|
Title:THE THIRD MAN Year: 1949 Rating: ***** |
It's not really that big a deal that Orson Welles turns up over fifty-minutes into THE THIRD MAN, being that audiences awaited KING KONG for about the same period of time...
The term best describing Welles's Harry Lime is anticipated antagonist, and yet all his criminal activity is refuted by best friend Joseph Cotten as cheap novelette
Western writer Holly Martins, and especially heartbroken
stage-actress-girlfriend Alida Valli, who Cotten attempts subtly
romancing... but can't compete with the ghost...
|
From THE THIRD MAN
|
Welles's
Lime is supposedly dead, and since there was an extra person carrying the body, told by Lime's criminal cohorts added
by a doomed witness, the character is both anticipated and
titular... yet most of the exposition is from Trevor Howard as Major
Calloway along with faithful sidekick (and future James Bond chief)
Bernard Lee...
Polite loggerheads Cotten and Howard are the best things going during the first half... before Lime... then when he arrives, initially lurking in the kind of shadowy mystique Welles helped define in stylistic B&W classics from CITIZEN KANE to THE STRANGER to THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, the MAN, with a quick, page-turning cadence throughout, kicks into both second and third gear...
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
As English director Carol Reed makes THIRD all his own, with a classic zither score and dutch angles (the camera titled to provide an off-putting vibe), yet presenting a more standard than auteur approach, where the script and performances elevate the British crime thriller to heights exceeding every Welles' picture post KANE...
In fact it was THE THIRD MAN that gave
Orson the comeback he couldn't garner himself, and his multi-collaborator Cotten landed a dream lead role that... despite technically playing a
rather clumsy scribbler, asking questions to various eccentric
characters around the postwar ruins of Vienna (split into four halves of
bordering countries)... story-wise, Cotten could've been a
pulp-inspired gumshoe...
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
But he's a real human, and his overall vulnerability towards Valli's wistful stage actress Anna (with a dark, morose beauty of Ingrid Bergman and the denial-ability of Eva Braun) is more relatable than the usual gritty-noir male lead, while Welles himself makes ample use of his three strategic scenes...
Lime's desperate yet comfortable persona, already known to Cotten and the audience for a penicillin-stealing racket that killed innocent people, including children, still harbors an infectious, cinema-scoundrel's charm, making any horrible act seem not only necessary but commonplace...
|
Finale from THE THIRD MAN |
Especially during Welles's most suspenseful and memorable scene with Cotten, high up on a carnival tramcar (where even an immense ferris wheel's far beneath), describing how anyone's expendable in an ironically blithe manner, proving he was an even more underrated actor than filmmaker...
Thanks to director Reed, who, backed by a tight Graham Green script and providing one of the greatest opening narrations himself, was keen enough to find gold in Welles the performer...
|
Carol Reed's THE THIRD MAN |
And,
despite an ongoing myth that Orson had a hand in directing or
manipulating anything he appeared in, Reed needed no help, having
already proven himself in countless motion pictures, including
an even darker noir ODD MAN OUT...
But it's the action-packed finale chase, through
the murky underground sewers, that puts THE THIRD MAN above any British
noir, before or after, with two legendary Americans helping provide the
universal, timeless appeal.
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Trevor Howard in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN
|
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN
|
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN with Joseph Cotten
|
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN
|
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Trevor Howard in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Bernard Lee in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Carol Reed's zither credit for THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Prologue from THE THIRD MAN |
|
Carol Reed: "Of course a situation like that does tempt amateurs" |
|
Carol Reed's THE THIRD MAN
|
|
Joseph Cotten THE THIRD MAN |
|
Trevor Howard in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten THE THIRD MAN with Trevor Howard
|
|
Joseph Cotten THE THIRD MAN with Bernard Lee
|
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN with Joseph Cotten
|
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Alida Valli in THE THIRD MAN with Joseph Cotten |
|
Sewer search fromTHE THIRD MAN |
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten & Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Carol Reed's THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN with Orson Welles
|
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN with Orson Welles |
|
Carol Reed's THE THIRD MAN with Orson Welles |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Criterion DVD for THE THIRD MAN |
|
Orson Welles in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Joseph Cotten in THE THIRD MAN |
|
Poster for THE THIRD MAN |
|
Poster for THE THIRD MAN |
|
Poster art for THE THIRD MAN
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.