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Thread: Desert Fury (1947)

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    Night Editor Outfit boss Adam Lounsbery's Avatar
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    John Hodiak
    as Eddie Bendix
    Lizabeth Scott
    as Paula Haller
    Burt Lancaster
    as Tom Hanson

    Default Desert Fury (1947)



    For me, Lewis Allen's Desert Fury is currently running neck and neck with Felix Feist's The Devil Thumbs a Ride for the honor of "wackiest movie of 1947."

    But maybe I'm comparing apples to oranges. While The Devil Thumbs a Ride was a zany thrill ride with oddball characters and a lot of unexpected humor, Desert Fury is a ridiculously campy melodrama in which most of the humor seems unintentional.

    Also, it has gay undertones that are strong enough to power a small city for a year.

    The poster above implies that Burt Lancaster and John Hodiak spend the movie fighting for Lizabeth Scott's love, but that's not the case. More accurate is the tagline: "Two men wanted her love ... The third wanted her life!"

    Scott plays a beautiful 19-year-old girl who lives in a "cactus graveyard" in the middle of nowhere — Chuckawalla, Nevada. She lives with her mother, Fritzi, who's played by Mary Astor (an actress from Hollywood's Golden Age who was just 16 years older than Lizabeth Scott). Fritzi always calls Paula "baby." Not in a sweet, maternal way, but the way a barfly might say, "Hey, baby! C'mere!"

    Fritzi wants Paula to go back to school, but Paula wants to help her mother run the Purple Sage Casino. (Paula's father was a bootlegger who was killed when Paula was very young.)

    Burt Lancaster plays Tom Hanson, a former bronco buster who barnstormed around the country, but washed out of the rodeo and now works as a sheriff's deputy in Chuckawalla. Fritzi wants Tom to marry Paula and make an honest woman out of her. He'd like nothing more than to marry Paula, but he doesn't push, because he knows that her love for him is strictly platonic.

    Into their lives comes runty, mustachioed gangster Eddie Bendix (John Hodiak) and his gunsel Johnny (Wendell Corey), and Paula — quite inexplicably — falls head over heels in love with Eddie.

    The love triangle formed by Paula, Eddie, and Tom is weak sauce compared with the love triangle formed by Paula, Eddie, and Johnny.

    Johnny is more than just Eddie's "muscle." He's his longtime companion, his best friend, and — just possibly — his lover.

    Is he or isn't he? Let's look at the evidence. Eddie and Johnny form a tight unit, and seem to both know what really happened to Eddie's first wife, who died in a car accident. Johnny hates Paula, and seems insanely jealous of her relationship with Eddie.

    And how does Eddie explain to Paula how he first hooked up with Johnny?

    "I was your age, maybe a year older. I was in the automat off Times Square about two o'clock in the morning on a Saturday. I was broke, he had a couple of dollars, we got to talking. He ended up paying for my ham and eggs," he says, a note of shameful resignation creeping into his voice.

    "And then?" Paula asks.

    "I went home with him that night. I was locked out. Didn't have a place to stay. His old lady ran a boarding house in the Bronx. There were a couple of vacant rooms. We were together from then on."



    The relationship between Eddie and Johnny isn't the only hint of a gay union. Paula and Fritzi are so close in age, and Fritzi's attitude toward her daughter lacking so much maternal warmth, that they seem more like a lesbian couple than anything else. Fritzi seems like the older, more dominant one, and Paula seems like the younger, more restive one, who might also be interested in men. (In further defense of this reading, Lizabeth Scott and Burt Lancaster might walk off into the sunset at the end of the picture, but their lips never meet. The final — and most passionate — kiss of the film is the one Fritzi plants on Paula's lips.)

    There's a lot of talent in front of and behind the camera, but that only counts for so much. For instance, compare Miklós Rózsa's brilliant score for Brute Force (1947) with his score for Desert Fury. His score for Desert Fury is powerful, but without the dramatic underpinning of a great film, it just writhes and flails all over the place, seemingly in search of a better movie, or at least a more lively one.

    The script by Robert Rossen (with uncredited assistance from A.I. Bezzerides), which is based on Ramona Stewart's novel Desert Town, has a lot of snappy dialogue, but the story just doesn't move with much intensity. Also, the Technicolor cinematography really undercuts some of the noir elements of the story and the situation.

    Desert Fury is campy, and worth seeing if you're into camp, but that's about it. Also, if you're a connoisseur of face-slapping, there's plenty of that going around, too.

    (Originally published on my blog, OCD Viewer.)
    Last edited by Adam Lounsbery; 03-29-2012 at 09:40 AM.

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    Administrator City Editor Steve-O's Avatar
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    I'm with team Mary Astor (more than Liz Scott...)

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    I've never taken Desert Fury seriously, it's campy fun!

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    Another contender for 1947 campiest dialog of the year is Dead Reckoning (J. Cromwell -1947). It stars Liz Scott (Dusty aka Mike) and Humphrey Bogart (Capt. 'Rip' Murdock). The bizarre dialog in that film also raises the question about Rip's relationship with his wartime pal Johnny Drake, who was burnt like a piece of charcoal. Somehow, Miss Scott delivered campy lines with a stiffness that makes these films fun to watch. Bogey was good at it too...

