Monthly Archives: September 2016

  • The Streetfighter

    Walter Hill (1975)

    Walter Hill’s The Streetfighter[1] is an incredibly good pulp film.  It’s almost inspiring to see a director doing the best he can with square, hackneyed material, instead of going through the motions or camping things up.  From the moment the streetfighter Chaney (Charles Bronson) jumps from a slow-moving goods train until the final scene, in which he disappears into the shadows, the film is invigorating and entertaining.  These opening and closing sequences are a simple, symmetrical expression of its man-from-nowhere theme.  The Streetfighter is set in New Orleans during the Great Depression.  The penniless Chaney arrives in the city to make some money with his fists.  He is, of course, formidably good at using them and a familiar strong, silent hero.  The picture includes other easily recognisable figures.  There’s Chaney’s opportunistic agent, Speed (James Coburn); Poe (Strother Martin), a man of good education brought low by a fatal character flaw; Lucy Simpson (Jill Ireland), a sad, lonely, wised-up girl who can’t live with Chaney because he’ll never stay the night and has no regular wage; Chick Gandil (Michael McGuire), the unscrupulous and imperturbable local Mr Big.  As stereotypes, they’re all easy to dismiss – in theory.  The achievement of The Streetfighter is that you don’t dismiss these characters and their story.  You feel they might turn out to be memorable – though, of course, it’s too soon to be sure about that.

    Hill, who co-wrote the screenplay with Bryan Gindoff and Bruce Henstell, has said of the film:

    ‘Guy rides into town, sorts things out, doesn’t give a lot of himself and rides on out in the end.  The fact that it’s New Orleans in the thirties is quite irrelevant.  It could be the Yukon in 1898 or Laramie, Wyoming. ‘  

    The 1930s setting comes across as important, nevertheless.  All the main characters are after money.  They’re not illustrations of a grubby, acquisitive society but victims of the Depression.  They have to be obsessed with money in order to survive.  In their situation, money is dignity.   When money is so essential, the potential of affluence becomes more important too.  Gambling is virtually the raison d’être of the streetfighting in the film.  Because of the personal prestige involved and in spite of the drab milieu, the gambling matters – to a greater extent than either the Western saloon or glamorous casino gambling we’re more used to seeing on a cinema screen.  Chick Gandil is determined, after his bullet-headed champion Jim Henry (Robert Tessier) has been expensively beaten by Chaney, to re-assert his authority as sponsor of the top fighter in the city.  He procures a supposed champion, pits him against Chaney, bets on the contest and agrees to pay all Speed’s debts if Chaney wins – which he does.  Although Gandil therefore loses even more heavily as a result, this venture brings him success in the longer term.   He makes the fight so potentially dangerous to his opponents that Chaney decides to go elsewhere; Speed disappears too, muttering about changing his patch.  In this Depression context, Gandil and Speed aren’t simply manipulative bookmaking figures:  success in the streetfighting management game is the measure of a man.

    Hill stages the fights – four involving Chaney and a couple of others – intelligently.  He exaggerates the pulp conventions in order both to intensify the action and to make it double-edged.  The punches crunch onto the soundtrack so loudly and crisply that they echo the zap-kapow sound effects of strip cartoons.  The fighting is given immediacy as a result but its aural proximity stops you lapping it up and though you root for Charles Bronson, you feel fear for his rivals as well as for Chaney.  The overhead shot that Hill favours for the two big fights in the story is conventional but  the action is so involving that it’s impossible to feel superior to the fight audience on the screen, even as they bay for blood.  You feel instead the crazy excitement of this kind of combat in the time and place in which the film is set.  Cine-sociologists claim that, during the recent recession, audiences have been favourably inclined towards disaster films because the people on screen are so much worse off than they are.  By contrast, the crowds in The Streetfighter are animated both by the visceral excitement of the spectacle and by the reassurance that you don’t need money in order to succeed in the fight game:  these onlookers are identifying with heroes as poor as themselves.  The streetfighting is a raw, brutally accurate metaphor for people’s attempts to avoid the Depression’s knockout punches.

