Monday, July 12, 2010
Brute Force
Jules Dassin's Brute Force is a dark, fatalistic prison noir, a film in which there is no exit, no freedom, no opportunity for escape — it's an unrelentingly oppressive journey towards its final confirmation that bloody destiny is inescapable. The film is set in a prison that's dominated by the cruel, sadistic guard captain Munsey (Hume Cronyn), who keeps the men under his charge on a tight leash through brutality and manipulation. Not only that, but he seems to take pleasure in it; when he's beating an inmate, or driving another to suicide by spreading lies about the man's beloved wife, a small smile inevitably creeps across his lips, while his eyes bulge in insane joy. The film presents the prison as a near-complete moral vacuum, a place where if anything the prisoners are mostly morally superior to those who watch over them. The prisoners are men who have made mistakes, who have done stupid things, committed petty crimes for foolish reasons, or been betrayed or framed. On the other hand, if Munsey is a brutish sadist, the prison's warden (Roman Bohnen) is a coward with no ability to curb his underlings' excesses, while the good-hearted doctor (Art Smith) tries his best to resist such brutality, but mostly just drowns himself in booze. He's prone to boozy speechifying, to bursts of righteous outrage and indignation, but all his fiery oration never has any impact despite his good intentions. Even so, he does provide the apt summation of Munsey's approach that provides the film with its title: "not imagination, not cleverness, just force... brute force."
Dassin surrounds the prisoners with an oppressive system that offers no possibility for escape. As Munsey makes clear, he's the one who decides what prisoners have been on "good behavior," and therefore he more or less controls the parole system. This means that the prisoners understand parole as an empty promise, and collaborating with Munsey is equally fruitless since it practically guarantees death by fellow prisoners: one "stool pigeon" meets his end in a license plate press, chased there by inmates with blowtorches. Dassin is essentially showing how few options are open to these men, closing each avenue of escape off one by one, demonstrating that there's really no hope. The stool pigeon tries to gain his freedom by turning on his fellow inmates, and meets a grisly end as a result, while Munsey brushes the man off once he's done with him, not caring about his fate. The prison newspaper editor Gallagher (Charles Bickford) hopes to gain his freedom through parole, by maintaining friendships with both guards and inmates, helping to keep the whole prison system running smoothly. But he soon enough learns that parole is a remote hope, especially when the prison board arbitrarily decides to suspend all parole hearings, demonstrating conclusively just how little control these men have over their circumstances. Lister (Whit Bissell) tries to keep to himself, only concerning himself with writing letters to his wife, but Munsey's intervention teaches him that even this is not a tenable position.
The film's mood is one of claustrophobic intensity. Dassin films the men in their cramped cells, packed together within these concrete walls, the bars casting striped shadows on their faces, as they squirm and plot under the restrictions enforced by Munsey. The men all want something on the outside. Collins (Burt Lancaster) wants to be reunited with his sickly girlfriend Ruth (Ann Blyth), who is wasting away in his absence. Soldier (Howard Duff) wants to get back to his Italian wife, for whom he took the fall in the first place, risking his career to get her and her father rare post-war food and supplies. The others have girls and dreams, too. Dassin awkwardly shoehorns in the men's flashbacks to their pre-jail days, and these saccharine diversions seem to have come from a different movie, with melodramatic acting and trite stories. These interludes don't serve the film particularly well, since they distract from what is otherwise an all-encompassing claustrophobia and dread, the sense of being trapped within the walls of the prison. The flashbacks, by taking the action outside the jail walls, dilute the film's feeling of being trapped along with these men, and moreover these scenes are unnecessary to establishing the stakes of escape. The desire to get out is written in every man's face anyway, in their desperate eyes, and the flashbacks don't do anything that a couple of terse lines of dialogue don't do just as well.
Flashbacks aside, the film is a stark, angry prison drama, and Dassin does a good job of ratcheting up the men's desperation until an escape attempt seems like the only possible solution. Early on, a glimpse of freedom is offered by the sight of the prison's gates opening and its drawbridge going down to let out a car carrying the body of a dead prisoner. Dassin films this shot as though it were the gates of Heaven itself opening: there's something ecstatic about the sight of an open road appearing where before there had only been forbidding walls. Collins watches with yearning, not realizing that this scene confirms what they all already know, that dying is one of the few ways to ensure that those gates will open and the bridge will lower.
This tension pays off in the final sequences, as Munsey's sadism reaches previously unimagined levels. The captain's beating of an inmate who he suspects of being involved with the escape plan is truly brutal, and Dassin films the scene mostly through suggestion, with the actual violence happening off-screen. Instead, Dassin captures the expression of mad pleasure, nearly lustful, that plays across the captain's face as he beats this man. Cronyn, so bland and innocent-looking, plays the role with obvious relish, brilliantly portraying the banality of evil, the ordinary sadist whose own ambitions and dreams are modest, and seemingly extend no further than the advancement of his career. In service to these utterly conventional middle-class ambitions, he commits acts of unspeakable horror and nastiness, not because they're strictly necessary but because he enjoys it, and because he's convinced himself that brutality is the only possible response to his charges.
