"WE'RE GONNA KILL THE SWEDE"
By Raymond Benson
The
Criterion Collection gave us the DVD versions of these two excellent crime
thrillers twelve years ago. The company
has now seen fit to upgrade the release to Blu-ray.
Based
loosely on a short story by Ernest Hemingway, both versions of The Killers begin with the author's
premise and then take off from there in very different directions. It's
interesting to see how the respective screenwriters adapted the story and then
created two disparate feature-length tales out of it. In Hemingway's piece, two
hit men arrive in a small town looking for "The Swede". They terrorize the
owner, cook, and a customer in a diner in an attempt to find the guy. After the
killers leave in frustration, the customer runs to the Swede's boarding house
and finds him in bed with his clothes on. He warns the Swede about the men, but
the Swede says he's not going to do anything about it. The customer goes back
to the diner and, after realizing no one cares, leaves town. And that’s it.
The
1946 version faithfully captures the short story even down to the dialogue for
the first ten minutes. Where the short story ends, the movie goes on and we see
the hit men actually kill the Swede (played by Burt Lancaster in his first
starring role). Enter Jim Reardon (Edmond O'Brien, with third billing, but he's
really the protagonist of the film!) as an insurance inspector. It turns out the
Swede had a life insurance policy that benefits an old lady who helped him
once. Reardon is determined to uncover the story behind it all, and the rest of
the movie follows his investigation into the Swede's life in crime (told
entirely in flashbacks). The Swede was a boxer who got mixed up with Big Jim, a
racketeer (played by Albert Dekker), and falls in love with Big Jim's gal,
Kitty (played by smoking hot Ava Gardner, in one of her first starring roles;
Gardner had been kicking around Hollywood since the early 40s and this was her big
break). As we all know, it's not good to mess around with the crime boss's
dame.
Robert
Siodmak received an Oscar nomination for Best Director on the picture (it was
also nominated for adapted screenplay, editing, and music score). There's no
question that The Killers is a
seminal film noir, one of the best of
the bunch produced when Hollywood was churning out these types of gritty crime
pictures by the dozens. Siodmak's hand is assured as he brings in all the
trademark film noir elements: ”expressionistic
lighting, a femme fatale, stark
brutality, a cynical attitude, flashbacks, a man haunted by the past, and
more. The picture could serve as a Film
Noir 101 course. Lancaster is fine and Gardner is sexy and dangerous, but
it is O'Brien who holds the movie together.
The
1964 version is a different animal. It was produced to be the very first TV
movie, but NBC viewed the finished product and deemed it too violent for
television. Instead, the producers released it theatrically worldwide. Directed
by Don Siegel (billed as "Donald Siegel"), The
Killers Mach II stars Lee Marvin and Clu Gulager as the hitmen, who here become the focal point
of the new story. John Cassavetes plays the Swede character, only here he is a
racecar driver named Johnny. The femme
fatale, Sheila, is played by Angie Dickinson, and get this... the crime
boss is none other than Ronald Reagan in his last film role before he became a
politician.
The
film begins basically the same way, but the setting is different. The two
hitmen come looking for Johnny and they kill him. Marvin's hitman character then
takes over the dramatic action originally performed by O'Brien in the 1946
version. Marvin is the one who wants to find out why he and his partner were
hired to kill Johnny, as well as what happened to a load of stolen cash that
Johnny may have hidden.
While
not as important or engaging as the 1946 edition, The Killers Mach II is worth watching for Siegel's solid
craftsmanship. NBC was probably right not to broadcast the picture on
television in 1964, given the time period, the movie is pretty brutal. Marvin
and Gulager are creepy bad guys, Cassavetes delivers his usual fine work, and
Dickinson displays her charms with aplomb. As for Reaga, well, le's just say
it's not too difficult to buy him as a crook. In hindsight, given that this guy
became a two-term U.S. president, his performance lends a "must-see" element to
the picture.
Criterion
gives us new high-definition digital restorations of both films (the 1964
version is in color and in 4:3 aspect ratio, since it was shot for television).
They look terrific. The black and white contrasts in the 1946 version are
especially sharp and unsettlingly beautiful. Almost all of the original
supplements are here:Andrei Tarkovsky's student film adaptation of the short
story from 1956; a video interview with noir
expert/writer, the late Stuart M. Kaminsky; a video interview with Clu
Gulager; Stacy Keach reading Hemingway's short story on audio; the Screen Directors Playhouse radio
adaptation from 1949 featuring Lancaster and Shelley Winters; an audio excerpt
from director Don Siegel's autobiography read by Hampton Fancher; and trailers.
The booklets feature essays by novelist Jonathan Lethem and critic Geoffrey
O'Brien. Not sure why Criterion left off the production, publicity, and
behind-the-scenes stills, actor biographies, production correspondence, Paul
Schrader's essay, and music and effects tracks, all which were on the original
DVD release. If those things are important to you, then you may want to hold on
to it.
But
for the Blu-ray restorations alone, The
Killers double feature is an excellent buy, especially for fans of film noir and crime pictures in general.
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