Desert Fury | |
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Directed by | Lewis Allen |
Screenplay by |
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Based on | Desert Town by Ramona Stewart |
Produced by | Hal B. Wallis |
Starring | |
Cinematography |
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Edited by | Warren Low |
Music by | Miklós Rózsa |
Production company | Hal Wallis Productions |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2.9 million (US rentals) |
Desert Fury is a 1947 American film noir crime film directed by Lewis Allen, and starring Lizabeth Scott, John Hodiak and Burt Lancaster. Its plot follows the daughter of a casino owner in a small Nevada town who becomes involved with a racketeer who was once suspected of murdering his wife. The screenplay was written by Robert Rossen and A. I. Bezzerides (uncredited), adapted from the 1947 novel of the same name by Ramona Stewart. The picture was produced by Hal Wallis, with music by Miklós Rózsa and cinematography in Technicolor by Edward Cronjager and Charles Lang.
The film had its world premiere in Salt Lake City in July 1947, and earned mixed reviews from critics. In the years since its release, the film has been subject to significant film criticism from scholars and critics for its overtones of homosexuality, particularly in the relationship between two of its central male characters.
Gangster Eddie Bendix and his henchman, Johnny Ryan, arrive in the small mining town of Chuckawalla in northern Nevada, where Eddie hopes to cash in on the local community's gambling trade, which is overseen by the powerful Fritzi Haller, owner of the Purple Sage casino. The two men stop at a bridge entering Chuckawalla where Eddie's wife, Angela, died in a car accident. Eddie was once involved with Fritzi, but left town under suspicion of causing his wife's fatal car accident. At the bridge, they are met by Fritzi's daughter, Paula, who asks them to move their vehicle so she can cross the bridge. Paula has just dropped out of college and has returned home.
Paula finds her relationship with her mother contentious and competitive, and, having felt long pressured by her mother, insists she finally wants to make her own choices. Meanwhile, she reunites with her friend, deputy sheriff Tom Hanson, a former rodeo performer who has long been in love with her. Impressed by Tom's honesty and character, Fritzi offers to buy Tom a ranch if he proposes to Paula. An offended Tom blatantly exposes Fritzi's plot to Paula, enraging Fritzi and furthering the disconnect between her and her daughter.
While leaving town, Paula encounters Eddie at the bridge, and offers him a ride back to the ranch where he is staying with Johnny. Johnny is highly protective of Eddie and antagonistic toward Paula, which becomes clearer as Paula and Eddie develop a romance. Paula is fascinated to later learn from Tom that she strongly resembles Eddie's deceased wife, a fact that does not deter her from continuing to pursue Eddie, further driving a rift between Eddie and Johnny, culminating in Eddie cutting ties with him.
Fritzi forbids Paula from further pursuing Eddie, and grows enraged by Paula's obstinance. When Paula returns to the ranch to visit Eddie one night, Johnny threatens to murder her. Shortly after, Tom arrests Eddie for drunk driving and interrogates him. Eddie returns to Fritzi's mansion, proposing that he and Paula elope. Fritzi asks the Sheriff, Pat Johnson, to arrest Eddie for the murder of his wife, but Pat insists there is no evidence. Fritzi reveals that Eddie worked for Paula's father, and that he also pursued her the same way he is pursuing Paula. Paula refutes her mother and leaves with Eddie.
As the two depart Chuckawalla, they reluctantly pick up Johnny, who is waiting on the road, and agree to drop him off in Las Vegas. The three stop at an all-night cafe. Inside, a seething Johnny draws a pistol and reveals to Paula that Eddie murdered Angela at his instruction, for fear that she would reveal their criminal activities. Horrified by Eddie's complicity, Paula flees as Eddie shoots Johnny to death. Speeding down the road back toward Chuckawalla, she is pursued by Eddie in another car. Tom joins the chase in his police car. Eddie loses control of his car, and it careens off the bridge into the riverbed. Tom radios backup and notifies Fritzi. Paramedics pull Eddie's body from the burning vehicle. Fritzi arrives at the bridge. She offers to help Paula make a new start in her life, and asks if she was in love with Eddie, to which Paula responds, "There is no Eddie Bendix—there never was. Everything I thought was his was really Johnny's." Paula assures Fritzi she will not run away again, and the two embrace, before Paula departs with Tom over the bridge.
