The Psychotronic Zone
By Ed Garea
By Ed Garea
Fear (Monogram,
1946) - Director: Alfred Zeisler. Writers: Dennis J. Cooper &
Alfred Zeisler (s/p); Fyodor Dostoevsky (novel, Crime
and Punishment), uncredited. Cast: Peter Cookson, Warren
William, Anne Gwynne, Francis Pierlot, Nestor Paiva, James Cardwell,
Almira Sessions, William Moss, Ernie Adams, & Charles Calvert.
B&W, 68 minutes.
Dostoevsky’s
novel, Crime and Punishment, is without a doubt one of
the classics of literature and, as such, it’s been adapted into
movies over the years, with the most famous being the 1935 Columbia
production starring Peter Lorre. The next American production came in
1946, made by Monogram, of all studios. Although Dostoevsky is
excised from the credits, perhaps to make viewers think the writers
came up with it all on their own, one gander at the film is enough to
remind anyone who read the novel or had seen one of the movie
adaptations that it was indeed Dostoevsky’s story, even if he
didn’t get credit.
That
being said, how does the film play out? All in all, not bad,
considering that its star, Cookson, is blander than a loaf of
store-bought white bread. Director Zeisler keeps everything moving
and everyone in play, while the film has some good actors in
supporting parts to help overcome the deficiencies of the leading
man, particularly William - as Porfiry to Cookson’s Raskolnikov -
and Gwynne, though she has practically no reason for being in the
film other than to give Cookson someone to talk to in order to
stretch out the running time. The film also contains the typical
Monogram plot holes (it just wouldn’t be a Monogram film without
them) and a novel plot twist at the end, which for cinephiles becomes
the movie’s raison d’etre.
Medical
student Larry Crain (Cookson) lives in a shabby one-room flat. He
also owes everyone: his landlady, his friends, and now his school,
which has sent him a letter telling him his scholarship has been
revoked because the school is revoking all scholarships (in reality
that's about as likely to happen as the moon being found to be made
of green cheese). At any rate, the landlady (Sessions) has been
bugging him, and out of desperation he goes to see Professor Stanley
(Pierlot), who doubles on the side as a pawnbroker.
Stanley
looks over the watch Larry has brought, noting that Larry owes him
back interest for the last item pawned. Larry promises to pay that
off, and Stanley gives him $10 for the watch, which actually
translates to $8, as Stanley deducts the interest on this item ahead
of time. A trusting fellow, he is. But the scene also serves as a
set-up for what is to follow, for Stanley goes to his wall safe to
retrieve the money. What, for only eight dollars? No, to show us the
strongbox he removes from the safe and which contains oodles and
oodles of dough, as well as other pawned items. We notice that Larry
is getting the urge to whack the professor right there and then; he’s
fiddling with a fireplace poker as Stanley places the box on a table.
He doesn’t go through with it, but he’s definitely thinking about
it.
The
next scene finds him in the local eatery, where he runs into some of
his fellow students, and more importantly, the Girl. It’s Gwynne,
and when the proprietor asks her to pay for her coffee, she searches
her purse, in which she seemingly keeps everything except money. No
matter, for Larry’s a gentleman, and he gladly pays for her coffee
while she promises to repay him the next time they meet. They
exchange introductions: she is Eileen, he is Larry.
Larry
returns home to find two pieces of bad news: a tuition bill from the
school and an ultimatum from his landlady - either pay up or hit the
road. His mind now made up, Larry returns to Professor Stanley’s
apartment, carrying an old ashtray he wrapped to make to look like
something worth pawning. He hides in the hallway shadows until a
painter working on an empty unit leaves. Stanley is reluctant to open
the door for Larry (weren’t you just here yesterday?), but Larry
convinces him he has something else to pawn.
As Stanley lets him in, Larry shows him the tightly wrapped ashtray. The safe is open and the strongbox is on the table. Stanley is struggling with the wrapping as Larry sneaks up behind him and lets him have it with the poker. It’s the best scene is the film, for we never see Larry land the poker on the prof’s noggin, but see Stanley’s hands as they unwrap the ashtray, and as he’s hit, the ashtray slip from his hand, land on the table, and knock over a glass of wine, which stains the white table cloth like blood. It’s an effective use of the camera, giving the scene a noirish aspect.
