“WANTED:
ANGER MANAGEMENT IN BORDER TOWNâ€
By
Raymond Benson
Sterling
Hayden was often cast as the gangster, the hooligan, the nutsy general, the
petty criminal with brawn but little brains… and yet here we have him as the
hero of a sticky film noir from 1954 as the chief of police of an urban
setting (southern California?) who loses his job because of allegations of
police brutality. Hayden is perfectly cast, and this is said without sarcasm.
Naked
Alibi
was directed by Jerry Hopper, who made well over a dozen B-movies in the crime,
adventure, western, and melodrama categories in the late 1940s to mid-50s, and
then moved smoothly into television and helmed an abundance of television
episodes for various long-running series into the 70s. Alibi does play
like an extended episode of one of the late 50s TV crime dramas like Naked
City, except with more violence, implied sex, and gritty adult themes.
Unfortunately,
the picture doesn’t come off well, mainly due to the over-the-top and often
histrionic performances of the main cast, and a needless aggression towards
women. Poor Gloria Grahame gets slapped around numerous times, and yet she
stoically barely flinches through most of the assaults. It’s not pretty.
Chief
Joe Conroy (Hayden) has his eye set on pinning some robberies and ultimately a
cop-murder on Al Willis (Gene Barry), a seemingly innocent, married-with-child
baker who happens to get hot-headed and into fights when he drinks too much—an
all too frequent habit. When no physical evidence supports Conroy’s pursuit,
the now-ex-chief shadows Willis on his own, following him to “Border Town†in
Mexico, where he discovers Willis is not so innocent (much of the movie was
shot in Tijuana). Marianna (Grahame) is Willis’ mistress there, and he has fed
her a load of bull about marrying her (and withholding the fact that he’s
already married). Furthermore, Willis is associating with some criminal types
there and has his own gang of cohorts. Conroy sets about wooing Marianna to his
side, making several felonies stick to Willis, forcibly moving the hood back to
the USA, and arresting him. Things become increasingly dangerous for Conroy and
Marianna, and Willis grows progressively more psychotic.
This
probably sounded decent on paper, but the execution is serviceable, at best.
For one thing, Barry is miscast and spends most of the movie jumping from calmness
to out of control at the drop of a hat, and it’s cause for some eye-rolling.
Grahame, whom albeit looks hotter than the streets of the border town, seems
bored and without energy through much of the picture. Again, the way she simply
takes her beatings is another point of unbelievability. As for Hayden, he, too,
could have used a stronger hand at direction, for he tends to chew the scenery
at times when a little restraint would have been more effective.
Kino
Lorber’s new high definition restoration is suitably and overly grainy if one
likes one’s film noir in that condition. It comes with English subtitles
for the hearing impaired, as well as an audio commentary by film historian Kat Ellinger.
The theatrical trailer for this and other Kino Lorber titles complete the
presentation.
Naked
Alibi is
recommended strictly for Sterling Hayden and/or Gloria Grahame fans, and for film
noir completists.
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