The escape attempt itself is predictably violent and nasty, as the prison is set ablaze, so that the whole sequence seems to be playing out in this fortified Hell, flames licking up at the men's desperate, rage-filled faces, as they struggle against impossible odds to get those gates open again, to get their revenge. By this time, the film's mood has reached a fever-pitch peak of insanity and cruelty, as the prisoners and the guards prove themselves equally capable of pointless violence and destruction, while everyone's confused plans fall apart all around them. In the end, no one gets what they want, and no one can escape. It's the fatalistic essence of the noir, a lesson Dassin imparts in a point-blank coda that underlines the impossibility of escape, the fact that bars — literal and metaphorical — cage us all.
You've framed this generally underrated Dassin prison noir quite exquisitely. It's not in the company of NIGHT AND THE CITY and RIFIFI among the director's work, and it's certainly not remotely with LE TROU and A MAN ESCAPED within the parameters of this sub-genre, but as you rightly note it yields a 'claustrophobic intensity.' Plus, (again as you assert, the focus in this film is far different than what it is in the others) The film’s style and chiaroscuro photography were greatly indepted to European cinema (no surprise, considering who the director is) especially, perhaps, the films of Marcel Carne. Munsey is portrayed here as a kind of American fascist in the Nazi tradition, as he plays Wagner’s TANNHAUSER while inflicting torture on his victims. But the Nazi metaphors are generally in abundance in the film.
ReplyDeleteBrute Force is of a piece with other wildly downbeat dramas of the period such as Losey's The Big Night, Cy Endfield's Try and Stop Me, John Berry's He Ran All The Way and Abe Polonsky's Force of Evil.
ReplyDeleteIn his classic prison movie routine Lenny Bruce does a great Hume Cronyn
Thanks, Sam and David. It's a fine movie, if not quite a great one. Sam makes a good point by mentioning the Nazi allusions, and among your list, David, Force of Evil especially stands out as an absolute masterpiece of bleakness and despair.
ReplyDeleteI'll go ahead and designate it a great movie, Ed! I know I'm in the minority on this position, but I rank Brute Force as my favorite English language film that Dassin ever made, even above other greats like Night and the City. Rififi is his only work that I prefer.
ReplyDeleteYou masterfully capture the downbeat tone of the entire movie. Even though the flashbacks are done in a more upbeat nature, never for a second do you truly believe that all this planning is going to work.
Thanks, Dave. I still really need to see more Dassin, but this was a good start. Rififi is of course a masterpiece that's pretty hard to top, but I liked this film a lot despite my reservations about it.
ReplyDeleteWell I was looking at Night and the City again yesterday and for me that's IT. So tough, so flavorful, so unusual in almost every way.
ReplyDeletean excellent film indeed--although I think of it as more of a horror film than a noir... it's different, too, from a film like I Am A Fugitive From a Chain Gang, which takes its protagonist down the road to a similarly frenzied state (and gives him a pal--the old guy, Bomber--who IS very much in the BRUTE FORCE vein), but which takes pain to ensure that, when he yells from the darkness, WE yell "I Steal" too
ReplyDeleteDassin's film is more analytical than CHAIN GANG... far less of a call to radical action against an injustice system that can reach out and grab anyone, anywhere, at any time...
it's Night of the (Barely) Living Lumpenproletarians, basically... a fine companion to Richard Wright's Native Son... it shows us why those much-hoped-for social revolutions don't seem to happen--i.e. the people with the least stake in bourgeois society have lost the ability to have a stake in ANYTHING (except perhaps in those stilted melodrama flashbacks that we get--and, precisely for that reason--I'd argue that the Blyth, Raines, etc. segments do a lot to show us how colonized these people are--even in their daydreams)
Cronyn IS amazing in the role--and this movie makes a great double feature with the Dassin/Cronyn/Marsha Hunt A LETTER FOR EVIE, in which Hume is far more lovable...
Dave
"Night of the (Barely) Living Lumpenproletarians" - I love that! And I love the radical interpretation of the film, which does place the flashbacks in context less as memories than as dream sequences, fantasies of a better life that these guys have no real hope of getting.
ReplyDeleteWhen I interviewed Dassin about BRUTE FORCE for my biography on Charles McGraw, he told me that he was forced into doing "the women on the outside nonsense" by producer Mark Hellinger and Universal-International to hype the box office. It was either that or quit the picture. Dassin wrote that he still "couldn't forgive myself" for the compromise. I told him that he was being too tough on himself. As you wrote, Brute Force is a virtuous film noir.
ReplyDeletethat makes a lot of sense Alan!
ReplyDeleteI still do feel that the imposed scenes--precisely because they were filmed in such a half-hearted way!--add something very interesting to the mix
Alan, thanks for that information! That really makes sense, and isn't too surprising to me. It's obvious that the flashbacks come from a very different sensibility than the rest of the movie, and represent a disjunction from the dark, claustrophobic tone of the prison scenes. It's all too obvious that they're only there so the film could be marketed based on its female stars - although I do find anagramsci's more generous reading interesting as well.
ReplyDelete