Noirvember: Brighton Rock (1948)

brighton rock

Watch enough British cinema and you will eventually come across the name Graham Greene. He was a novelist whose books were often adapted for the screen. Eventually, he became a screenwriter himself. His films include The Third Man (1949), This Gun For Hire (1942), Went the Day Well? (1942), Ministry of Fear (1944), and many others. I’ve seen quite a few of them and there isn’t a bad one in the bunch.

This includes Brighton Rock, a terrific little film noir about a group of hoodlums in the titular seaside English town. Richard Attenborough stars as Pinkie the razor-wielding, sadistic leader of a small gang of hoods. He happens across Fred (Alan Wheatley) a man he thinks is responsible for the death of the gang’s former leader.

He and the rest of the gang members (including the first Doctor Who, William Hartnell) chase Fred through a carnival until finally killing him on one of those creaky horror rides.

While trying to hide at the carnival Fred meets Ina (Hermione Baddeley), for having a woman by his side might work as a disguise. She winds up playing detective as no one else seems to care what happened to him.

Looking for an alibi Pinkie latches onto Rose (Carol Marsh) whom he comes across working as a waitress in a restaurant. She’s lonely and never had a guy before and falls in love immediately. He treats her terribly but says enough sweet things to keep her by his side (when he needs her to be).

It is an extraordinary performance from Richard Attenborough. I’ll always think of him as John Hammond in Jurassic Park (1993). He’s young here, and terrifying. He’s icy cold and the way he manipulates Rose is just awful (awfully good).

This is film noir all the way through with terrifically stark black-and-white photography, pitch-black characters, and wonderfully made from start to finish.

Great British Cinema: The League of Gentlemen (1960)

the league of gentlemen

The League of Gentlemen is a British heist film that doesn’t do anything particularly original, nor does it set any high water marks, but it does what it does really well.

Jack Hawkins plays Lieutenant-Colonel Norman Hyde who has recently been forced into retirement from the military due to redundancies. Angry at this he decides to enact his vengeance upon the government by robbing a bank.

He essentially blackmails a group of former military officers who have since fallen on hard times, and either found themselves in embarrassing circumstances, or criminal ones. But there is really no need for blackmail as each man is more than willing to help with the caper and come away with a large wad of cash for their troubles.

Like the great French film Rififi, The League of Gentlemen spends a lot of time on the details. They discuss the heist, they train for the heist, they obtain weapons and supplies for the heist. Then they actually do the heist.

All of this is detailed in a very matter-of-fact manner. It never quite obtains the tension that Rififi accomplishes and there aren’t any scenes like the working the alarm scene or the actual heist in Rififi. In fact, I should stop comparing it to Rififi altogether because few films get anywhere near the greatness of that one.

But The League of Gentlemen is very well crafted and a joy to watch. The heist scene is also beautifully staged. At one point they ignite a bunch of smoke bombs in the streets of London creating this fabulously atmospheric fog.

I quite loved the whole thing.