NowChannel.com
– Discover Great DVDs Fast and Simple  (How?)
More Results, Less Clutter
  We filter and prioritize – you'll see excellent DVDs. 
  Find it here, then buy it at Amazon   (Learn More)  

 
    
    Box Sets DVDs
 
TV Shows
Entire Series of 1970s TV

DVD:
The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete TV Series

see 25 items like this...
 
 

    Product Search
 
Search
 
Advanced DVD Search 
 
 
    DVD New Releases
 
 Last 30 Days:
    - TV Shows on DVD
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 Coming Soon:
    - TV Shows on DVD
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 All New & Future Releases
 
 
    DVD Bestsellers
 
 Top DVDs Today:
    - TV Shows
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 
    Home
 
 NowChannel
 
Discover Great Home Media

- Fast and Simple
- Real Human Editors
- Multiple Merchants
- Learn More

 
 

       
 

DVD: Born to Kill

  Classic Film > 1947

 
DVDs   Born to Kill    Discs    DVD Release Date  
 
 
Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 2

Born to Kill / Clash by Night / Crossfire / Dillinger (1945) / The Narrow Margin (1952)

 
5
 
July 5, 2005  

check prices
 

 

Film noir is such a rich cinematic zone that second-tier specimens compel nearly as much fascination as the classics. At a glance, Volume 2 of Warner Bros.' (ever-expanding, we hope) Film Noir Collection is a distinct step down from Volume 1--inevitable when you've launched your series with five landmark titles, including three outright noir masterpieces (The Asphalt Jungle, Gun Crazy, Out of the Past). But linger beyond that first glance, because the second set is a flavorful mix of sleazoid iconography (two vehicles for B-movie bad boy Lawrence Tierney), an offbeat outing for a major director (Fritz Lang in his Howard Hughes RKO period), Poverty Row production circumstances that encourage aggressively peculiar, verging-on-radical filmmaking (the strange mélange that is Monogram's Dillinger), and two pressure-cooker suspense pictures that are landmark films in their own right (Crossfire and The Narrow Margin).

Jean-Luc Godard dedicated Breathless to Monogram Pictures, and Dillinger (1945) was probably the main reason why. With an Oscar-nominated script credited to Philip Yordan (abetted by his friend William Castle, director of Monogram's excellent When Strangers Marry), Max Nosseck's 60some-minute account of the Depression-era outlaw's brashly improvisatory career is a hypnotic mix of bargain-basement filmmaking (lotsa stock footage and minimalist sets), astute ripoff (the rain-and-gas-bomb robbery sequence from Lang's You Only Live Once), and Brechtian bravura. The major Hollywood studios had taken a vow of chastity when it came to glorifying gangsterism; Monogram ignored the embargo and barreled ahead to unaccustomed popular and critical success. The storyline actually scants the ultraviolence (no Bohemia Lodge shootout) and all-star supporting cast (no Pretty Boy Floyd, no Baby Face Nelson) of Dillinger's real life--likely a matter of cost-cutting rather than abstemiousness. Newcomer Lawrence Tierney nails the guy's coldblooded freakiness and animal magnetism, and the supporting cast includes such éminences noirs as Marc Lawrence, Eduardo Ciannelli, and Elisha Cook Jr. Producers Maurice and Frank King would make Gun Crazy four years later.

Born to Kill (1947) is the second helping of Tierney, playing a psychotic drifter who's irresistible to women ("His eyes run up and down ya like a searchlight!" breathes housemaid Ellen Colby, just about the only female he doesn't bother targeting). A number of people end up dead by his hand, but the kicker is that he crosses paths with a woman--socialite-divorcee Claire Trevor--just as heartless as he, and even more treacherous. The script makes less sense with each passing reel, but there are ripe character turns by Walter Slezak, as a philosophical private eye who operates out of a diner; Elisha Cook Jr., as Tierney's more level-headed partner; and Esther Howard, as a hard-bitten old bat who flirts with Cook in a nightmarish nocturnal wasteland outside San Francisco.

Three Roberts--Young, Mitchum, and Ryan--costar in Crossfire (1947), one of only a handful of noirs to be sanctified with Academy Award nominations: best picture, director Edward Dmytryk, screenwriter John Paxton, and supporting players Ryan and Gloria Grahame. The film unreels during a single sweaty, post-WWII night when one among a squad of GIs on leave in Washington, D.C., murders a nice Jewish man (Sam Levene) because he doesn't like "his kind." The audience knows who's guilty before the cops do, and Ryan's portrayal of the bigot will make the hair on your neck rise. Police detective Robert Young plays with his pipe too much and makes one speech too many, but the atmosphere is memorably taut and surreal.

Robert Ryan may be even scarier in Fritz Lang's Clash by Night (1952), a rare noir without any criminal aspect: all its bitterness and savagery is emotional, psychological, and--preeminently--sexual. Barbara Stanwyck, slightly past her stellar peak but in her prime as an actress, plays a married woman in a New England fishing town who knows what a bad idea it is but falls anyway for a vicious, misogynistic movie projectionist. Sample Clifford Odets dialogue, Stanwyck to Ryan: "What do you want to do to me? Put your teeth in me? Hurt me?" Clinching ensues. (All this and Marilyn Monroe, too.)

We've saved the best for last. Narrow Margin (1952) is the kind of trim, beautifully paced movie people have in mind when asking, "Why don't they make 'em like that anymore?" Two cops have to guard a gangster's widow against assassination as she rides the Golden West Limited sleeper train from Chicago to give evidence in L.A. Soon there's only one cop (gravel-voiced Charles McGraw, usually a villain), and he's finding the sharp-tongued widow (Marie Windsor) as obnoxious as she is endangered. Nothing goes quite as you'd expect in this exemplary train thriller, which rattles and rocks toward its destination without a music track or a wasted moment. --Richard T. Jameson   More...
 

 
Born to Kill

 
1
 
July 5, 2005  

check prices
 

 
 
Compare All 2 Selections   (See Features and Prices) »»

 
 

See also:
Classic Film on DVD - 1930-1969

1930   1931   1932   1933   1934   1935   1936   1937   1938   1939

1940   1941   1942   1943   1944   1945   1946   1947   1948   1949

1950   1951   1952   1953   1954   1955   1956   1957   1958   1959

1960   1961   1962   1963   1964   1965   1966   1967   1968   1969

 

Top Films on DVD - Oscar® Winners and Nominees

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z

 

NowChannel
TV Shows on DVD
Classic TV   Entire Series on DVD

Classic Film   Oscar® Winners

More Genres of DVD

 
Oscar® is a registered trademark of Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
This site has no relation to Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
See www.oscars.org for comprehensive Oscar® database.
 
Can't find it here?  Try Amazon DVD Search:
 

 

 NowChannel.com   about this site     Copyright © 2004-2009 NowChannel.com   All rights reserved. web@nowchannel.com