Between Us (Logato)
There is nothing
soft, except
the way that night
Escapes your eyes
& drapes itself,
laughing light,
Round the arcs
Of shooting stars
Lost in their
flight.
Isaiah Quintabe is a
detective, a community problem-solver in the run-down East Long Beach
area of LA. He doesn't get paid much, some muffins, a chicken,
whatever. But one day his former friend Dodson, a small-time hustler
with big-time attitude, brings him a case with a juicy payday: a
drug-addled rap star whose life is being threatened, whose entourage
contains nothing but suspects, and an attempted murder by a trained
giant pit bull who recalls an urban Hound of the Baskervilles.
After watching John Ford's The Seas Beneath over Christmas (see my essay on it here), I mentioned the Argentine actress Mona Maris, who was one of the most interesting characters in that film, and who, as if by coincidence, turned out to play a part in a Falcon movie I came across, one of the few I had never before seen.
The trail takes him to the artist's daughter Mona (played by Martha MacVicar, soon to be renamed Martha Vickers by Warner Bros.) who is haunted, she believes, by her father's ghost, and thence to Mexico, where her father lived and worked (and which enabled RKO to use some of Orson Welles' stock shots from his never-finished Brazilian film, It's All True). There they meet Maris, playing Wade's widow, and her slick new husband Anton, who's in the Falcon's face PDQ. A Wade collector, 'Lucky Diamond' Hughes (perhaps to distinguish him from Howard Hughes?) shows up trying to chase down the stolen 'new' painting. Emory Parnell plays Hughes with a combination of bluster and sneaky greed that is delightful, if a bit embarrassing (check him out in his jammies when The Falcon breaks in on him).
Maris (second right in the photo right) is again one of the best things about the film; she has more range than most of the actors involved, though her role doesn't necessarily demand it. She gets second-billing, after Conway, and deserves that, perhaps because this was her second Falcon pic; she played in Sanders' second one, A Date With The Falcon, as the exotic femme fatale who involves him with a gang trying to get a formula for artificial diamonds, which coincidentally prevents his marriage to long-term fiance Wendy Barrie, who, for all her pizazz, isn't as interesting as Maris.
In the days of
click-bait celebrity journalism, identity-politics opinion, and
memory that extends no farther than the last hit of the 'delete' key,
it was hard to figure out exactly what it was that actor Liam Neeson
had done forty years ago after a 'close friend' had been raped that
merited the headlines it generated. The rapist had been a black man,
and the tabloids, both printed and virtual, screamed that Neeson had
gone out on the streets looking to kill a black man in revenge. And
of course the tabloid headlines generated more 'serious' reflection.
One opinion piece in Britain's Guardian explained that Neeson
confessed to having 'entertained a racist lynching fantasy' and gone
'looking for a black man to murder'.
It was called Death
Wish, based on the novel of the same name by the recently
deceased Brian Garfield, and it starred Charles Bronson and was
directed by Michael Winner in 1975, and thus not long before the
incident Neeson described. It was a huge hit, and it's not unlikely
that the 23 year old Neeson saw it. Bronson plays Paul Kersey, a
New York City architect whose wife is murdered and daughter raped by
a gang of intruders (including Jeff Goldblum in his first film
appearance). He begins setting himself up as an obvious target for
muggers, then kills them.
In Garfield's
original novel, Paul (called Benjamin) is an accountant. The book was
originally adapted by screenwriter Wendell Mayes for director Sidney
Lumet, the Michelangelo of New York City's urban decay in the
Seventies, and was to star Jack Lemmon. In Garfield's words, the
story was that of 'an ordinary guy who descends into madness'. It was
meant to recall the adage about digging two graves when you embark on
revenge. But when producer Dino DeLaurentis acquired the rights,
Lumet backed off the project and Winner (whom Garfield called 'an
idiot') was brought on board, along with Bronson, with whom he had a
successful working relationship. In Winner's subtle hands, the
violence was played with voyeuristic celebration, something perhaps
more requiring of apology than Neeson's own fantasies. Bronson,
of course, became an heroic figure. Enough to propel Death Wish
to four film sequels, a fifth film based on Garfield's own sequel,
Death Sentence, and a 2018 remake starring Bruce Willis, which
I have not yet seen because frankly, life is too short.
The original novel
was called Death Wish because Paul Benjamin was acting out his
own death wish, and, as noted, Brian Garfield wanted to show his vengeance was
leading to his own self-destruction. Winner and Bronson's version was more celebratory of Paul's transformation. Ambiguity isn't a motif in Michael Winner movies.