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Thread: Pitfall (1948)

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    Dick Powell
    as John Forbes
    Lizabeth Scott
    as Mona Stevens
    Jane Wyatt
    as Sue Forbes

    Default Pitfall (1948)

    Director: André De Toth Stars: Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott, Raymond Burr, Byron Barr, and Jane Wyatt



    A creepy little film with Powell starring as a disgruntled, bored, married, claims adjuster who becomes smitten with femme fatale Scott as the forbidden fruit he encounters during a routine recovery of stolen funds. Funds stolen and converted into gifts for Scott by Byron Barr, Scott's boyfriend who is doing time. Raymond Burr plays a creepy PI who traced down Scott, who works with Powell's firm, and he is also obsessed with Scott in a bad way. Jane Wyatt plays Powell's wife and she is your typical 40's-50's housewife.

    The film is not very visually stylistically "Noir" but the subject matter is quite on the dark side, turning the future staple 50's TV family sitcom vision of stability on its ear. Scott is surprisingly very appealing in this as a sweet and innocent catalyst to the downfall of three men.

    Powell & Scott


    Burr & Scott


    Wyatt


    Powell was impressive playing a completely different character from the previous noirs I've seen him in, 8/10

    Again I quote bmacv of IMDB:

    De Toth's subversive look at the organization man gone astray, 8 August 2004

    Author: bmacv from Western New York

    Andre De Toth's Pitfall opens in the shaky sanctuary of post-war domestic bliss. Jane Wyatt cracks eggs into a cast-iron skillet, to be served to her insurance-claims adjuster husband Dick Powell and their tousle-haired young son; the cozy breakfast nook where they exchange morning what-if banter looks out upon a vista of the New California of subdivisions and revolving credit and sunny possibilities yet to be realized. But, as Wyatt drives Powell into downtown Los Angeles (two-car families still being around the corner), he grouses absently about his routine job and clockwork schedule before giving her a perfunctory peck on the cheek. The canker has invaded the rose. As he later confesses, he feels he's in a rut `six feet deep,' and yearns for freedom – adventure. He gets more than he bargained for.

    Waiting for him in his office is `Gruesome,' private investigator Raymond Burr, who's done some legwork concerning a convicted felon who has defrauded the company. The felon (Byron Barr) squandered most of his ill-gained money showering his girlfriend (Lizabeth Scott) with furs, an engagement ring and even a little speedboat. Burr, in the course of his sleazy sleuthing, has taken quite an obsessive fancy to her, but Powell warns him off, saying he'll wrap the case up himself.

    At first Scott dismisses Powell as just `a little man with a briefcase,' an assessment that tallies too well with his own worst self-image. But to no one's surprise, in this climate of Pacific air and marital dissatisfaction, he ends up taking his own fancy to her, one that turns out to be mutual. They tear around the harbor in her boat, then fritter away the rest of the afternoon in a dim cocktail lounge. He doesn't get back to hearth and home ‘till the wee small hours.

    One night when his son is awakened by nightmares, Powell lectures him: `Take only good pictures and have only good dreams.' It's a case of do what I say, not what I do. By veering off from the straight and narrow, Powell has set into motion a chain of baleful events. The vindictive Burr assaults him outside his garage. Scott discovers that Powell's been hiding his life as a married father. Ex-cop Burr starts visiting Barr in stir, sowing seeds of jealousy and plans for revenge. Events converge one dreadful night with an unplanned pair of killings that leave the quick, arguably, worse off than the dead....

    Jay Dratler's script (from his own novel) shows a progressive streak in dealing with the short and unpredictable fuses of controlling, potentially violent males – stalkers. The script also serves the assembled cast well. True, there's not much to be done with Wyatt, with her cap-sleeved house-dresses and finishing-school elocution, but she's more plausible than she would be two years later as a highly unlikely femme fatale in The Man Who Cheated Himself. Here, she's the distaff side of those male dictators, a wife whose ideals of suburban decorum are chiseled into cold marble (she's a faint forerunner of Joan Crawford's Harriet Craig).

