![]() |
![]() |
Big Clock (The) (Blu-ray)
[Blu-ray]
Blu-ray B - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (25th May 2019). |
The Film
![]() ![]() Synopsis: Hiding in the mechanism of the huge clock that dominates the lobby of the Janoth Corporation building, George Stroud (Ray Milland) reflects on the 36 hours that led him to his current predicament. Stroud is the editor of Crimeways, one of the Janoth Corporation's many publications. Known for finding clues that the police have overlooked and finding key persons involved in criminal cases, thus giving Crimeways circulation-grabbing exclusives, Stroud is a key member of Janoth Corporations. However, Stroud is deeply unhappy: the head of Janoth Corporation, Earl Janoth (Charles Laughton) is a particularly unpleasant man, known for making outrageous demands on his staff. Janoth is also involved in a strange relationship with a woman, Pauline York (Rita Johnson). Janoth and Pauline seem to be lovers, but Janoth has also been paying off Pauline through Janoth’s right-hand man Steve Hagen (George Macready). Stroud has been planning to take his first holiday since starting his employ with Janoth Corporation a number of years previously; in fact, Stroud cut his honeymoon short in order to take the job as editor of Crimeways, much to the chagrin of Stroud’s patient wife Georgette (Maureen O’Sullivan). However, Janoth has other ideas and presses Stroud to cancel his holiday – or Janoth will ensure Stroud loses his job at the Janoth Corporation and is blacklisted from working on any other magazines in the future. Stroud encounters Pauline, who offers Stroud the chance to get one up on Janoth. (‘I know enough about Mr Janoth to make him change his mind about both of us’, Pauline promises Stroud.) Pauline suggests she and Stroud should share information about Janoth and blackmail him with it. When Stroud’s meeting with Pauline overruns and, after calling home, he discovers from his maid that Georgette has already left for the holiday with their young son, George Stroud, Jr, Stroud spends the night on the town with Pauline. A slightly loaded Stroud buys a painting by the eccentric local artist Mrs Patterson (Elsa Lanchester); and at Burt’s Place, a bar Stroud frequents and which is run by the friendly Burt (Frank Orth), Stroud persuades Burt to part with a sundial. ![]() Critique: Based on the 1946 novel by Kenneth Fearing, The Big Clock is actually one of three very different film adaptations of Fearing’s book: the others are Alain Corneau’s very French policier picture Police Python 357, starring Yves Montand; and Roger Donaldson’s 1987 neo-noir film No Way Out. Unlike Farrow’s 1948 film, those two later pictures took some distinct liberties with Fearing’s novel, which had two major sources of inspiration. One of these was Sam Fuller’s then-recently published novel The Dark Page (1944), in which Carl Chapman, the editor of a newspaper, commits a murder and finds himself under investigation by the newspaper’s top crime reporter. Faced with the prospect of the crime he has committed being uncovered, Chapman nevertheless discovers that the coverage of the murder is helping to increase the circulation of his newspaper, and therefore must encourage his top crime reporter to keep digging into the story. Rich in Fuller’s own experiences in the world of journalism, The Dark Page is a typically Fuller-esque journey into liminal morality. The other source of inspiration for The Big Clock was the 1943 murder of wealthy heiress Patricia Lonergan by her husband, which was complicated by the fact that Patricia Lonergan had spent the evening before her murder on a ‘crawl’ of trendy nightclubs in the company of an interior decorator, Mario Gabellini – with whom Lonergan publicly quarrelled after she had danced with an officer in the marine corps, Peter Elser. Fearing took from these two sources of inspiration a focus on the milieu of crime journalism and the importance of improving one’s circulation (and the notion of an editor of such a publication and his subordinate being at odds), and from the Lonergan case Fearing seems to have been inspired by Lonergan’s relationship with Gabellini, whose ‘nightclub crawl’ with the victim was a distinct red herring to the police. Fearing also seems to have taken from the Lonergan case the primary motive for the crime: Patricia Lonergan and her husband argued over previous sexual relationships, with the press reports intimating that Patricia suggested her husband was secretly gay and this caused him to commit the murder of his wife. ![]() The Big Clock was the second collaboration between director John Farrow and actor Ray Milland: Farrow