    Last edited by Hard-Boiled-Rick; 04-01-2012 at 10:18 PM.

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    Night Editor Outfit boss Adam Lounsbery's Avatar
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    Speaking of "Dead Reckoning," does anyone know why Bogie constantly calls Liz Scott "Mike" in that film? Was that ever explained?

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    Default A connoisseur of face-slapping I am not, but you&#...

    A connoisseur of face-slapping I am not, but you've piqued my interest in DESERT FURY. I know I've seen in at some point over the years because the Wendell Corey thing just sounds so familiar. Who in their right mind would fall in love with John Hodiak - he of that strange little mustache(Well, Judy Garland did in THE HARVEY GIRLS).

    When I saw the title of your post, the film I mean, I thought you meant the Burt Lancaster movie where he plays a Foreign Legionnaire or something like that.

    More...

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    Default I have a very different take on Desert Fury. First...

    I have a very different take on Desert Fury. First, it's one of only two technicolor films made in the '40s worthy of the "film noir" label, the other being Leave Her to Heaven with Gene Tierney. Second, the cast is chock full of actors with serious credentials in the canon of good crime dramas. I'll agree the Hodiak/Corey relationship is way gay, but it enlivens the script here, just as similar hookups do in other noir classics( Elijah Cook and Sidney Greenstreet in the Maltese Falcon; Lawrence Tierney and Elijah Cook [again] in Born to Kill; Alan Ladd and William Bendix in The Glass Key).

    Burt Lancaster, in his first screen role, is good but underutilized here. Astor, Hodiak and Corey, however, are in top form. Lizabeth Scott was still under personal contract to Hal Wallis, who apparently wanted to showcase her in Desert Fury - which I believe accounts for her numerous costume changes, a distracting and laughable visual element that diminishes the film's heft as a top-flight noir.

    But all those undertones of perverse desire and the twisted mother/daughter relationship - isn't that part of what we love these films for? I think Desert Fury delivers on its noir bona fides, and provides some terrific entertainment. The one serious boo-boo is in Lizabeth Scott's back story. She's supposed to be 19 years old, and home from college. No college student of the 40's ever looked like that or dressed like that.

    comment by Paul McGoran



    This comment was made at Noiroftheweek.com.



    2012-12-23T22:33:29.710-05:00

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    [review from May 25, 2012]

    Fritzi Haller (Mary Astor) runs a casino in a small Nevada town. She has higher aspirations for her daughter Paula (Lizabeth Scott), who has just quit finishing school and returned home. Meanwhile, the racketeer Eddie Bendix (John Hodiak) rolls into town with his sidekick Johnny (Wendell Corey, in his debut appearance). When Paula starts falling for lowlife Eddie, Fritzi bribes deputy Tom (Burt Lancaster) into proposing to her. But Tom lets Paula know about the deal, driving her further into the arms of Eddie. Now Tom and Fritzi try their hardest to spare Paula from a dark future.

    That sounds like a whole lot of story, but it doesn’t really add up to much. Though falling loosely into the noir category, there isn’t much sizzle to the story and the love triangle at the center is pretty dull stuff. More interesting are the clues of other, more illicit relationships. I don’t want to be that guy who reads homoerotic subtext into everything, but I’ll be damned if Johnny doesn’t have the hots for Eddie. He’s followed him around for decades, cooks his meals, cleans his house, fetches his drinks… and seethes when Eddie shows an interest in Paula. He acts like a petulant housewife, a jilted lover. He’s downright bitchy about it. And there’s also a hint of an incestuous, lesbian relationship between Fritzi and Paula. That part might be stretching it, but it really doesn’t take a big leap to get there.

    Lancaster isn’t very interesting here, playing a generally straight-and-narrow kind of fella, and Hodiak isn’t bringing a whole lot to the table either. I run hot and cold on Lizabeth Scott, this time out I’d have to say I’m pretty cold. Normally it wouldn’t be a big deal for a 24-year-old to play 19, but Scott’s husky voice and aura of world-weariness doesn’t suit a character with Paula’s impetuousness and naiveté. And there aren’t any sparks between her and Hodiak (of course, each is too busy having sparks with their same-sex companions) nor her and Lancaster. It’s Corey and Astor who make the most compelling characters.

    This makes my 6th noir by Lewis Allen, and I don’t know why I keep coming back. They’ve all been rather underwhelming. As much fun as homosexual subtext is, it’s not a big part of the film and the rest of it lopes along without sparking much interest. It feels longer than it should. However, the Technicolor photography does look very nice, and doesn’t get in the way much of the noirish atmosphere. Rozsa’s score isn’t his greatest, but it’ll do. There’s also some nice, snappy dialogue. It’s very much a mixed bag, with good facets and not-so-good facets. Probably skippable for most folks. Rating: Fair

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