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Scarlet Street

Scarlet Street is a 1945 American film noir directed by Fritz Lang. The screenplay concerns two criminals who take advantage of a middle-aged painter in order to steal his artwork. The film is based on the French novel La Chienne (literally The Bitch) by Georges de La Fouchardière, which had been previously dramatized on stage by André Mouëzy-Éon, and cinematically as La Chienne (1931) by director Jean Renoir.[2]

Scarlet Street
theatrical release poster
Directed byFritz Lang
Screenplay byDudley Nichols
Based onLa Chienne
1931 novel and play
by Georges de La Fouchardière (novel)
André Mouézy-Éon (play)
Produced byWalter Wanger
Fritz Lang
StarringEdward G. Robinson
Joan Bennett
Dan Duryea
CinematographyMilton R. Krasner
Edited byArthur Hilton
Music byHans J. Salter
Production
companies
Walter Wanger Productions
Fritz Lang Productions
Diana Production Company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • December 28, 1945 (1945-12-28) (United States)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,202,007[1]
Box office$2,948,386[1]

The principal actors Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea had earlier appeared together in The Woman in the Window (1944), also directed by Lang. Local authorities in New York, Milwaukee, and Atlanta banned Scarlet Street early in 1946 because of its dark plot and themes.[3]

The film is in the public domain.[4][5]

Plot

New York, 1934 – Christopher "Chris" Cross, a meek amateur painter and cashier for a clothing retailer, is fêted by his employer for 25 years of service. After presenting Chris with a gold watch and kind words, company head J.J. Hogarth leaves the party and gets into a car with a beautiful blonde. Chris muses to a colleague about his desire to be loved by a young woman like that.

Walking home through Greenwich Village, Chris sees a young woman, Katherine "Kitty" March, being attacked, and knocks her assailant unconscious with his umbrella. After Chris dashes off to summon a policeman, the assailant, who is actually Kitty's boyfriend Johnny, flees. Chris walks Kitty to her apartment. His wistful remarks about art suggest to her that Chris must be a wealthy painter. Enamored of Kitty and thinking she feels affection for him, Chris tells her about his loveless marriage. His shrewish wife Adele idolizes her previous husband, a policeman believed drowned while trying to rescue a suicidal woman.

Needing funds for a shady business deal, Johnny believes that Kitty should play on Chris's naivete and feign romantic interest in the supposed rich artist to swindle money from him. Kitty persuades Chris to rent her an apartment, suggesting that he could use it as his art studio. To finance the apartment, Chris steals $500 in insurance bonds from his wife and later $1,000 cash from his employer.

Unknown to Chris, Johnny tries selling some of his paintings, leaving them with a street vendor who thinks them worth no more than $25. The paintings attract the interest of art critic Damon Janeway, who declares the work as exceptional. After Johnny persuades Kitty to pretend that she painted them, she charms Janeway with Chris's own views about art. Captivated by the paintings and by Kitty, Janeway promises to represent her. However, Adele sees her husband's paintings, signed "Katherine March", in the window of a commercial art gallery and accuses Chris of copying March's work. Chris confronts Kitty, who claims that she had sold them because she needed the money. Delighted that his creations are appreciated, he lets her become the public face of his art. She becomes a huge commercial success, although Chris never receives any of the money.

Adele's supposedly dead first husband Higgins appears at Chris's office to extort money from him. Higgins did not drown but disappeared after stealing $2,700 from the purse of the woman whom he had tried to save. Already suspected of taking bribes from speakeasies, he faked his death to escape his crimes and his wife. Chris steals another $200 from the safe at work for Higgins. Chris plots for Adele to see Higgins, hoping that his marriage will be invalidated when Adele realizes that Higgins is still alive.

Chris goes to see Kitty, believing that he is now free and that she will marry him. He finds Johnny and Kitty in an embrace, confirming his suspicions that they are romantically involved. However, Chris asks Kitty to marry him, but she spurns him for being old and ugly and laughs in his face. Enraged, he stabs her to death with an ice pick. The police visit Chris's office. Higgins has told them that Chris embezzled money from Hogarth, who refuses to press charges, but fires Chris. Johnny is arrested for Kitty's murder.

