On Tonight on TCM!!!


As part of a "Noir City" line-up, Turner Classic Movies is showing The Breaking Point tonight at 9:45 (I'm in Seattle). Don't miss this great film! (Others in the line-up are Cry Danger (nearly forgotten, recently restored noir -- Dick Powell, Rhonda Fleming); 99 River Street (man, I'm looking forward to finally seeing this -- Evelyn Keyes, John Payne!); Tomorrow is Another Day (also super-psyched to finally see this, one of the four noir/crime mellers of the late 40s/early 50s by the swell but largely unknown director Felix E. Feist -- Ruth Roman, Steve Cochran); The Prowler (terrific Joseph Losey thriller -- the great Van Heflin and more Evely Keyes!); and Fingers at the Window (hhmmm... don't think I'd ever even heard of this Ax-Murderer-in-Chicago flick before reading of tonight's line-up -- Lew Ayres, Lorraine Day... and Basil Rathbone!!!)

Now, I like To Have and Have Not, I like Bacall and I love Bogart. But, I'll take The Breaking Point over its predecessor any day. For one thing, love Garfield more than Bogart, and love Neal way more than Bacall. But, while THaHN has style and seduction on its side most definitely, TBP just has way more real impact on me. I watch To Have and I'm certainly entertained; I watch The Breaking Point and I'm incredibly entertained and genuinely moved. It's tougher, it's more human. It's got real blood coursing thru it.

Matthew

reply

Looking forward to it. Nice synopsis. Watching now for the first time.

reply

I'm watching The Breaking Point now. I've never seen it before.

I wish that TCM had a monthly noir lineup.

reply

Just finished watching (2:30 AM 1/18/2012). Very good performances. Mr. Osborne had Eddie Muller, the head of the Film Noir Foundation in the studio (he was the guest movie programmer for the night) and I was surprised that they didn't comment on that heartbreaking ending of the little kid looking around for his father and being totally ignored by the Coast Guard, the medics, and all of the regular folks looking on. If Garfield dies or takes the family and moves that poor kid might never find out what happened.

reply

Yeah, schwap, that ending is unexpected and very affective. No matter how many times I see this film, when Hernandez is shot I gasp like I've seen it for the first time. (Talk about taking TBP over THaHN -- love Walter Brennan, but he's a cartoon in the latter, compared to the flesh and blood Hernandez plays in the former!) And so Joseph at the end is just heartbreaking. It's like the film is owning up to Joseph's -- and Wesley's -- isolation not only in the real world but in the very film itself.

Man, is this film supremely well-acted. One thing it confirms yet again for me is how much I love Wallace Ford, who I guess I first encountered in A Patch of Blue. Man, in this one, I spend most of his scenes wanted Garfield to beat the keee-rap out of him, he's so unctious... and then when he's freaking out at the heist he's been forced to attend, he's so helpless and pitiful, damned if he and the filmmakers don't make me feel bad for him!

And, maybe the single, identifiable element that most marks TBP superior to THaHN: Phyllis Thaxter as Lucy, a character who, of course, isn't even in the first film. Now, you gotta understand how insanely in love with John Garfield I am; for me he is, despite a fine critical reputation, just about the most underrated actor in the history of film, since I think very, very few were better than him -- and he's by far the sexiest, most beautiful man of the Hollywood studio era. And this is one of his very best performances. And I *LOVE* Patricia Neal. Then there's Hernandez and Ford, and others doing fine work in smaller parts. The KIDS are pretty damn incredible...

But, I gotta tell you, I think Phyllis Thaxter *almost* beats them all, including Garfield, in a kind of role that so often either provides barely commendable support or outright sucks. But the material for this character is good, and Thaxter runs with it, bringing such life to a "normal" type of person. Even when Lucy tries for glamour (with the hair-dyeing), she can't escape her lovely, down-to-earth ordinariness. Again, that *real* blood that courses thru the film, and Lucy -- as written, directed and especially acted by Thaxter -- as mother and wife, represents so much of the humanity of the film, its heart, if you will.

Speaking of which, a funny thing occurred to me watching TBP this time. Mr. Muller explained to Robert Osborne, in their talk after the film ended, why he felt TBP was a true Film Noir. But, at some point in the film, it hit me that it was also, kinda at heart... a Western.

So much of the Western is Man (and men) going out into the unknown and making their way separate from society -- part of the very point is to be FREE of society. But, the irony of this tennant of the Western is that much of the frontiering is done to BRING society to the unknown. The Man (and men) of many a Western destroy what they seek, if slowly in some cases. The conflict between 'rugged individualism' (men) and civilization (women) has long been integral to the Western.

Well, that's an awful lot of what TBP is about. Morgan is torn between his (arguably childish) individualist definition of himself on the one hand and the societal roles which he's accepted on the other, in the form of the three main females in his life. He is even given the opportunity to choose between those females and a fourth who herself has cast off the rules of society -- as Patricia Neal explained that Garfield emphasized to her before filming began (in that little interview bit TCM used to promo this showing of the film), she's a whore.

In a real important way, The Breaking Point is a Western!

Matthew

reply

And, oh, yeah -- I *completely* agree with jr! Another thing occurred to me as I watched these films the other night was that I too wish TCM would turn Thursdays -- or at least one Thursday a month -- into Noir City or somesuch name. I would completely love that.

(And it should indeed be Thursdays -- that evening fits around my tv series schedule very nicely! heh heh...)

Sometimes I'm in the mood for nothing but crime films: not necessarily Noir, could be gangster films, murder or other mysteries, even caper films (like this month's TCM spotlight on films like Riffifi, The Asphalt Jungle, 5 Against the House and even Big Deal on Madonna Street!). But, other times, Noir is all I wanna watch. I just wanna sit down and watch, like, 48 eight hours straight of (old) Film Noir.

Matthew

reply

I too felt sad for little boy & get frustrated at times with TCM's lack of what I feel are: important comments. Like mentioning a star is in a new movie or such..
Anyways, glad for TCM's choices in film noir flicks!

reply