By David in TN
saturday, august 5, 2023 at 11:19:00 a.m. edt
TCM’s Film Noir of the Week is on hiatus during the month of August. This is Summer Under the Stars Month. Each day a different performer is featured.
This Monday, Robert Ryan (1909-1973) films are shown, Among others: Act of Violence, The Naked Spur, Billy Budd, The Set-Up. Oddly, Crossfire and Bad Day at Black Rock aren’t among them.
Robert Ryan was a left-winger who specialized in playing bigoted characters, as in Crossfire, Bad Day at Black Rock, etc.
On Monday Night-Early Tuesday Morning at 12:45 a.m. ET TCM has a rare showing of Executive Action (1973) by hack director David Miller. This is a fantasy of Hollywood leftists. Burt Lancaster, Robert Ryan, Will Geer and Lloyd Gough play a group of right-wing conspirators who carry out the “plot to kill JFK.”
I think it was Ryan’s last film. It was the kind of role he relished.
N.S.: I consider Robert Ryan to have been a crypto-communist, like his friend, Richard Brooks, who wrote the novel that Crossfire (1947) was based on. By the way, Ryan and Brooks were both shirkers, but they wore USMC uniforms stateside. Ryan, the Yale heavyweight champion, taught boxing, while Brooks was a Marine Corps reporter.
A crypto-communist was a communist who didn’t join the party, so there was no record anywhere. My Trinidadian Uncle Frank (1904-1992) and Aunt Ruth (my late mom’s big sister) (1921-2016) were both Stalinist crypto-communists. Uncle Frank was a civil engineer who worked for The Phone Company, while Aunt Ruth was an elementary school teacher in Bellmore, New York. When Uncle Frank was in his seventies, he would say, “Stalin did what had to be done.” If either had joined the party, they would have lost their jobs.
Ryan’s best roles came early in his career as heavies, psychos, and near-psychos. He had an especially powerful chemistry with Ida Lupino in a couple of RKO cheapies (pardon the redundancy), On Dangerous Ground (1951) and Beware, My Lovely (1952).
In On Dangerous Ground, he played an out-of-control, bachelor NYCPD detective whose job is hanging by a thread, due to his penchant for beating confessions out of suspects. He accusatorily asks a fat, middle-aged detective colleague, who has a wife and a houseful of kids, “How can you live with yourself?!” The colleague replies, “I don’t! I live with other people!”
Ryan’s boss gives him a chance to redeem himself, in more ways than one. He sends the detective a couple of hours north to assist in a murder investigation. A pretty, teenaged girl has been murdered and maybe raped. The suspect, a mentally retarded, crazy young man, is hiding out, and the victim’s father (Ward Bond) is hunting for him, to kill him.
Ryan meets and interviews the killer’s older sister (Lupino), who is blind, and who, while resourceful, depended on her kid brother.
The detective and the blind lady, two crippled people, fall in love. She redeems him.
I can’t describe the story without degenerating into clichés, but Ryan, Lupino, and Bond make it work.
There must have been some interesting breaks, considering that the cast contained a communist and a patriot.
Later in Ryan’s career, he decided he wanted to play likeable, kindly cut-throats. In The Wild Bunch (1969), he played the least sympathetic role, that of Deke, the pretentious, old crime partner of Bill Holden’s Pike Thornton, who is forced by a railroad tycoon to hunt down his old friend. Ryan’s character was saddled with prairie scum (Strother Martin, L.Q. Jones, et al.), to whom he felt morally superior. In Executive Action, he played a nice guy presidential assassin.
Will Geer, as I recall, was Communist AND gay- a real two-fer! Like so many of the blacklisted, he was given plum roles in the 60s and 70s (admittedly, he was outstanding in Frankenheimer's masterpiece SECONDS). -RM
ReplyDeleteDavid In TN: Last night I watched Executive Action. About 17-18 minutes in, the "conspirators" (Ryan, Geer, and Lancaster) are conferring at Ryan's mansion. Geer asks, "Have you researched the man's personal history?" Lancaster answers, "If you'll forgive me, we're way ahead of you. If we could find some way to discredit him, believe me, we would have done it by now."
ReplyDeleteThis is an unintentionally funny line. Had the Establishment/Deep State wanted to destroy JFK they would have done so by embroiling him in a sex scandal, which wouldn't have been difficult.
On Friday Night, TCM shows Alan Ladd's Most famous roles, starting with Shane (1953) at 8 p.m. ET. Following are his co-starring films with Veronica Lake; This Gun for Hire (1942), The Blue Dahlia (1946) written by Raymond Chandler, and The Glass Key (1942).
TCM shows Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) at 8 a.m. ET Friday Morning. It's part of Ernest Borgnine Day.
ReplyDeleteThis is one of Robert Ryan's best Racist Bad Guy roles, which he relished. Ernie Borgnine is a fellow villain. The best scene is when Spencer Tracy beats him up.
I saw an interview in which Ernest Borgnine says "Bob Ryan had a heard time staying in the scene with Spencer Tracy." Meaning no one could steal a scene from Spencer Tracy.
TCM's Film Noir of the Week Returns after a month-long Hiatus with Mel Ferrer's The Secret Fury (1950) with Claudette Colbert, Robert Ryan, Paul Kelly Saturday Night-Sunday Morning at Midnight and 10 a.m. ET.
ReplyDeleteFilm Noir Guide: "Poor Claudette Colbert--on the verge of madness again (see Sleep, My Love). This time it's because somebody speaks up at her wedding and announces that she's already married. That's enough to send any girl to the nuthouse."
"Ryan, the wannabe groom, stands by his woman through it all. Mostly boring stuff, b ut you might find it interesting to see 45-year-old Colbert portraying a blushing bride. Keep your eyes open for Jose Ferrer at a jam session."
David In TN: Eddie Muller has said he will for the rest of 2023 show movies not previously on Film Noir of the Week. The series is in its seventh year on TCM.