    But Powell gets to tap deeply into his key emotion, snappish discontent, and lets it deepen into something close to small-time tragedy. Scott, always an iconic presence but an actress with limits, finds a comfortable part as a bewildered and vulnerable victim of the men who come into her life, bidden and unbidden. Burr, billed fourth (after Wyatt!), possibly fares best. Much in demand in the late ‘40s as one of the creepiest heavies, he earned that demand by providing extra (and maybe unasked-for) dimensions to the thugs he played. Like the giant Fafner in Das Rheingold, he lets a bit of yearning, of desperation, show under all his intimidating bulk (and in sheer avoirdupois, it's one of his biggest roles).

    De Toth, better remembered for his westerns and 3-D horror pix like House of Wax, made, in Pitfall, one of the more distinctive titles of the noir cycle. Not often mentioned in top-ten lists, even those of black-and-white crime films of the post-war era, it has the effrontery to situate deceit and duplicity and betrayal where it surely ought not to belong – not in road houses or tenement flats but right at the heart of a storybook American family (it's one of the more subversive films of the era).. Yes, there are lapses, chief among which is a score that keeps trying to crack corny little jokes. But in the denouement – far from unleashing a hideous storm of terror, De Toth opts for cold detachment – he casts a chill that lingers still.

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    [review from April 24, 2011]

    Subdued noir from De Toth that lacks stylization but sticks with you. Although short on snappy dialogue and snazzy photography, the themes of modern ennui and the allure of nonconformity are strong. At times it seems like De Toth might be setting up a cautionary fable about straying too far from the suburban nuclear family ideal, but by the ending there’s some room for ambiguity. You can’t complain about Dick Powell or Lizabeth Scott, and you sure as hell can’t complain about Raymond Burr, menacing and creepy as ever. The score, however, is a mixed bag… when it’s somber, it’s great, but the lighter musical cues are groan-worthy. Rating: 8

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    Posted by samspadefan

    By the time he helmed Pitfall in 1948; Hungarian born émigré directorAndré de Toth had a filmography consisting of a handful of largely forgettable films, and was perhaps better know as the one-eyed husband of the beautiful Veronica Lake. Although he’d have limited success later in his career, most notably with the 3-D horror film House of Wax, a growing number of people, myself included, have come to believe that in Pitfall he has created one of the finest, and most unique, entries in the film noir canon.

    PLOT RECAP (SPOILERS APPLY)

    Pitfall opens with the seemingly idyllic suburban life of John Forbes (Dick Powell), insurance company claims adjuster, his wife Sue (Jane Wyatt) and their young son Tommy.

    It soon becomes apparent that this vision of the American dream is simply an illusion, at least to the melancholy John who dryly complains of the rut “six feet deep” that he feels himself caught in and his longing for something more exciting and less routine in his life.


    Forbes finds his excitement through ‘Mac‘ MacDonald (Raymond Burr), a private investigator hired by his firm to track down and recover insurable gains. MacDonald points Forbes in the direction of Mona Stevens (Lizabeth Scott), possessor of several items purchased for her by her imprisoned ex-boyfriend Bill Smiley using stolen money insured by Forbes’s company. During the course of his investigation MacDonald, known as ‘gruesome’ around the office, has developed an attraction towards Mona. Forbes opts to go and see Mona himself to re-inventory the stolen gains.

    After a very rocky start, in which Mona strikes at the very heart of Forbes’ personal dissatisfaction with his current life by calling him a “little man with a briefcase”, the two spend the afternoon boating and sharing cocktails before Forbes returns home quite late into the night after the implied adultery. It is worth noting that Forbes does not offer up the information that he is a married man, nor does he wear a wedding ring. Forbes’ late return is not lost on a lurking, and jealous, MacDonald.