At the trial, Johnny's past works against him. Chris denies painting the pictures, claiming to be an untalented artist. Several witnesses confirm Chris's testimony and attest to Johnny's misdeeds and bad character. Johnny is convicted and put to death for Kitty's murder, Chris goes unpunished and Kitty is erroneously immortalized as a great artist. Haunted by the murder, Chris attempts to hang himself on the night of Johnny's execution, but is rescued. Five years later, Chris is homeless and destitute, with no way of claiming credit for his own paintings. He witnesses his portrait of Kitty sell for $10,000. Tormented by thoughts of Kitty and Johnny loving each other eternally, Chris wanders New York, constantly hearing their voices in his mind.

Cast

Production

Scarlet Street

Scarlet Street reunited director Fritz Lang with actors Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea, who had worked with him in The Woman in the Window (1944). The film was based on the French novel La Chienne (literally The Bitch) by Georges de La Fouchardière, which had been dramatized on stage by André Mouëzy-Éon, and cinematically as La Chienne (1931) by director Jean Renoir. Lang's film Human Desire (1954) was based on another Renoir film, La Bête humaine (1938), which was based on Émile Zola's novel on the same name. Renoir was said to have disliked both of Lang's films.

Scarlet Street is similar to The Woman in the Window in its themes, cast, crew and characters. Robinson again plays a lonely middle-aged man, and Bennett and Duryea once more play the criminal elements. Both films were photographed by Milton R. Krasner. Walter Wanger, who produced the film, had earlier produced Lang's 1937 film You Only Live Once.

Though Scarlet Street is considered a film noir classic along with Lang's earlier film The Woman in the Window, Robinson, who noticed the thematic similarities between the two, found the production of Scarlet Street monotonous and was eager to finish it and move on to other projects. Robinson had also disliked making The Woman in the Window.

Twelve paintings created for the film by John Decker were sent to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City for exhibition in March 1946.

Reception

Box office

According to Variety, the film earned rentals of $2.5 million in the U.S.[6]

Reception

 
Joan Bennett as Kitty March

New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther gave the film a mixed review. He wrote:

But for those who are looking for drama of a firm and incisive sort, Scarlet Street is not likely to furnish a particularly rare experience. Dudley Nichols wrote the story from a French original, in which it might well have had a stinging and grisly vitality. In this presentation, however, it seems a sluggish and manufactured tale, emerging much more from sheer contrivance than from the passions of the characters involved. And the slight twist of tension which tightens around the principal character is lost in the middle of the picture when he is shelved for a dull stretch of plot. In the role of the love-blighted cashier Edward G. Robinson performs monotonously and with little illumination of an adventurous spirit seeking air. And, as the girl whom he loves, Joan Bennett is static and colorless, completely lacking the malevolence that should flash in her evil role. Only Dan Duryea as her boy friend hits a proper and credible stride, making a vicious and serpentine creature out of a cheap, chiseling tinhorn off the streets.[7]

A review in Variety magazine stated: "Fritz Lang's production and direction ably project the sordid tale of the romance between a milquetoast character and a gold-digging blonde ... Edward G. Robinson is the mild cashier and amateur painter whose love for Joan Bennett leads him to embezzlement, murder and disgrace. Two stars turn in top work to keep the interest high, and Dan Duryea's portrayal of the crafty and crooked opportunist whom Bennett loves is a standout in furthering the melodrama."[8]

Time magazine gave Scarlet Street a negative review, describing the plot as clichéd and with dimwitted, unethical, stock characters.[9]

Critic Dennis Schwartz wrote in 2003:

Scarlet Street is a bleak psychological film noir that has the same leading actors as his 1944 film The Woman in the Window. It sets a long-standing trend of a criminal not punished for his crime; this is the first Hollywood film where that happened ... The Edward G. Robinson character is viewed as an ordinary man who is influenced by an evil couple who take advantage of his vulnerability and lead him down an amoral road where he eventually in a passionate moment loses his head and commits murder. Chris's imagination can no longer save him from his dreadful existence, and his complete downfall comes about as the talented artist loses track of reality and his dignity.[10]

 
Joan Bennett and Edward G. Robinson

In 1995, Matthew Bernstein wrote in Cinema Journal: "The film is a dense, well-structured film noir and has been analyzed and interpreted numerous times. Some of the earliest interpretations came from censors in three different cities," adding:

On January 4, 1946, the New York State Censor Board banned Scarlet Street entirely, relying on the statute that gave it power to censor films that were "obscene, indecent, immoral, inhuman, sacrilegious" or whose exhibition "would tend to corrupt morals or incite to crime." As if in a chain reaction, one week later the Motion Picture Commission for the city of Milwaukee also banned the film as part of a new policy encouraged by police for "stricter regulation of undesirable films." On February 3 Christina Smith, the city censor of Atlanta, argued that because of "the sordid life it portrayed, the treatment of illicit love, the failure of the characters to receive orthodox punishment from the police, and because the picture would tend to weaken a respect for the law," Scarlet Street was "licentious, profane, obscure and contrary to the good order of the community."... Universal was discouraged from challenging the constitutionality of the censors by the protests of the national religious groups that arose as the Atlanta case went to court.[11]

