NFR Project: “Gun Crazy”
Dir: Joseph H. Lewis
Scr: Dalton Trumbo, MacKinlay Kantor
Pho: Russell Harlan
Ed: Harry Gerstad
Premiere: Jan. 20, 1950
87 min.
Joseph H. Lewis was a talented director who came up the hard way. He made “B” pictures – those films that were cheap and created to fill out a double bill at a theater with a more prestigious “A” picture. He worked in practically every genre – Westerns (he was known as “Wagon Wheel Joe” for shooting scenes through that object to vary up the look of things), comedies, horror movies, costume dramas, and musicals.
It wasn’t until 1945 that he really hit on his strength, when he made the excellent film noir My Name is Julia Ross. Other fine examples of his work in this genre are So Dark the Night (1946), The Big Combo (1950), and this film, largely regarded as his masterpiece.
This screenplay was written by MacKinlay Kantor and the blacklisted Dalton Trumbo, working under a pseudonym. It’s the story of the love between two disturbed people. Bart (John Dall) grows up obsessed with guns – although he is averse to killing. He gets in trouble with the law, serves in the Army, and comes back after his service to his hometown.
At a carnival he meets sharpshooter Laurie (Peggy Cummins), whom he beats in a shooting contest. They fall for each other, and run off together. Laurie wants to get money the quick and easy way, and she handily gets Bart to join her in armed robberies. Their crime spree gets them in the sights of the law. Laurie advocates one more big heist to set themselves up. They pull it off, but Laurie kills two people in the commission of the crime.
Laurie is trigger-happy, and unconcerned about committing murder. Pursued by the police, the two run into the mountains. Lost in the fog, surrounded by police, Laurie intends to kill in order to escape, but Bart balks at this and kills her, only to be killed himself shortly after.
The movie is enlivened by unique and innovative filming techniques. Lewis places close-ups off-center, to disorient and throw off the viewer, perhaps echoing the skewed perspective of the criminals. Notably, he directs the commission of a robbery from the back seat of a car in a continuous, 10-minute take (he repeats this back-seat filming a few more times in the film).
At the end, the two are lost in the (moral) fog they find themselves in. Bart is lured to his death by a femme fatale; he does the right thing in the end, but too late to change his fate.
Lewis makes a mean, lean picture that’s entertaining and thoughtful.
The NFR is one writer’s attempt to review all the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: The Heiress.
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