As Stanley lets him in, Larry shows him the tightly wrapped ashtray. The safe is open and the strongbox is on the table. Stanley is struggling with the wrapping as Larry sneaks up behind him and lets him have it with the poker. It’s the best scene is the film, for we never see Larry land the poker on the prof’s noggin, but see Stanley’s hands as they unwrap the ashtray, and as he’s hit, the ashtray slip from his hand, land on the table, and knock over a glass of wine, which stains the white table cloth like blood. It’s an effective use of the camera, giving the scene a noirish aspect.
As
Peter is about to help himself to the loot, there’s a knock at the
door. At the door are some other students who have come to see their
friendly pawnbroker. They start to leave until one notices that the
lights are on inside. Larry hears them talking about getting the
manager, and after they leave he grabs the ashtray and books it out
of there - cashless. When he hears someone coming up the stairs he
ducks into the empty unit, getting paint on his jacket sleeve. He
makes it back to his place, stuffs the jacket under his bed and drops
off to sleep.
The
next day, he’s rousted out of bed by the landlady and Detective
Schaefer (Paiva), who has come to haul him down to the station. On
the way out, the landlady hands him a letter that has just come in
the mail. At the station, Larry meets Captain Burke (William), who
informs him about an announcement in the previous day’s paper
requesting Stanley’s customers to come down to the station to
reclaim their possessions; Larry was the only one not to do so.
Larry’s excuse is that he slept through the entire day and did not
see the paper. While waiting on Burke, Larry opens his mail to
discover a check for $1,000 from a periodical for an article he
submitted. He tells Burke the news as he leaves, and heads for his
favorite hangout to celebrate. There, he finds Eileen now working
behind the counter. As they renew acquaintances, they decide to go on
a picnic, but Schaefer enters with orders to bring Larry back to the
station.
At
the station, Burke compliments Larry on his article, “Men Above the
Law,” in which he argues that if enough good results from an evil
act, the act is justified. Burke questions Larry as to whether or not
that is an argument or his personal philosophy: that some men are
above the law. Larry states it's his personal philosophy and leaves
to return to the restaurant. His friends inform him that the college
has learned about his article and decided to renew his scholarship.
He’s also going on that picnic with Eileen. Everything is going his
way at last.
Now
if only he could get Captain Burke out of his hair, for it seems that
no matter which way he turns or where he goes, Larry keeps running
into Detective Schaefer, who brings him to the office to confer with
Burke. Burke tells Larry that he found clothing fibers clinging to
the paint inside the vacant unit. Larry weasels his way out with a
contrived explanation, but once he gets home, he makes sure to burn
the incriminating jacket.
He
eventually winds up at Eileen’s home, where he confesses all. She
advises him to confess to the police and he agrees. But when he
returns home, Burke is waiting there for him with a copy of that
day’s newspaper. The headline? “Painter Confesses Murder.”
Burke explains that innocent people sometimes confess to others’
crimes. He calmly asks Larry to drop by the station and Larry agrees,
but once Burke leaves, Larry starts packing. He arranges to meet
Eileen at a travel agency. When he sees her waiting, he is so anxious
to get to her that he dashes across the street and is hit by a car.
Is
this the end of Larry? Not so fast. Cut back to Larry’s room, awash
in harp music and a swirling vortex. He’s sleeping. A knock at the
door rouses him out of his slumber. It was all a dream! At the door
is Professor Stanley, who gives Larry a loan of $120 and news that
his scholarship has been renewed. As Larry step out of his apartment
he bumps into Eileen in the hallway. Only her name isn’t Eileen,
see? It’s Cathy, and she has tracked him down to repay his 60 cents
before compound interest sets in. While she’s there, she decides to
rent a room from Mrs. Williams, the landlady. As she repays him, he
asks her out. And he also asks if he can call her “Eileen.”
Creepy, huh? Completely unmoved, she remarks that “he sure must
have been in love with that girl!” Larry responds by telling her
he’ll tell her all about it one day as the movie fades to the end
title.
Talk
about disappointing. The movie, which already has a decent ending,
decides to tack on a cheesy coda. Was director Zeisler trying to add
on time to the film? Or, perhaps he was imitating his idol, Fritz
Lang, by copying his trick ending from his 1944 film with Edward G.