    The characters’ names can be seen as semi-symbolic – Chaney, the sort-of beast the crowds come to watch; Speed, the fast talker; Poe, the intelligent opium-eater.  Speed moves, laughs and shoots a line with élan and is physically animated by the sight of greenbacks yet he’s never quite convincing as the hot-shot entrepreneur he aspires to be.  His exaggeratedly slick talk and gestures – the wisecracks, the flashing smiles, the affable, it’s-a-deal hand-slapping – make Speed look silly even when his man wins.  In a crisis, he is easily compromised and ineffectual, and relies on Chaney to get them both out of trouble.  Lying in a brothel bed, he asks the prostitute how he performed.  ‘Really terrific,’ she replies, not sounding as if she means it.  ‘That’s exactly what I thought,’ says Speed:  his shallow braggadocio carries even less conviction.  In debt and in panic, he tries the standard you-were-nothing-before-you-met-me-and-you’ll-be-nothing-without-me line on Chaney but the fighter sees the cliché for what it is and confirms he has the upper hand merely by saying nothing back.  James Coburn illustrates Speed’s weaknesses while making him charming and likeable too.  Speed is still on his feet, in spite of the Depression and his own shortcomings.

    Strother Martin’s Poe is likewise a figure of fun but a fundamentally determined one.  Poe is, in effect, the team doctor – a squat, dapper, white-suited, panama-hatted figure.  Like all the characters, he needs some moral fibre even to survive, though he’s even more lightweight than Speed and is no ladies’ man.  His passion for opium curtailed his medical school career but Poe is still something of a thinker:  we first see him at a black Pentecostal church service – he tells Speed he’s fascinated by comparative religion.  The irresponsibility of Speed and Poe give their set-up an amateurish quality that contrasts sharply with the sleek Gandil and his henchmen.  Gandil himself is well dressed and gives away less facially even than Chaney.  The shaven-headed Jim Henry looks more weapon than human being, until his defeat by Chaney, after which he’s reduced to the role of baggage man.  Jim Henry’s replacement, Street (Nick Dimitri), as he steps down onto the station platform, is a smart professional fellow, a businessman rather than a brawler.  There’s one incongruous figure in the Gandil camp – a pale little man with a moustachioed Dodge City bartender’s face, who keeps desperately switching sides to keep his head above water.  Maurice Kowaleski looks just right in the role.

    Walter Hill has used Charles Bronson honestly but knowingly.   This smallish (5’ 7”), middle-aged man is a huge Hollywood star.  He makes money for himself and directors like Michael Winner by bashing people up on screen.  Bronson thus brings an extra, grimly amusing dimension to the character of Chaney.  He’s an inexpressive actor but Hill turns that quality into inscrutability.  In physical terms, Bronson is certainly well cast as a teak-tough, lifeworn pugilist; his immobile, somewhat Oriental features seem right for Chaney’s serene, resigned attitude to life too.  Hill does more than communicate his affection for the mysterious underdog.  He also makes it infectious.  Philip Lathrop’s subdued photography catches the hopelessness of the grey streets and black alleyways.   The set decoration by Dennis W Peeples favours browns, pale greys and sad blue-greens.  Barry DeVorzon’s good, simple score is melancholy but the high notes are quietly hopeful – it’s an underdog’s signature tune.  All the harassed characters are, in the circumstances, underdogs:  their successes make them thankful for small mercies.  The Streetfighter made me, after seeing some ropy films recently, feel the same way.  Food for thought is not what you expect from a Charles Bronson picture but you get some from this one.

    [1970s]

    [1] Afternote:  The film was released in the US as Hard Times and that’s its primary title on Wikipedia and IMDB.  The latter confirms that the film was released in the UK as The Streetfighter.

  • Champion

    Mark Robson (1949)

    Carl Foreman’s screenplay (from a story by Ring Lardner) and Mark Robson’s direction are as ruthlessly efficient as the film’s protagonist, Michael ‘Midge’ Kelly, is in the ring; but perhaps you need either an appetite for the fight game or a detailed knowledge of boxing movies – or both – to enjoy and appreciate Champion.  Even these two things together may not be enough to warm to the film.  Manny Farber’s criticism repeatedly discloses a real enthusiasm for sport as well as a gift for describing its realisation on the cinema screen.   In his review of Champion in 1949, Farber starts by noting that ‘the studios have been turning out fight films as fast as they could steal each other’s material’.  He goes on to point out, exasperatedly, that:

    ‘The scenarios seem to have been written by a gossip columnist – they concentrate on spanking the hero for the un-Christian way he breaks training by smoking, the mean treatment he accords to his friends, and, most of all, his crude, ugly approach to women.  He goes with disreputable females, mistreats his mother and the girl back home waiting for him …

    The romanticism of the script is quite restrained, compared to the peculiar business that goes on in the ring.  Whereas real fighters actually hit each other about one sixth of the time, the fearless “phenoms” of the cinema are hitting every second – and never anywhere but flush on the chin or in the stomach; in spite of this, the hero is usually looking around the audience for someone he knows.  … There are no decisions, fights are never stopped …’

    Unless I missed it, Kirk Douglas’s Midge Kelly stays off tobacco.  Otherwise, Champion bears Farber out in all the above details, and plenty more.