In 1998, Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader included the film in his unranked list of the best American films not included on the AFI Top 100.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Matthew Bernstein, Walter Wagner: Hollywood Independent, Minnesota Press, 2000 p443
  2. ^ Scarlet Street at IMDb
  3. ^ Matthew Bernstein, "A Tale of Three Cities: The Banning of Scarlet Street". Cinema Journal (Autumn 1995), 27-52.
  4. ^ Rapold, Nicolas (14 February 2014). "Even Good Films May Go to Purgatory: Old Films Fall Into Public Domain Under Copyright Law". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  5. ^ Murray, Noel (23 November 2005). "Scarlet Street & House By The River". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  6. ^ "60 Top Grossers of 1946", Variety 8 January 1947 p8
  7. ^ Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, February 15, 1946. Last accessed: April 11, 2008.
  8. ^ Variety. Film review, 1945. Last accessed: April 11, 2008.
  9. ^
  10. ^ Schwartz, Dennis "An uncompromising subversive remake of Jean Renoir's La Chienne (1931)". Film review at Ozus' World Movie Reviews, February 13, 2003. Accessed: June 20, 2013.
  11. ^ Bernstein, Matthew (Autumn 1995). "A Tale of Three Cities: The Banning of Scarlet Street". Cinema Journal. 35 (1): 27–52. doi:10.2307/1225806. JSTOR 1225806., pp. 27-52.
  12. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (June 25, 1998). "List-o-Mania: Or, How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love American Movies". Chicago Reader. from the original on April 13, 2020.

