seeing only what one character sees, using the camera
as his eyes, was done in another noir, "Lady In The Lake," but not done
as successfully as in this film. Here, it works as we meet these other
weird characters as Bogart sees them. Actually, every character
including Bacall's, is a bit odd. The script doesn't always make sense,
either, to be honest, but it's fun to play along.
It was a simple but effective story with some neat twists along the way
and pretty good suspense here and there, too. I think it's a very
underrated film noir and very glad the long-awaited DVD gave it a nice
transfer. This is another example of a classic film that looks far
better on DVD than it ever did on tape. I hadn't realized how
well-photographed this movie was until I saw it on disc.
26 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
The Softer Side of Bogart and Bacall, 9 June 2005
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Author:
Dorian Tenore-Bartilucci (dtb) from Whitehall, PA
The absorbing documentary featurette on the DVD edition of the 1947
mystery DARK PASSAGE (DP) suggests that Humphrey Bogart and Lauren
Bacall's participation in the star-studded Committee for the First
Amendment, intended to defend colleagues called before the HUAC, might
have been the reason that DP wasn't as big a hit as the real/reel-life
couple's earlier screen collaborations. However, I suspect that
audiences past and present may have found DP harder to cozy up to
because, instead of the cool, insolent, wisecracking Bogart & Bacall of
TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT and THE BIG SLEEP, this film version of David
Goodis' novel THE DARK ROAD presents a more melancholy, vulnerable
Bogart & Bacall -- which is not at all a bad thing, just unexpected
from this star team at that time. That Bogart & Bacall chemistry is
still there, but it's sweeter here, as if they'd decided to let down
their collective guard and allow tenderness to take over. Instead of
the cocksure Bogart character we all know and love, DP protagonist
Vincent Parry is wary, fearful, fumbling in his attempts to clear
himself of his wife's murder and elude the cops like he escapes from
prison in the film's opening scenes. His only allies include the
mysterious Irene Jansen (Bacall), who followed his case during his
trial and ends up in a position to help hide him while he proves his
innocence, and Sam (Tom D'Andrea), a kindly, lonesome cabbie who steers
Parry to a back-alley plastic surgeon (Houseley Stevenson) to get a new
face to help him fly under the law's radar.
1947 was The Year of the Subjective Camera, with DP's first hour shot
from Bogart's point of view and Robert Montgomery's film adaptation of
Raymond Chandler's LADY IN THE LAKE (which I've discussed elsewhere on
the IMDb) using the technique throughout. Unlike LADY..., DP's plastic
surgery gimmick provides a good plot reason for the audience not to
initially see Bogart's face, though we frequently hear that
unmistakable Bogart voice to make up for it. We also get to see the
lovely Bacall and lots of spellbinding character actors in lieu of
Bogie. There isn't an uninteresting face or a bad performance in the
bunch, with standout performances from the leads, D'Andrea, Stevenson
(wise, kindly, and vaguely sinister all at once), Rory Mallinson as
Parry's musician friend, the ever-dependable Bruce Bennett, cheap hood
Clifton Young (with an oily grin and a cleft chin that looks like it
got lost on the way to Cary Grant's face), and especially the
magnificent Agnes Moorehead as Madge Rapf, the kind of woman who won't
join any club that'll have her as a member, a stylish dame who spreads
stress and misery wherever she goes. Sticking her nose into everyone's
business, Madge manages to lure people to her and push them away at the
same time, and if she can't have you, she'll make damn sure nobody else
canhave you, even if that means murder. With her delivery dripping
honey one minute and venom the next (especially in her climactic scene
with Bogart), the quicksilver Moorehead's commanding presence and her
unconventional, undeniably striking good looks ensure that you can't
take your eyes off her whenever she's on screen.
If you're looking for a tight mystery plot, look elsewhere. While DP
has many suspenseful moments, it's primarily a character study and a
mood piece about loneliness, redemption, and starting over, with a
strong undercurrent of postwar paranoia, all underscored beautifully by
Franz Waxman's stirring music (with contributions by an uncredited Max
Steiner). The bus station scene is a touching example of this. But the
reactions of people who meet Parry with his post-op face and new name,
"Allan Linnell," are so suspicious I wondered if writer/director Delmer
Daves (who cameos as the photo of Irene's doomed dad. His real-life
kids have bit parts, too) was indicating that Parry was really
projecting his own paranoia onto the people around him. His new name in
particular makes people look at him like he just dropped in from the
planet Neptune: "Linnell? That's a very unusual name." What's so
freakin' unusual about it?! What, it's not blandly Anglo-Saxon enough?
I wonder if John Linnell of They Might Be Giants fame ever had to field
such questions...but I digress... :-)
Even when DP drops the subjective camera style so we can see Bogart in
all his glory, the visuals are striking thanks to Sid Hickox's moody
black-and-white photography (although with the emphasis on Madge's love
of all things orange, I can imagine a partly-colorized version a la SIN
CITY, with everything black-and-white except Madge's orange clothes and
belongings... :-) and some innovative visual techniques. I particularly
liked the use of the glass floor when Bogart discovers a dead body -- a
tip of the hat to Alfred Hitchcock's THE LODGER, perhaps? Speaking of
Hitchcock, DP and Hitch's 1958 classic VERTIGO might make an
interesting double feature since they share themes of loss, loneliness,
new identities and fresh starts as well as a San Francisco setting. If
you want to see a softer side of Bogart & Bacall, DP is well worth
watching. You may also enjoy the DVD's other fun extras, like the
original theatrical trailer (for me, the hyperbole of that era's movie
trailers is part of their charm) and SLICK HARE, one of the Bugs Bunny
cartoons affectionately lampooning Bogart (rumor has it that Bogart
liked to pal around with the animators at Warner Bros.' "Termite
Terrace" and he actually did his own voice work for SLICK HARE and
8-BALL BUNNY).