and Milland had previously made California (1947) together and would subsequently collaborate on Alias Nick Beal (1949) and Copper Canyon (1950). Farrow reputedly had a reputation as a director who was difficult to work with, though it seems that Farrow was frustrated by the script-learning abilities (or lack thereof) of many of the studio contract players who acted in his pictures. In Milland, he found an actor who was adept at learning his lines, leading to a productive relationship between director and star that spanned four pictures. In the film’s opening sequence, Milland embodies the prototypical film noir anti-hero, skulking through the Janoth Corporation building at night, evading guards. He also narrates, in the first person and suspense-building present tense: ‘More guards [….] And they said “shoot to kill”’, he begins, ‘How’d I get into this rat race, anyway? I’m no criminal. What happened? When did it all start? Just 36 hours ago, I was down there, crossing that lobby on my way to work, minding my own business [….] 36 hours ago, I was a decent, respectable, law-abiding citizen with a wife and a kid and a big job’. As Stroud is shown concealed in the titular big clock, the camera tilts down – and in doing so, takes us from the diegetic present to the past, seamlessly bringing us into the lobby of the Janoth Corporation 36 hours earlier. ![]() The film hints at the homosexuality of Jonath, who surrounds himself with men – including Steve, who may or may not be Jonath’s lover – and is in one scene shown being given a massage by Jonath’s silent bodyguard Bill (Harry Morgan). In Fearing’s novel, the references to Jonath’s homosexuality are more overt, the murder taking place as an outcome of an argument between Pauline and Janoth during which the pair ‘trade accusations of what appear to be uncontrolled sexual activity coded as deviancy’ (Wald, op cit.: 39). Janoth accuses Pauline of having numerous male lovers and implies she has taken female lovers too; and Pauline retaliates by suggesting that he is a repressed homosexual and has been flaunting a covert sexual relationship with his subordinate Steve Hagen (‘Did I ever see you together when you weren’t camping?’; ‘camping’ in this instance refers to two men who are concealing a gay relationship), going so far as to describe Hagen as ‘that fairy gorilla’. ![]() The Big Clock is filled with a wonderful cast (Milland; Laughton; O’Sullivan; Macready; Harry Morgan). However, amongst some universally strong performances, the highlight is arguably Elsa Lanchester’s role as the artist Mrs Patterson. Patterson is introduced in the background, as Stroud purchases one of her paintings, unaware that the artist is standing next to him. She chastises him over the price he is willing to pay for her painting. She reappears later in the story, when Janoth catches wind of the fact that the witness in his murder of Pauline bought one of Patterson’s paintings and, on the back of this information, sends Klausmeyer (Harold Vermilyea) – the art critic of Artways magazine – to interview Mrs Patterson. Immediately, Patterson recognises Klausmeyer as the man who reviewed her exhibition in ’41. ‘I’ve been meaning to kill you for years’, she says dryly. Patterson has five children: three of these are the product of her marriage to her three previous husbands, ‘and the twins are Mike’s’. ‘Your present husband?’, Klausmeyer asks. ‘Would be if I could find him’, Patterson responds. Klausmeyer tells Patterson that he is trying to find a man who bought one of her paintings. ‘So have I, for 15 years’, she quips back. As Klausmeyer leaves, he stumbles and falls badly. ‘Oh, Penelope’, Patterson asserts insincerely, ‘You’ve forgotten to put away your roller skates’. It’s a dryly humorous role that plays with stereotypes of artists, and Lanchester plays it perfectly. Later, she is invited to Janoth Corporation by Janoth, who asks Patterson to sketch the likeness of the man who bought her painting. There, she meets Stroud and becomes sympathetic to him – so much so that when Janoth asks her to show him the sketch she has made, she reveals an abstract, symbolic image: ‘I think I’ve captured his mood rather successfully’, she says before laughing shrilly. Writing about Kenneth Fearing’s source novel, Alan M Wald has noted that The Big Clock hinges on the contrast between two unmarried women: Pauline Delos (or York, in the film adaptation), the blonde who is blackmailing Janoth (over what, we don’t know; she may also be involved in a sexual affair with him, or it may be over his relationship with Steve) and receiving payments through Hagen. In contrast with her is Louise Patterson, the eccentric brunette painter who has a stack of children and, having previously been married three times, is desperately attempting to find husband number four (Wald, 2012: 39). Both women function as an ally to Stroud, helping him to escape from the clutches of Janoth – both in terms of his contract of employment with Janoth Corporation and in terms of Janoth’s attempts to eliminate Stroud as a witness to the murder of Pauline. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Video