External links

scarlet, street, this, article, about, 1945, film, magazine, magazine, 1945, american, film, noir, directed, fritz, lang, screenplay, concerns, criminals, take, advantage, middle, aged, painter, order, steal, artwork, film, based, french, novel, chienne, liter. This article is about the 1945 film For the magazine see Scarlet Street magazine Scarlet Street is a 1945 American film noir directed by Fritz Lang The screenplay concerns two criminals who take advantage of a middle aged painter in order to steal his artwork The film is based on the French novel La Chienne literally The Bitch by Georges de La Fouchardiere which had been previously dramatized on stage by Andre Mouezy Eon and cinematically as La Chienne 1931 by director Jean Renoir 2 Scarlet Streettheatrical release posterDirected byFritz LangScreenplay byDudley NicholsBased onLa Chienne1931 novel and playby Georges de La Fouchardiere novel Andre Mouezy Eon play Produced byWalter WangerFritz LangStarringEdward G RobinsonJoan BennettDan DuryeaCinematographyMilton R KrasnerEdited byArthur HiltonMusic byHans J SalterProductioncompaniesWalter Wanger ProductionsFritz Lang ProductionsDiana Production CompanyDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease dateDecember 28 1945 1945 12 28 United States Running time102 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 202 007 1 Box office 2 948 386 1 The principal actors Edward G Robinson Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea had earlier appeared together in The Woman in the Window 1944 also directed by Lang Local authorities in New York Milwaukee and Atlanta banned Scarlet Street early in 1946 because of its dark plot and themes 3 The film is in the public domain 4 5 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Reception 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditNew York 1934 Christopher Chris Cross a meek amateur painter and cashier for a clothing retailer is feted by his employer for 25 years of service After presenting Chris with a gold watch and kind words company head J J Hogarth leaves the party and gets into a car with a beautiful blonde Chris muses to a colleague about his desire to be loved by a young woman like that Walking home through Greenwich Village Chris sees a young woman Katherine Kitty March being attacked and knocks her assailant unconscious with his umbrella After Chris dashes off to summon a policeman the assailant who is actually Kitty s boyfriend Johnny flees Chris walks Kitty to her apartment His wistful remarks about art suggest to her that Chris must be a wealthy painter Enamored of Kitty and thinking she feels affection for him Chris tells her about his loveless marriage His shrewish wife Adele idolizes her previous husband a policeman believed drowned while trying to rescue a suicidal woman Needing funds for a shady business deal Johnny believes that Kitty should play on Chris s naivete and feign romantic interest in the supposed rich artist to swindle money from him Kitty persuades Chris to rent her an apartment suggesting that he could use it as his art studio To finance the apartment Chris steals 500 in insurance bonds from his wife and later 1 000 cash from his employer Unknown to Chris Johnny tries selling some of his paintings leaving them with a street vendor who thinks them worth no more than 25 The paintings attract the interest of art critic Damon Janeway who declares the work as exceptional After Johnny persuades Kitty to pretend that she painted them she charms Janeway with Chris s own views about art Captivated by the paintings and by Kitty Janeway promises to represent her However Adele sees her husband s paintings signed Katherine March in the window of a commercial art gallery and accuses Chris of copying March s work Chris confronts Kitty who claims that she had sold them because she needed the money Delighted that his creations are appreciated he lets her become the public face of his art She becomes a huge commercial success although Chris never receives any of the money Adele s supposedly dead first husband Higgins appears at Chris s office to extort money from him Higgins did not drown but disappeared after stealing 2 700 from the purse of the woman whom he had tried to save Already suspected of taking bribes from speakeasies he faked his death to escape his crimes and his wife Chris steals another 200 from the safe at work for Higgins Chris plots for Adele to see Higgins hoping that his marriage will be invalidated when Adele realizes that Higgins is still alive Chris goes to see Kitty believing that he is now free and that she will marry him He finds Johnny and Kitty in an embrace confirming his suspicions that they are romantically involved However Chris asks Kitty to marry him but she spurns him for being old and ugly and laughs in his face Enraged he stabs her to death with an ice pick The police visit Chris s office Higgins has told them that Chris embezzled money from Hogarth who refuses to press charges but fires Chris Johnny is arrested for Kitty s murder At the trial Johnny s past works against him Chris denies painting the pictures claiming to be an untalented artist Several witnesses confirm Chris s testimony and attest to Johnny s misdeeds and bad character Johnny is convicted and put to death for Kitty s murder Chris goes unpunished and Kitty is erroneously immortalized as a great artist Haunted by the murder Chris attempts to hang himself on the night of Johnny s execution but is rescued Five years later Chris is homeless and destitute with no way of claiming credit for his own paintings He witnesses his portrait of Kitty sell for 10 000 Tormented by thoughts of Kitty and Johnny loving each other eternally Chris wanders New York constantly hearing their voices in his mind Cast EditEdward G Robinson as Christopher Chris Cross Joan Bennett as Katherine Kitty March Dan Duryea as Johnny Prince Margaret Lindsay as Millie Ray Rosalind Ivan as Adele Cross Jess Barker as Damon Janeway Charles Kemper as Patch eye Higgins Anita Sharp Bolster as Mrs Michaels as Anita Bolster Samuel S Hinds as Charles Pringle Vladimir Sokoloff as Pop LeJon Arthur Loft as Delarowe Russell Hicks as J J HogarthProduction Edit source source source source source source source source Scarlet Street Scarlet Street reunited director Fritz Lang with actors Edward G Robinson Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea who had worked with him in The Woman in the Window 1944 The film was based on the French novel La Chienne literally The Bitch by Georges de La Fouchardiere which had been dramatized on stage by Andre Mouezy Eon and cinematically as La Chienne 1931 by director Jean Renoir Lang s film Human Desire 1954 was based on another Renoir film La Bete humaine 1938 which was based on Emile Zola s novel on the same name