Edgar G.
Ulmer is one of those American masters I've been neglecting for my whole adult
life, and I need to change this from now on. Famous for his cheapie thrillers,
a hired gun for the studios when they needed something quickly done. He
directed around 50 movies since 1930, but before that he worked as a set
designer and art director for silent movies classics as Der Golem, Siegfried
and Metropolis. So he came from the school of the best of the best. After
scoring a big hit with The Black Cat in 1934 he quickly found himself in
demand, but maybe faster than anyone else he dived into the world of poverty
row thrillers and imaginative exploitation movies. This might have stopped him
from being really big, but it also gave him an emotional freedom that's very visible in Strange Illusion.
Jimmy Lydon
plays Paul Cartwright, an excellent student and smart young man who still is in
pain over his dear fathers violent death. He spends a lot of time with doc (Regis
Toomey), the family doctor - and he's almost like father figure for Paul. When
he comes home after being away for studies - and a nice fishing trip with doc -
he founds out that his mother is dating a new man, the charming Brett Curtis (Warren
William). But Paul is having dreams, dreams that he thinks is foretelling the
future - and that dream says his mother is in danger. Soon he starts to suspect
that Brett is a womanizer, a murdered - just out to marry and kill his mother
and now Paul need to stop this from happen...
Strange Illusion
is a simple and smart thriller, and excellent choice if you want to see an
effective cheapie that proofs that budget is nothing compared to talent. The
movie starts of atmospherically with a dream sequence, maybe inspired by Alfred
Hitchcock's Spellbound from the same year, that sets the tone for the whole
movie - paranoia, the idea that you can't trust no one. I have no idea if that
is true, but there's a feeling that the interpretation of dreams is something
that interested Ulmer in real life. This is not a silly sequence, but a dark
and eerie one. And it feels smart. Like a lot of these movies the story is
contained inside rooms, cheap sets with the inclusion of some stock footage to
show the outside. Much like John Brahm's The Undying Monster (1942 - highly
recommended werewolf movie) this works almost for the better, because we're
trapped with the characters in very claustrophobic storyline.
In a movie
where the actors are the most important pieces, except the script, Strange
Illusion delivers even on that front. Jimmy Lydon, only 22 years old at the
time, carries a lot of the movie on his own shoulders - but has an excellent
opponent in the elder veteran playing the baddie, the awesome Warren Willam. He
died a few years after this movie, but mostly known during his golden years for
playing evil bastards, false lovers and corrupt officials - and he's both
handsome and talented enough to make this work. Like Vincent Price he has a
remarkable voice, which was lucky for him after coming from the silent movie
era and made the transition to talkies very well. Like many others who played
baddies he was a silent and serious man, devoted to his wife, and took his
acting job very seriously. I'm missing that kind of actors.
Strange
Illusion was a good start for me (I've seen Ulmer's Hannibal since earlier) and it gave me even
more inspiration to check out the rest of his career. This movie is easy and
cheap to find, so if you're interested in film noir or just an obscure forties
thriller this is the movie for you.
4 comments:
"so if you're interested in film noir or just an obscure forties thriller"
Sounds like my kind of movie....
After The Edgar G. Ulmer Week will there be a Samuel Fuller Week..?
Fuller yeah, that might happen :)
Ninja: Cool....oh yeah...a film to add regarding Hackman...No Way Out (1987).
Hackman is always good! I could watch him sleep for two hours and it would be awesome! :D
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