“LURID
LOVE AND NOIRâ€
By
Raymond Benson
Film
historian Jeremy Arnold, who provides the excellent audio commentary as a
supplement for the terrific Blu-ray release of Kiss the Blood Off My Hands, says the movie’s title is
remarkably “lurid.†The Production Code people obviously had a problem with the
title and tried to get it changed, but an appeal from up and coming star Burt
Lancaster, whose newly formed production company (co-founded with Harold Hecht)
made the picture, resulted in the “lurid†title staying in place.
The
film does not live up to the implied sensationalism. While we do get a dark, at
times brutal, and cynical piece of film noir, we also get an atypical
love story at the picture’s heart.
Kiss
the Blood Off My Hands, from 1948, is based on a novel by Gerald Butler, and
was adapted by Ben Maddow and Walter Bernstein (one of the Hollywood Ten). The
screenplay is by Leonardo Bercovici, with Hugh Gray credited as providing additional
dialogue. The director, Norman Foster, had been an actor throughout the 1930s.
He helmed a slew of Mr. Moto movies starring Peter Lorre, some of the Charlie
Chan pictures, and several films noir in the 40s and early 50s. Foster
brings a good deal of style to the proceedings with the help of cinematographer
Russell Metty. It’s an impressive little picture.
The
movie contains many of the signature traits associated with film noir—black
and white high contrast photography, many scenes at night and/or with rain, a
cynical protagonist, violence, crimes, excessive smoking and drinking, locations
in seedy pubs and flats, and an urban setting. What makes Kiss the Blood unique
is that it’s an American film noir production set in London (but it
wasn’t filmed there aside from some second unit shots).
Bill
Saunders (Lancaster) is a Canadian World War II veteran bumming around in
London. He has no desire to return home, but he is lost and aimless in the UK.
He also has a devil of a temper and is quick to start a fight if someone so
much as looks at him funny. Heaven help you if you say something he doesn’t
like—he might kill you. Which is what happens in a pub when the owner tries to
kick him out so the place can close. It’s an accident, but Bill knows the
police won’t take kindly to the incident. He manages to run away, but a
witness, Harry Carter (played by slimy, weaselly Robert Newton) takes note. Bill
hides from the police in the first open window he can slip into, and it happens
to be the flat of nurse Jane Wharton (Joan Fontaine, who receives top billing).
At first, of course, Jane is frightened by Bill, but he manages to ease her
fear. Despite his tendency to fly off the handle, Jane falls in love with Bill,
and he’s head over heels for her at first sight. Too bad he gets into a scuffle
with a copper and lands in prison (a sentence that includes a vicious lashing
with cat o’ nine tails). Jane waits for him, though, and once he’s out she gets
him a job as a delivery driver transporting drugs. That’s when Harry steps in
to blackmail Bill unless the former con will help him pull off a robbery.
What
happens next would spoil the fun. Kiss the Blood is an engaging small
picture with fine performances. One can see that Lancaster is still green and
tends to overact, but his passion is tangible. Fontaine is always lovely and
handles her role with grace and honesty. Newton, always perfect as a Cockney
baddie, is suitably over the top.
There
is one oopsy, though. The lorry that Bill drives during the second half of the
movie is an American vehicle—the steering wheel is on the left side of the
dashboard. In England, that wheel would have been on the right!
Kino
Lorber’s new high definition restoration looks remarkably good. The images are
clear and sharp, with the right amount of soft focus in certain scenes. The
aforementioned audio commentary by Jeremy Arnold is informative and
entertaining. Sadly, the only other supplements are trailers for this and other
Kino Lorber releases.
Kiss the Blood Off My Hands may not sound like a date movie, but the romance
noir elements of the picture are surprisingly potent. So, grab your spouse,
significant other, or someone you pick up in a seedy pub and settle in for a
romantically brutal experience!
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