Renoir was said to have disliked both of Lang s films Scarlet Street is similar to The Woman in the Window in its themes cast crew and characters Robinson again plays a lonely middle aged man and Bennett and Duryea once more play the criminal elements Both films were photographed by Milton R Krasner Walter Wanger who produced the film had earlier produced Lang s 1937 film You Only Live Once Though Scarlet Street is considered a film noir classic along with Lang s earlier film The Woman in the Window Robinson who noticed the thematic similarities between the two found the production of Scarlet Street monotonous and was eager to finish it and move on to other projects Robinson had also disliked making The Woman in the Window Twelve paintings created for the film by John Decker were sent to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City for exhibition in March 1946 Reception EditBox office Edit According to Variety the film earned rentals of 2 5 million in the U S 6 Reception Edit Joan Bennett as Kitty March New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther gave the film a mixed review He wrote But for those who are looking for drama of a firm and incisive sort Scarlet Street is not likely to furnish a particularly rare experience Dudley Nichols wrote the story from a French original in which it might well have had a stinging and grisly vitality In this presentation however it seems a sluggish and manufactured tale emerging much more from sheer contrivance than from the passions of the characters involved And the slight twist of tension which tightens around the principal character is lost in the middle of the picture when he is shelved for a dull stretch of plot In the role of the love blighted cashier Edward G Robinson performs monotonously and with little illumination of an adventurous spirit seeking air And as the girl whom he loves Joan Bennett is static and colorless completely lacking the malevolence that should flash in her evil role Only Dan Duryea as her boy friend hits a proper and credible stride making a vicious and serpentine creature out of a cheap chiseling tinhorn off the streets 7 A review in Variety magazine stated Fritz Lang s production and direction ably project the sordid tale of the romance between a milquetoast character and a gold digging blonde Edward G Robinson is the mild cashier and amateur painter whose love for Joan Bennett leads him to embezzlement murder and disgrace Two stars turn in top work to keep the interest high and Dan Duryea s portrayal of the crafty and crooked opportunist whom Bennett loves is a standout in furthering the melodrama 8 Time magazine gave Scarlet Street a negative review describing the plot as cliched and with dimwitted unethical stock characters 9 Critic Dennis Schwartz wrote in 2003 Scarlet Street is a bleak psychological film noir that has the same leading actors as his 1944 film The Woman in the Window It sets a long standing trend of a criminal not punished for his crime this is the first Hollywood film where that happened The Edward G Robinson character is viewed as an ordinary man who is influenced by an evil couple who take advantage of his vulnerability and lead him down an amoral road where he eventually in a passionate moment loses his head and commits murder Chris s imagination can no longer save him from his dreadful existence and his complete downfall comes about as the talented artist loses track of reality and his dignity 10 Joan Bennett and Edward G Robinson In 1995 Matthew Bernstein wrote in Cinema Journal The film is a dense well structured film noir and has been analyzed and interpreted numerous times Some of the earliest interpretations came from censors in three different cities adding On January 4 1946 the New York State Censor Board banned Scarlet Street entirely relying on the statute that gave it power to censor films that were obscene indecent immoral inhuman sacrilegious or whose exhibition would tend to corrupt morals or incite to crime As if in a chain reaction one week later the Motion Picture Commission for the city of Milwaukee also banned the film as part of a new policy encouraged by police for stricter regulation of undesirable films On February 3 Christina Smith the city censor of Atlanta argued that because of the sordid life it portrayed the treatment of illicit love the failure of the characters to receive orthodox punishment from the police and because the picture would tend to weaken a respect for the law Scarlet Street was licentious profane obscure and contrary to the good order of the community Universal was discouraged from challenging the constitutionality of the censors by the protests of the national religious groups that arose as the Atlanta case went to court 11 In 1998 Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader included the film in his unranked list of the best American films not included on the AFI Top 100 12 See also EditPublic domain film List of American films of 1945 List of films in the public domain in the United StatesReferences Edit a b Matthew Bernstein Walter Wagner Hollywood Independent Minnesota Press 2000 p443 Scarlet Street at IMDb Matthew Bernstein A Tale of Three Cities The Banning of Scarlet Street Cinema Journal Autumn 1995 27 52 Rapold Nicolas 14 February 2014 Even Good Films May Go to Purgatory Old Films Fall Into Public Domain Under Copyright Law The New York Times Retrieved 10 March 2018 Murray Noel 23 November 2005 Scarlet Street amp House By The River The A V Club Retrieved 10 March 2018 60 Top Grossers of 1946 Variety 8 January 1947 p8 Crowther Bosley The New York Times film review February 15 1946 Last accessed April 11 2008 Variety Film review 1945 Last accessed April 11 2008 Cinema The New Pictures Jan 21 1946 Schwartz Dennis An uncompromising subversive remake of Jean Renoir s La Chienne 1931 Film review at Ozus World Movie Reviews February 13 2003 Accessed June 20 2013 Bernstein Matthew Autumn 1995 A Tale of Three Cities The Banning of Scarlet Street Cinema Journal 35 1 27 52 doi 10 2307 1225806 JSTOR 1225806 pp 27 52 Rosenbaum Jonathan June 25 1998 List o Mania Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love American Movies Chicago Reader Archived from the original on April 13 2020 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Scarlet Street Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scarlet Street Scarlet Street at IMDb Scarlet Street at AllMovie Scarlet Street at the TCM Movie Database Scarlet Street at the American Film Institute Catalog Scarlet Street is available for free download at the Internet Archive Scarlet Street Full Movie on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scarlet Street amp oldid 1147253302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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