Robinson, The Woman In the Window. It’s now 1946, who’s
going to remember a 1944 film? Or, just maybe, he was trying to leave
the audience with something to talk about as they left the theater.
If that was his intention, I’m sure he succeeded, for they probably
muttered, “What a cheesy ending,” to each other as they walked up
the aisles.
Afterwords
As
mentioned before, Fear is the Poverty Row version of
Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment. Warren William, who
does not make his appearance until almost one-third of the film is
gone, is Porfiry. Peter Cookson is obviously Raskolnikov. One wonders
why the studio does not acknowledge its debt to Dostoevsky. It’s
not as if they had to pay any royalties. But then again, it just
wouldn’t be a Monogram production if they resorted to that type of
thing. Anne Gwynne got the worst deal playing an updated Sonia, as
she was little more than window dressing.
As
Crain, Cookson put in a decent, if unspectacular, performance, one
that would be expected given his lack of acting experience at the
time. He began his career at Universal and floated around the
studios. His second appearance was an unbilled part in the Spencer
Tracy-Irene Dunne wartime soaper, A Guy Named Joe, for
MGM. He soon ended up at Monogram, which would be his home base until
he left the Silver Screen later in 1946, his last appearance being a
starring role in William Beaudine’s morality play, Don’t
Gamble With Strangers. He moved to Broadway and made a name for
himself starring in the original production of The Heiress.
He later split his time between Broadway and the television studios
of New York City, guest starring in assorted series and teleplays. In
addition, he also became a producer of Broadway and off-Broadway
plays. In 1949, he married fellow thespian Beatrice Straight, a
marriage that lasted until his death in 1990 from bone cancer.
Of
course, to the surprise of no one, it’s Warren William who steals
the movie, even though, as mentioned before, we do not see him until
the film is well underway. Born Warren William Krech in Atkin,
Minnesota, in 1894, he was one of moviedom’s great, unappreciated
actors, beginning his career as William Warren on Broadway in 1924,
with a small role in the H.G. Wells play, The Wonderful
Visit. He would go on to appear in 17 more Broadway productions,
along with a couple of silent pictures under the name “Warren
Kretch.” He joined Warner Bros. in 1931, assuming the role of the
underhanded businessman in many a Pre-Code feature. His patrician
looks and manners were showcased in Cecil B. DeMille’s production
of Cleopatra, in 1934, where he played Julius Caesar to
Claudette Colbert’s titular character. Also, while at Warner’s he
gained fame as the screen’s first Perry Mason. After making Stage
Struck in 1936, William left to join the rolls at MGM as a
character actor. From there it was on to Columbia, where he was noted
for his portrayal of Michael Lanyard in the long running “Lone
Wolf” series. After his run in the series ended, William continued
in character parts, but his failing health caused other major studios
to avoid him, which is the reason why he landed at Monogram. He died
in 1948 at age 53 from multiple myeloma, a form of cancer of the
blood.
Although Fear was
his next-to-last film before his death, as the cancer took its toll,
he still managed to turn in a delightful performance as Burke - sly,
yet most amiable, stroking Crain’s ego, making him feel more like a
colleague than a suspect, all the while gathering information. He may
have been deathly ill, but it didn’t show in his sprightly
performance.
Gwynne,
a Universal starlet who gained fame as a pin-up queen during the war,
is given little to do as Eileen, becoming almost peripheral to the
plot. Her only interaction is with Crain, and her scenes almost
throwaway, as if the film could well go on without her presence. If
she was meant to be a type as Joan Bennett played in The
Woman in the Window, Zeisler needn’t have bothered.
The
only other actor of note was Nestor Paiva, as lead detective
Schaefer, whose character seemed to exist only to tell Larry that
Burke wanted to see him. Paiva would turn up at Universal in the
‘50s, appearing in numerous science-fiction films. Also look for
the unbilled Darren McGavin, in only his fifth film, as one of
Larry’s fellow students congratulating him on the publication of
his article.
Fear is
typical of the Monogram output at the time, a forgettable thriller
meant only as a diversion for its audience until the main attraction
unspooled.
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