In the years since its release, Desert Fury has been praised as a seminal and unique Hollywood melodrama due to its bold overtones of homosexuality. [1] [2] Film scholar Foster Hirsch wrote: "In a truly subversive move the film jettisons the characters' criminal activities to concentrate on two homosexual couples: the mannish mother who treats her daughter like a lover, and the gangster and his devoted possessive sidekick... Desert Fury is shot in the lurid, over-saturated colors that would come to define the 1950s melodramas of Douglas Sirk." [3]
Eddie Muller, writer and founder of the Film Noir Foundation, similarly assessed the film: "Desert Fury is the gayest movie ever produced in Hollywood's golden era. The film is saturated—with incredibly lush color, fast and furious dialogue dripping with innuendo, double entendres, dark secrets, outraged face-slappings, overwrought Miklos Rosza violins. How has this film escaped revival or cult status? It's Hollywood at its most gloriously berserk." [4]
Writing for Film Comment , Ronald Bergan suggests that it is impossible to discern whether the homosexual undertones in the relationship between Eddie and Johnny were "intended or inadvertent... Since Vito Russo’s 1981 book The Celluloid Closet , we have grown accustomed to reading cryptic messages of homosexuality in pre-Sixties Hollywood movies. But the Eddie-Johnny relationship is too overt to be intentionally gay in the Hollywood of the Forties. If Desert Fury had been made in exactly the same way today, however, there would be nothing oblique about the liaison." [5]
In one notable piece of dialogue for the period, Paula asks Eddie how he and Johnny met. He replies: "It 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.""And then?", Paula asks. To which the reply is: "I went home with him that night. We were together from then on." [6] Film scholar David Ehrenstein cites this dialogue as an example of "the remarkable degree of specificity with which sexual status is detailed" in the film. [7]
Film scholar Imogen Sara Smith writes in In Lonely Places: Film Noir Beyond the City (2014) that the film's flamboyant visuals and undercurrents of homosexuality "tend to mask its real theme, [which is] the weakness and dependency that lurk behind glamorously hard-boiled exteriors... Set in a West thoroughly tainted by crime, money, corruption, and social snobbery, the film is a study of people trying to lasso and bridle the objects of their desire." [8]
John Hodiak's casting alongside Lizabeth Scott was announced in July 1946. [9] This was the first screen appearance of Wendell Corey, like Lancaster, a contracted discovery of producer Hal Wallis.
The majority of the film was shot on studio sets designed to appear as desert locales. [10] The production had red sandstone and gravel transported from Arizona to Los Angeles for the set shooting. [11] Some location shooting occurred in the small Ventura County, California, town of Piru, with the northwest side of Center Street, at Main, used as the exterior of Fritzi's saloon and casino; the Piru Mansion was used as the Haller home and the historic Piru bridge was used as the locale of the car crash. Additional exteriors were shot in Palmdale, [11] as well as the Arizona cities of Clarkdale and Cottonwood, the latter of which was entirely leased by the production for filming, and included local residents as extras. [12]
Miklós Rózsa was hired to compose the film's original score, which he began composing in December 1946. [13]
Released by Paramount Pictures, the film had its world premiere in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, July 23, 1947, with principal stars Burt Lancaster and Lizabeth Scott in attendance. [14] [15] It was subsequently given a wide theatrical release on August 15, 1947, [11] and premiered in Los Angeles on October 29, 1947. [16]
Paramount reissued the film in February 1959. [17]
When the film was released, The New York Times roundly despised it. They wrote, "Desert Fury is a beaut—a beaut of a Technicolored mistake from beginning to end. If this costly Western in modern dress had been made by a lesser producer than Hal Wallis it could be dismissed in a sentence. But Mr. Wallis is a man with a considerable reputation, being a two-time winner of the Irving Thalberg Award of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and Desert Fury is such an incredibly bad picture in all respects save one, and that is photographically." [18]