    After warning, then threatening Forbes who meets again with Mona, MacDonald takes a more physical approach and administers a brutal beating to him. Hearing that Forbes is sick and out of the office, the faithful Mona attempts to deliver some cheer and chicken soup, only to learn the truth of Forbes’ marital status which leads to severing their relationship. MacDonald, however, doesn’t quite buy into this and continues his stalking of Mona and threats against both her and Forbes, including informing the soon to be released Bill Smiley of the dalliances between his girl Mona and Forbes in the hopes of forcing a confrontation.

    This all leads to the ultimate confrontations where an armed (by MacDonald) Smiley heads to a forewarned Forbes’ house and MacDonald, awaiting the outcome of this confrontation in which he expects one man to end up dead and the other imprisoned, heads to Mona’s to force her into leaving with him.

    Smiley is killed by Forbes and upon hearing the news over a police scanner, Mona in turn kills MacDonald. Although in the apparent clear, Forbes has a fit of conscience and confesses all to his wife who declares that in the interests of maintaining the illusion of their perfect family he not tell the police. Continuing his need for conscience cleansing, Forbes does tell all to the police. Forbes’ killing is considered justifiable self defense, but Mona may not be so lucky. In the words of the DA, he believes they are “holding the wrong person upstairs”.

    Forbes stumbles from the police station to find his dutiful wife awaiting him, willing to give their marriage another chance, while Mona’s fate hangs in the balance.

    End Spoilers

    In Pitfall, de Toth has largely removed the noir film from the urban settings of the large, looming city, populated by gangsters and cops, and placed it firmly in the suburbia of America populated by the everyman (or everywoman). By creating a domestic noir, de Toth taps into feelings of familial incarceration which is more easily related to by, and perhaps more disturbing to, the everyday Joe. While very few of us would act on any of our impulses the way Forbes does, it would be folly to suggest that many haven’t occasionally felt trapped in our own domestic or employment rut. In this context, Pitfall serves as a moral cautionary tale with great effect, even though the ultimate punishments seem misplaced.

    One other characteristic standard that de Toth manages to turn upside-down in Pitfall is that of the femme-fatale. In other reviews or comments on this film, I’ve frequently seen Mona Stevens (Lizabeth Scott) referred to as the femme-fatale of the story. My own view is quite different as I view Mona as the doomed innocent. Mona’s lone faults are that she commits with her heart and she attracts the wrong men. Of the three men in her life throughout the film, one is arrested for embezzling in order to provide her gifts, one is a sadistic stalker and one is a philandering husband who manages to place her in further peril. In none of these instances is Mona responsible for leading the ‘innocent’ male characters towards their doom. Instead, it is the actions of the men who lead Mona to hers. Indeed, Mona’s respect for the sanctity of marriage and the family, only further imperil her to the point of requiring forceful self defense in an act that may ultimately mean jail or death for herself, while the cheating Forbes is returned to his loving, though damaged, family. Clearly it is Mona who suffers the most of the pair at the hands of the film’s homme-fatale(s).

    In the final retrospective, Pitfall represents something of a zenith on several fronts. As a unique and subtly complex noir, I believe it to be the best work from director André de Toth (at least of the several films I’ve seen to date). It also represents some of the finest acting from the three main leads – Dick Powell in a more nuanced role than that of Philip Marlowe and one in which he hits it perfectly, noir icon Lizabeth Scott in what I consider to be her best role and Hollywood heavy favorite Raymond Burr delivering at the top of his game as well.

    Sadly, Pitfall remains without a DVD release on the horizon and while TCM occasionally airs it and collectors copies are available to those that search them out, this is one film that noir lovers should be clamoring to see.


    Pitfall Trivia:
    • de Toth was originally hired to do a rewrite of the script before accepting the director’s chair.
    Humphrey Bogart was originally cast as the film heavy MacDonald, but was vetoed by de Toth in favor of Burr, an actor he had never seen work before.
    • de Toth was also responsible for the casting of Lizabeth Scott.
    • Powell was originally attached to the project as an executive producer.

    Additional reading on, and interviews with, André de Toth including his work on Pitfall can be found here:

    Senses of Cinema de Toth interview
    Senses of Cinema de Toth



    Posted 12th March 2007

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