Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Beat The Devil - John Huston


This is a surprisingly run-of-the-mill movie, considering the names involved: John Huston, Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, and Truman Capote worked on the script. Bogart plays Bogart here, which should be good, but if his oeuvre were filled with films like this, he never would have become a star. In a strange way his character is the weak part of this film. Better than the British broad, but together, she and Bogart’s rote romantic gestures taste like milk a couple days past its expiration.

Lorre and the guy from “The African Queen” and the British bounder and even Lollobrigida all put in great secondary performances. Really, all of the secondary performances are pretty great. They should have been put to use in a great movie. But Bogart is kind of stale in this. This is a stale Bogart performance in a stale Bogart movie, and while the rest of the cast is great, you can’t make a great dish with freezer burnt meat. The romance with the British woman, especially, was distinctly lacking in chemistry.

You could point to a line or two and argue that Bogart pulls his weight here. But that’s rather missing the point. Overall, the whole Bogart thing just feels tired in this movie, and all these years later there’s no particular reason for that to be the case. Hollywood and the star system were just really attracted to formulas in those days I suppose. Sometimes it worked better than others. This one not so much. Movie does get stronger as it goes, and I liked the ending. Grade C+.

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