Slightly Scarlet (1956 film)
Slightly Scarlet | |
---|---|
Directed by | Allan Dwan |
Written by | Screenplay: Robert Blees Story: James M. Cain |
Produced by | Benedict Bogeaus |
Starring | John Payne Rhonda Fleming Arlene Dahl Kent Taylor Ted de Corsia |
Cinematography | John Alton |
Edited by | James Leicester |
Music by | Louis Forbes |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures Inc. |
Release dates | February 29, 1956 (U.S.A.) |
Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Slightly Scarlet is a 1956 color film noir based on James M. Cain's novel Love's Lovely Counterfeit. The movie was directed by Allan Dwan, and the film's cinematography was shot in widescreen by noted cameraman John Alton.[1]
The picture tells the story of Ben Grace (John Payne), a man working for a powerful metropolitan crime boss--Solly Casper (Ted de Corsia).
Plot
Casper is fighting to retain control of the city's criminal activities when Frank Janser (Kent Taylor), an honest man and mayoral hopeful, begins a strong anti-crime campaign. Casper tasks Grace to dig up some dirt on the mayoral candidate and ruin his chances of election.
Grace finds some dirt when he meets the man's sexy redheaded secretary, June Lyons (Rhonda Fleming). He follows her to a jail where she's picking up her red headed and equally sexy kleptomaniac sister Dorothy (Arlene Dahl).
Ben Grace eventually falls for June and gives her incriminating evidence about his boss, causing violent Caspar to kill a well-known newspaperman, and leave the city. Ben Grace takes over the racket, yet he has good instincts.
At the same time, June is nervous because his sexually charged sister is attracted to Ben.
Caspar returns for revenge and shoots Ben several times. The police enter the house and arrest Casper with gun in hand. A wounded Ben is taken to the hospital, as June and Dorothy follow in tow.
Background
The film was made when prolific director Allen Dwan was seventy years old.
Noir cinematography
According to critic Blake Lucas the film was made with a modest budget, and yet the film is richly colored and well decorated and is one of the best of the Dwan-Alton pictures. Lucas wrote, "Alton's imagination in lighting is as distinctive in color as it is in black and white." Alton uses extensive shadows and large black areas, and he accentuates an array of pinks, greens, and especially the color orange. The end result is a startling effect in many of the scenes, all in Technicolor.[2]
Cast
- John Payne as Ben Grace
- Rhonda Fleming as June Lyons
- Arlene Dahl as Dorothy Lyons
- Kent Taylor as Frank Janser, Mayoral Candidate
- Ted de Corsia as Solly Caspar
- Buddy Baer as Lenhardt, Caspar Goon
Critical reception
The film revived poor reviews. Bosley Crowther, film critic for The New York Times, was caustic about the casting and the adaption of Cain's novel, and wrote, "...Rhonda Fleming and a laughably kittenish Arlene Dahl, are a couple of on-the-make sisters, and the fellow, played by John Payne, is an on-the-make big-time gangster. In the end all their faces are red. So, we say, should be the faces of the people responsible for this film, which is said to have been taken from a novel (unrecognizable) of James M. Cain. For it is an exhausting lot of twaddle about crime and city politics, an honest mayor, his secretary-mistress, her kleptomaniacal sister and the fellow who wants to get control of the gang.[3]
Footnotes
- ^ Slightly Scarlet at IMDb.
- ^ Silver, Alain and Elizabeth Ward. Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style. Film noir analysis by Blake Lucas, page 260. The Overlook Press, 3rd edition, 1992.
- ^ Crowther, Bosley, The New York Times, film review, March 17, 1956. Last accessed: December 4, 2007.
External links
- Slightly Scarlet at IMDb.
- ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› Slightly Scarlet at AllMovie