    Midge and his brother Connie (Arthur Kennedy) are travelling from Chicago to California, thumbing lifts and hitching on freight trains.  They’re just about penniless, having bought a share in the Los Angeles diner they’re heading for.  They get a lift into Kansas City from a boxer called Johnny Dunne (John Daheim) and his girlfriend, Grace Diamond (Marilyn Maxwell).  Dunne is fighting in Kansas City that night and a promoter offers Midge $35 if he’ll fill in for a boxer who’s dropped out of one of the supporting bouts.  Desperate for funds and game for anything, Midge agrees, although the promoter eventually pays him only ten dollars, claiming the remainder as a management fee.  Midge doesn’t intend to box again but, when they reach LA, the brothers discover they’ve been swindled over the diner share too – and end up waiting tables and washing dishes.  Both Midge and Connie are attracted to Emma (Ruth Roman), whose father runs the restaurant where they work.  Midge gets too close to her:  a shotgun wedding follows.   A fight trainer called Tommy Haley (Paul Stewart) approached Midge after his fight in Kansas City and told him, if he ever needed a break, to come to the gym that Tommy runs in Los Angeles.  Midge, with Connie in tow, soon abandons Emma and heads for the gym.

    It’s the first step en route to the middleweight championship of the world and Emma is the first of a succession of people – the salt of the earth, rotten apples and something between the two – whose trust Midge betrays on the road to the top.  The decent folk include, as well as Emma, Tommy and Midge’s ailing ma (Esther Howard).  Among the wrong ‘uns are the self-serving Grace Diamond and the organised crime bosses who expect Midge to throw a fight against the long-time title hopeful Johnny Dunne.  Connie and Palmer Harris (Lola Albright), who falls for Midge after her husband (Luis Van Rooten) has replaced Tommy as his manager, are relatively ambiguous figures.  Champion goes about its job confidently but so predictably that it’s only in the supercharged melodrama of Midge’s climactic title defence against Dunne – their paths keep crossing! – that the film is undeniably startling.  Carl Foreman, Mark Robson and the editor Harry W Gerstad (who won an Oscar for his efforts) give this last title bout the works:  it feels all of twelve rounds but the fluctuations and the dynamic brutality of the action are compelling.

    This was the first movie produced by Stanley Kramer.  In view of what he went on to do, it’s hard to avoid thinking that Kramer had a big hand in turning the finale into a resounding jeremiad.  The film, before it sets about telling Midge Kelly’s success story in flashback, opens with a ringside commentator’s introduction of Midge as not only a champion but also a popular hero.  By the time Champion reprises the commentator’s spiel – as a prelude to the final fight – we know how hollow his words of praise are.  It’s still a shock, however, that the wages of Midge’s sin are death:  he eventually keeps his title but loses his life (a brain haemorrhage in the locker room afterwards).    Although a large part of its commercial success must have been thanks to the tickets bought by boxing fans, the movie implies that Midge went irredeemably wrong the moment he got into the corrupt and corrupting fight game.

    Playing Midge Kelly made Kirk Douglas a star.  You get a powerful sense of the actor’s relish in landing so emphatically dominant a leading role and his pride in the physique he gets to show off.  (His musculature is so developed beside John Daheim’s that poor Johnny Dunne never looks to have a chance against Midge – though I’m not sure Douglas’s upper body actually resembles the typical prizefighter’s physique of the time.)  Kirk Douglas’s surplus dynamism on screen sometimes went to waste.  There’s no risk of that happening on this energetic assignment and his acting meshes perfectly with the style of Champion.  This means, unfortunately, that he’s also somewhat monotonous:  like the film as a whole, it’s only in the in extremis closing stages that Douglas is truly extraordinary.  The contrast between the brothers is comically overdone by giving Connie a limp and a walking stick but Arthur Kennedy does well in the part – particularly in the lovelorn Connie’s scenes with Emma.  (Kennedy has a fine moment when – after Emma, in distress, has removed the wedding ring that binds her to Midge – Connie gently and regretfully puts it back on her finger.)   The actresses in the three main female roles have, in dramatic terms, similarly thankless tasks but the casting of Ruth Roman, Marilyn Maxwell and Lola Albright ensures they’re effectively contrasting presences in the story.

    4 September 2016

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