Grace Kingsley of the Los Angeles Times described the film as a Western "all dolled up with psychological angles and assorted neuroses," and praised Wendell Corey's performance as a strong point. [19] Helen Bower of the Detroit Free Press praised the film's scenery and cinematography as "genuinely sublime," with a story that "presents a far less sublime story of human emotions of weakness." [20]
James Agee of Time wrote that the film "is easy to take with tongue in cheek, impossible to take with a straight face... [its] intricate difficulties are presented in a leathery, smart-cracking kind of dialogue that sounds like an illegitimate great-grandchild of Ernest Hemingway's prose. A remarkable amount of footage is devoted to the way Miss Scott walks, chews over a line like a bit of Sen-Sen before getting it out, and tools a high-powered convertible around a curve. This is, in fact, one of the most auto-maniacal movies since James Cagney's racing classic, The Crowd Roars (1932)." [21]
As of May 2023 [update] , the film holds an approval rating of 57% based on 7 critical reviews on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 5.5/10. [22]
In 2012, the Academy Film Archive preserved a screen test for Desert Fury, with Burt Lancaster and Lizabeth Scott, in 2012. [23]
The film was released by Kino Lorber on Blu-ray and DVD in the United States on February 12, 2019. [24] [25]
Burton Stephen Lancaster was an American actor and film producer. Initially known for playing tough guys with a tender heart, he went on to achieve success with more complex and challenging roles over a 45-year career in films and television series. He was a four-time nominee for the Academy Award for Best Actor, and he also won two BAFTA Awards and one Golden Globe Award for Best Lead Actor. The American Film Institute ranks Lancaster as #19 of the greatest male stars of classic Hollywood cinema.
John Hodiak was an American actor who worked in radio, stage and film.
Ella Wallace Raines was an American film and television actress active from the early 1940s through the mid-1950s. Described as "sultry" and "mysterious", the green-eyed star appeared frequently in crime pictures and film noir, but also in drama, comedy, Westerns, thrillers, and romance.
Wendell Reid Corey was an American stage, film, and television actor. He was President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and a board member of the Screen Actors Guild, and also served on the Santa Monica City Council.
Lizabeth Virginia Scott was an American actress, singer and model for the Walter Thornton Model Agency, known for her "smoky voice" and being "the most beautiful face of film noir during the 1940s and 1950s". After understudying the role of Sabina in the original Broadway and Boston stage productions of The Skin of Our Teeth, she emerged in such films as The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946), Dead Reckoning (1947), Desert Fury (1947), and Too Late for Tears (1949). Of her 22 films, she was the leading lady in all but three. In addition to stage and radio, she appeared on television from the late 1940s to early 1970s.
The Killers is a 1946 American film noir starring Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner, Edmond O'Brien, and Sam Levene. Based in part on the 1927 short story of the same name by Ernest Hemingway, it focuses on an insurance detective's investigation into the execution by two professional killers of a former boxer who was unresistant to his own murder. Directed by Robert Siodmak, it featured an uncredited John Huston and Richard Brooks co-writing the screenplay, which was credited to Anthony Veiller. As in many film noir, it is mostly told in flashback.
Dead Reckoning is a 1947 American film noir directed by John Cromwell and starring Humphrey Bogart, Lizabeth Scott, Morris Carnovsky, and William Prince. It was written by Steve Fisher and Oliver H.P. Garrett, based on a story by Gerald Drayson Adams and Sidney Biddell, adapted by Allen Rivkin. Its plot follows a war hero, Warren Murdock (Bogart) who begins investigating the death of his friend and fellow soldier, Johnny Drake (Prince). The investigation leads Murdock to his friend's mistress, a mysterious woman whose husband Drake was accused of murdering.