![]() Combined with some innovative production design, the film’s photography, by John F Seitz, masterfully emphasises the different spaces within the Janoth Corporation headquarters, which is the setting for most of the film: from the shadowy interior of the titular ‘big clock’ that overlooks the lobby to the bright elevators; from the large corporate boardroom to the contrasting interiors of Stroud’s and Janoth’s offices. The film’s opening sequence features some particularly expressive low-key lighting as Stroud skulks through the corridors of the Janoth Corporation at night and conceals himself within the mechanism of the big clock in the foyer of the building. This presentation is very pleasing. The film’s 35mm monochrome photography is communicated very well throughout. A substantial level of fine detail is present throughout the film and noticeable particularly in close-ups. Damage is limited to some minor density fluctuations in the emulsions and some very infrequent vertical scratches. Contrast levels are very good, with some well-defined midtones and a sharp drop-off into the toe. Finally, the encoded to disc is strong and ensures the presentation retains the structure of 35mm film. Full-sized screengrabs are included at the bottom of this review. Please click to enlarge them. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
Audio is presented via a LPCM 1.0 mono track. This is rich and deep, with good range and no distortion. Optional English subtitles for the Hard of Hearing are included, and these are easy to read and accurate in transcribing the film’s dialogue.
Extras
![]() - Audio commentary with Adrian Martin. The Australian film critic talks about The Big Clock, reflecting on its relationship with its source novel and discussing how it ‘fits’ in terms of its relationship with the paradigms of late-1940s films noir. Martin suggests the film is the ‘combination’ of novelist Kenneth Fearing, screenwriter Jonathan Latimer and director John Farrow – all of whom were published writers. - ‘Turning Back the Clock’ (23:01). Critic Adrian Wootton talks about how unique The Big Clock is in terms of its position within American films noir of the late 1940s. He discusses Kenneth Fearing’s source novel and Jonathan Latimer’s approach to adapting it for the screen. Wootton also considers the parallels between The Big Clock and the Thin Man pictures, suggesting that the film’s moments of humour in its early sequences seem to align it more with the comedy genre than the thriller, but as the story progresses the thriller elements become more prevalent. - ‘A Difficult Actor’ (17:31). Simon Callow offers an excellent appraisal of Laughton’s career during the 1940s, considering how it had evolved to that point and the manner in which it would progress in subsequent years. Callow suggests that Laughton ‘lost his way’ somewhat after The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (William Dieterle, 1939), arguing that his performance as Quasimodo ‘burnt him out in some ways’. However, Callow suggests, Laughton is ‘on top form’ in The Big Clock. However, Callow offers that some of onscreen tension between Laughton and Milland benefitted from Milland’s dislike of the fact that Laughton was gay. - Lux Radio Theatre: The Big Clock (59:28). This 1948 radio dramatization of The Big Clock features Ray Milland and Maureen O’Sullivan reprising their roles from the feature film version of the story. - Trailer (2:21). - Gallery: Posters and Press (0:21); Promotional Stills (1:48).
Overall
![]() Arrow’s Blu-ray release of The Big Clock contains a very good presentation of the main feature. The source exhibits some minor wear and tear but nothing detrimental, and on the whole it’s a pleasingly film-like presentation of the picture. The film is accompanied on the disc by some superb contextual material: Callow, Wootton and Martin are always astute interviewees, and their comments here enrich one’s understanding of the film. References: Wald, Alan M, 2012: American Night: The Literary Left in the Era of the Cold War. The University of North Carolina Press Please click to enlarge: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
|
|||||
![]() |