39 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
Totally unconvincing star thriller which succeeds because of its professionalism
, 6 April 2005
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Author:
ironside (robertfrangie@hotmail.com) from Mexico
Bogart's third teaming with Lauren Bacall was in "Dark Passage," a
murder-mystery film which depended upon contrivances rather than good
scripting to see it through
The film opened with the use of a subjective camera (MGM used it
throughout their "Lady in the Lake" that same year) with Bogart's
off-camera narration establishing the plot as we watch our hero escape
from prison with the intent of finding the real murderer of his wife,
the crime for which he had been wrongfully jailed
Once he meets up with Bacall and goes to a plastic surgeon, the
subjective camera is forgotten as Bogart now utilizes his own face and
carries on the investigation
"Dark Passage" was energetically directed and written by Delmer Daves
who used some atmospheric location shots in San Francisco to underscore
his drama
The film included an unusual number of bizarre and eccentric
characters, all competently played
Agnes Moorehead essayed a superb1y schizoid characterization as a
bitchy "friend" of Bogart and his dead wife
Bacall showed definite
signs of improvement in her acting and Bogart was properly bitter, sour
and nonplussed
For all practical purposes, this film marked the conclusion of Bogart's
famous "image" period
Now he was to forsake his romantic leading-man
roles for acting assignments which he hoped would raise him to greater
heights as a performer
He was to succeed, in many cases,
magnificently
18 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Agnes Moorehead steals the show!, 11 April 2005
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Author:
dbdumonteil
Even if she has only two or three scenes she steals them all.And it
speaks volumes when the stars are Bogart and Bacall.
This is my favorite B/B among the four films they made together."The
big sleep" has a plot I've never understood -Hawks used to say it was
the same to him-,"to have and to have not" fails to excite me (Bogart a
resistant and Gaulliste at that!"Key Largo",on the other hand, is a
close second to Daves' movie .
Not that the subjective viewpoint/camera was that much new.Robert
Montgomery filmed his hero the same way in 1946 ("Lady in the lake"
,and we only saw his reflection in the mirrors).Hitchcock knew the
technique as well and he used it with virtuosity during short
sequences.But Daves who is best remembered for his westerns ("broken
arrow") pulls it off effortlessly.The depth of field gives a dreamlike
atmosphere to the first sequences with Bacall and the surgeon -dream
which becomes nightmare during the operation when Bogart sees in his
bad dream all the characters involved in the story- There are plot
holes of course,particularly Madge 's character .Parry is in Irene's
house and presto here she comes.It takes all Agnes Moorehead's talent
to give this woman substance.
The first third is Bogartless,as an user points out.But he could add
that the last third is almost Bacallless too.
Only the ending,which I will not reveal of course ,is not worthy of a
film noir!Maybe the producers imposed it.
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Bad Script, 14 February 2009
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Author:
Uncle_Joe_Movin_Slo from Oregon, United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The terrible script completely destroys this film. That's a shame,
because I'm a huge fan of Bogart and Bacall. The film has first person
camera work which is excellent, and the supporting cast is fantastic.
However, Bogey's character acts like a total moron, leaving his
fingerprints on every crime scene he finds himself at, and crime scenes
follow him like a a five year old follows an ice cream truck. There is
one phony plot contrivance after another. Bacall's character would have
to be insane to believe that Bogey's character is innocent -- every
time he goes to see someone, they die! He always has an explanation,
and it always sounds false.
In short, the awful script destroys what is, in every other way, an
excellent film.
17 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
Fascinating film noir, 15 November 2000
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Author:
Paul McCartney (thewalrus@london.com) from London, UK
Wow, we are really asked to believe a lot in this film. Typically movies
can
only get away with one or two unlikely plot elements, but somehow I still
enjoyed 'Dark Passage' despite numerous key elements' implausibility.
The film opens to a shot of convicted felon Parry (Bogart) in a barrel in
back of a truck headed down the road.
He shakes the barrel, takes a nasty roll and staggers out. It's just the
first of many doubt-inducing sequences.
The film, with its plot problems aside, is really an excellent film noir
study. We are taken through most of the first half of the film from the
first-person Parry (Bogart) view. I found this fascinating, despite wooden
dialogue and continuous unrealistic steadiness of the camera. I think the
base story of 'Dark Passage' is superb, with all its film noir elements. I
especially like the first-person view, which then transforms through a
surrealistic imagery scene of plastic surgery, into the normal
third-person
view.
One plot element I particularly take issue with is that, although Parry
gets
a new face, we are asked to believe that his distinctive Bogart voice
cannot
be recognised by the closest of his acquaintances. He makes no effort
whatsoever to account for this, and this is given no thought in the
slightest.
The film is one I would personally love to make - I would like to direct
the
thing myself, and revise the script a bit, make it more real in dialogue
and
plot primarily. This is a feeling I've not oft encountered, because I've
almost always felt a director has done, even when he presents a wrong
point
of view, a better job than I could do. Due to my love for the story here I
was torn - torn I tell you - in my selection of a vote for this film, but
arrived at 7. I took off for the unrealistic factors, but made sure to
preserve the respectability of the film. It is, incontestably, a classic -
and in my opinion, just because a film is old doesn't mean it is. I
respect
this film.
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