Too Late for Tears is a 1949 American film noir starring Lizabeth Scott, Don DeFore, and Dan Duryea. Directed by Byron Haskin, its plot follows a ruthless woman who resorts to multiple murders in an attempt to retain a suitcase containing US$60,000 that does not belong to her. The screenplay was written by Roy Huggins, developed from a serial he wrote for The Saturday Evening Post. Arthur Kennedy, Kristine Miller, and Barry Kelley appear in support.
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers is a 1946 American noir tragedy film directed by Lewis Milestone and starring Barbara Stanwyck, Van Heflin and Lizabeth Scott. Kirk Douglas appears in his film debut. It follows a man who is reunited with his childhood friend and her husband; both the childhood friend and her husband believe that the man knows the truth about the mysterious death of the woman's wealthy aunt years prior. The screenplay was written by Robert Rossen, adapted from the short story "Love Lies Bleeding" by playwright John Patrick.
Byron Conrad Haskin was an American film and television director, special effects creator and cinematographer. He is best known for directing The War of the Worlds (1953), one of many films where he teamed with producer George Pal.
Kiss the Blood Off My Hands is a 1948 American noir-thriller film directed by Norman Foster. Based on the best-selling novel of the same name by Gerald Butler, it stars Joan Fontaine, Burt Lancaster, and Robert Newton. The film faced minor opposition from fundamentalist groups in the United States and the Commonwealth, with regard to its gory title. In some markets, the film was released under the alternate titles The Unafraid or Blood on My Hands.
Rope of Sand is a 1949 American adventure-suspense film noir directed by William Dieterle, produced by Hal Wallis, and starring Burt Lancaster and three stars from Wallis's Casablanca – Paul Henreid, Claude Rains and Peter Lorre. The film introduces Corinne Calvet and features Sam Jaffe, John Bromfield, and Kenny Washington in supporting roles. The picture is set in South West Africa. Desert portions of the film were shot in Yuma, Arizona.
I Walk Alone is a 1947 film noir directed by Byron Haskin and starring Burt Lancaster and Lizabeth Scott, with a supporting cast featuring Wendell Corey and Kirk Douglas.
Variety Girl is a 1947 American musical comedy film directed by George Marshall and starring Mary Hatcher, Olga San Juan, DeForest Kelley, Frank Ferguson, Glenn Tryon, Nella Walker, Torben Meyer, Jack Norton, and William Demarest. It was produced by Paramount Pictures. Numerous Paramount contract players and directors make cameos or perform songs, with particularly large amounts of screen time featuring Bing Crosby and Bob Hope. Among many others, the studio contract players include Gary Cooper, Alan Ladd, Paulette Goddard, Ray Milland, William Holden, Burt Lancaster, Robert Preston, Veronica Lake, William Bendix, Barbara Stanwyck and Paula Raymond.
Two Smart People is a 1946 American film noir crime drama film directed by Jules Dassin and starring Lucille Ball, John Hodiak, Lloyd Nolan and Hugo Haas. It was produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was one of a number of noirs starring Hodiak.
You Came Along is a 1945 romantic comedy-drama film set in World War II, directed by John Farrow. The original Robert Smith screenplay was rewritten by Ayn Rand. You Came Along stars Robert Cummings and in her film debut, Lizabeth Scott.
Kristine Miller was an American film actress. She appeared in film noir and Westerns. A discovery of Paramount producer Hal Wallis, she appeared in I Walk Alone (1948), Jungle Patrol (1948), Too Late for Tears (1949), Shadow on the Wall (1950), and the TV series Stories of the Century (1954–55).
Bad for Each Other is a 1953 American drama film noir directed by Irving Rapper and starring Charlton Heston, Lizabeth Scott and Dianne Foster. It was produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures. Its genre has been characterized as a "medical melodrama" with a film noir "bad girl".
Lizabeth Scott (1922–2015) appeared in 22 feature films from 1945 to 1972. In addition to stage and radio, she appeared on television from the late 1940s to early 1970s.
Ramona Stewart was an American author. She is best known for her 1946 novel Desert Town and the 1970 supernatural thriller The Possession of Joel Delaney, both of which were adapted into films.