Friday, June 21, 2024

A Flashback within a Flashback Within a Flashback?! TCM’s Film Noir of the Week Saturday Night-Sunday Morning at 12:15 and 10 a.m. ET is John Brahm and Sheridan Gibney’s The Locket (1946), with Laraine Day, Brian Aherne, Robert Mitchum, Gene Raymond and Reginald Denny (and Alleged Script-Doctor Norma Barzman) (photos)

By David in TN
friday, june 21, 2024 at 4:18:00 p.m. edt

TCM’s Film Noir of the Week Saturday Night-Sunday Morning at 12:15 and 10 a.m. ET is John Brahm’s The Locket (1946), with Laraine Day, Brian Aherne, Robert Mitchum, Gene Raymond and Reginald Denny.

Film Noir Guide: “On the day he’s supposed to marry his fiancee (Day), Aherne is visited by a psychiatrist (Raymond), who claims to be Day’s ex-husband. Raymond warns him that Day is a kleptomaniac and, possibly, a murderess.

“He tells him the strange tale of how he met her and how he was similarly warned by Day’s former fiance (Mitchum), who believed Day killed her boss (Denny), while trying to steal his jewels. Raymond, to his regret, didn’t believe Mitchum and, of course, Aherne doesn’t believe Raymond.

“Confusing? At one point, there’s a flashback that goes three deep. The excellent cast can’t redeem the convoluted script.”

David in TN: Red Eddie Muller recycles another so-so film previously shown on Noir Alley. Right after The Locket, TCM shows The Two Mrs. Carrols (1947), followed by Conflict (1945). In both, Humphrey Bogart plays the bad guy. Bogey had been trying to break out of being the villain.

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0059555/?ref_=ttfc_fc_wr2

[“Norma Barzman, an undistinguished, virtually unknown screenwriter and actress, who had sought to slaughter over 100 million Americans, and enslave the rest, is dead at 103”;

“communist Norma Barzman and plagiarism”;

“On some of the red (not republican!) supporters of talentless, communist, hollywood non-entity Norma Barzman”; and

“hollywood communist gets decapitated.”]


N.S.: On Jon Hopwood’s Ben Barzman imdb.com page, he writes, “With his wife, he wrote two films, "The Locket" and "Never Say Goodbye," and a second novel, "Rich Dreams.". [sic]”

In recent years, Hopwood has come to control more and more imdb.com pages. Time was, he used to write with some eloquence himself, but has gone (or come out as) full-blown communist/racial socialist. Thus, he has lost credibility, which Norma Barzman always lacked.

I don’t believe that Norma Barzman had anything to do with “writing” properties (e.g., The Locket) her husband turned out. I believe, rather, that Ben Barzman, who was a distinguished screenwriter, got his talentless wife credits, in order to squeeze some extra money out of producers, and to give her undeserved credit. Jon Hopwood also credited Norma Barzman with a “screenplay” for il triangolo rosso, but that was a tv show; thus, she could never have written a “screenplay” for it. Hopwood is desperate to inflate the importance of old reds.

Hopwood writes of Ben Barzman, practically with the same words he used for Norma Barzman, “A victim of the blacklist in Hollywood, about which he was often eloquently scathing in his later years.” Again, Hopwood provides zero evidence that Ben Barzman was “often eloquently scathing” about the blacklist. If Barzman had been, you can be sure Hopwood would have quoted him.

Note that Ben Barzman supposedly (according to Hopwood) left the french communist party in 1968, because it was insufficiently communist for his tastes. Hopwood says that Norma Barzman was a member of the communist party from 1943-1949, but never explains why she left it, if indeed she did.



Left-to-right: communist “Adrian Scott socializing with Norma Barzman, Jeannie Lees, Bobby Lees, and Anne Scott (seated on floor), circa 1946.” As all of the photos I’d seen of Norma Barzman were of her when she was presumably in her nineties or older, old and hideous, and she functioned as a living communist, er, “progressive” (aka “leftist”) souvenir, I searched for a pic of her as a young woman, and seem to have found one of her as a young knockout. This is from her memoir, The Red and the Blacklist. Norma Barzman spent the 1950s and ‘60s giving birth to and raising seven little red diaper babies.

I just read Jaden Thompson’s december 19th variety obituary for talentless, 103-year-old communist Norma Barzman, and either it’s a massive plagiary of her imdb.com bio page, or her imdb.com page, which I read yesterday, is a massive plagiary of Thompson. I’m thinking someone at imdb.com is the guilty party. What say you, Jon Hopwood?

Norma Barzman, presumably when she was in her nineties or older. Imagine how long she would have lived, if not for apartheid and the blacklist?



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

From the NYT a few months ago:

Paula Weinstein, a movie producer, studio executive and political activist who became a fierce advocate for women in her industry, died on Monday at her home in Manhattan. She was 78.

In the boy’s club of Hollywood, Ms. Weinstein was the rare female top executive: Over her long career, she was president of United Artists, a vice president of Warner Bros. and an executive vice president at 20th Century Fox. She was just 33 when she was hired at Fox in 1978, and when she was promoted to vice president a year later, The Los Angeles Times called her “the highest-ranking woman in the motion picture industry.”

Ms. Weinstein accepted the Emmy Award for the HBO movie “Recount” in 2008. She was an executive producer on the film, which was based on the 2000 presidential election.

As Ken Sunshine, the veteran public relations consultant and longtime Democratic activist, put it in a phone interview: “Unlike so many, she didn’t play at politics. To her, social and political change was paramount. She was the antithesis of a phony Hollywood activist looking for good P.R. or a career boost. She was unique in a sea of pretenders.”

Activism was the family business: Her mother, Hannah Weinstein, was a journalist and speechwriter who in 1950 took her three young daughters to live in Paris and then London, fleeing the grim and punitive politics of the country’s McCarthy era. In Britain, where the family lived for more than a decade, Hannah Weinstein produced movies and television series using blacklisted actors and writers like Ring Lardner Jr. and Ian McLellan Hunter.


That blacklist sure was rough, wasn't it? Just pack up and head off to live in Europe with three daughters (note that no husband is mentioned), and end up making a mint as producer of one of the most successful TV series of its era, THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD (given a measure of quality by its team of blacklisted- but talented- writers). And evil begets evil. But we sure have been entertained all these years on our way to extinction!
-RM

Anonymous said...

More questions: if the blacklist was so "punitive," how did she manage to produce a series that was sold to CBS as a prime-time entry (and a British import no less- unprecedented in 1955)? And why did she use the name Hannah Fisher on some of her later series- were the evil McCarthyists still hounding her? As you noted, the IMDB info is very sketchy.
-RM

David In TN said...

TCM's Film Noir of the Week Saturday Night-Sunday Moring at 12:15 and 10 a.m. ET is Harold F. Kress' No Questions Asked (1951) with Barry Sullivan, Arlene Dahl, George Murphy, Jean Hagen, Richard Simmons.

Film Noir Guide: "After his gold-digging fiancee (Dahl) dumps him for a wealthy man (Simmons), insurance investigator Sullivan decides to climb the ladder of success the easy way. He becomes, in effect, a legal fence, working with fur and jewel thieves to return stolen merchandise for a price so his insurance company doesn't have to pay up."

"While he makes a nice little commission on each deal, he soon learns an expensive lesson about working on the dark side. Hagen is the girl who loves him, and Murphy is the cop who's trying to put him away. An effective little twist on the good cop gone bad, this noir supports the old adage, 'there's one born every minute.'"

David In TN: Another one Red Eddie Muller has previously shown on Noir Alley.