Appointment with Danger (Lewis Allen, 1950)
I wasn't expecting much from Appointment with Danger since two of Lewis Allen's well-loved vehicles, The Uninvited (1944) and Desert Fury (1947), convinced me that Andrew Sarris was right to ignore the director in The American Cinema. But this solid-plus noir suggests that Allen had a feel for beefing up certain moments, perfect for someone like me whose mind drifts off most narratives. As it is, I can barely recall the specifics of the story, something about postal inspector Al Goddard (Alan Ladd) protecting nun Phyllis Calvert who witnessed a murder committed by Jack Webb and Harry Morgan. Ladd looks luscious. Here he is during a nasty game of hand ball with Webb.
Jan Sterling of Female on the Beach renown is on board as Dodie, a moll with a love for bop. She runs into Ladd at a drug store where she's come to purchase some records. "Do you like bop?" she asks him.
Al: "Bop? Is that where everybody plays a different tune at the same time?"
Dodie: "You just haven't heard enough of it. Have you heard Joe Lily's "Only Mine"? Come up to my place and hear it."
Al: "As a favor to Joe."
Dodie: "What he can do with a horn. He belts it, melts it, and rides it all over the ceiling."
Al: "Can he play it?"
Labels: film noir, heteronormativity, records
3 Comments:
I presume you've never seen the 1954 Frank Sinatra vehicle Suddenly
Indeed I have not. Masterpiece?
Not a masterpiece but a gripping film that contains a magnificently unsympathetic performance from Sinatra
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