Nightfall (1956 film)

Nightfall is a 1956 American crime film noir directed by Jacques Tourneur and starring Aldo Ray, Brian Keith and Anne Bancroft.[1]

Nightfall
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJacques Tourneur
Produced byTed Richmond
Screenplay byStirling Silliphant
Based onNightfall
by David Goodis
Starring
Music byGeorge Duning
CinematographyBurnett Guffey
Edited byWilliam A. Lyon
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Copa Productions
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • December 6, 1956 (1956-12-06)
Running time
79 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The low-budget film is remembered today for camera work by cinematographer Burnett Guffey. It uses flashbacks as a device to tell the story, which was based on a 1948 novel by David Goodis.[2]

The theme song, "Nightfall," was composed by Peter De Rose and "Charles Harold" (Charles H. Cuppett), with lyrics by Sam M. Lewis and sung by Al Hibbler.

Plot

At night on a busy Los Angeles sidewalk, James "Jim" Vanning (Aldo Ray) wanders aimlessly, avoiding bright lights and police cars, while he's being watched by another man, later revealed to be insurance investigator Ben Fraser (James Gregory). At a corner, Fraser asks Vanning for a light, and the two men chat briefly, with Vanning revealing that he is a veteran who fought on Okinawa in the war. Vanning enters a bar, sitting next to Marie Gardner (Anne Bancroft), who has been nursing her drink because she has no cash to pay for it. Vanning pays for her drink, and the two have dinner together. As happens several times in the film, the scenes with Vanning are intercut with scenes of Fraser and his wife (Jocelyn Brando) discussing Vanning, who is wanted for murder. Fraser's real interest is in retrieving $350,000 in stolen money for his company.

At dinner, Marie reveals that she is a model, while Vanning is a commercial artist who has lived in several places but does not say much else about his past. Leaving the restaurant, Marie and Vanning are encountered by two thuggish men, John (Brian Keith) and "Red" (Rudy Bond). They thank Marie for distracting Vanning and she quickly goes away. The two men drive Jim to a deserted spot by some oil pumps, demanding that Vanning tell them where to find the $350,000 that he took from them and threatening to torture him. Vanning insists that he does not know where the money is. The men discover a slip of paper with Marie's name, address, and phone number.

In intermittent flashbacks, the story of Vanning's troubles is revealed. Near the town of Moose, Wyoming, Vanning and his friend Dr. Edward "Doc" Gurston have been camping, hunting, and fishing. As they plan to leave because of an impending snowstorm, they see a car go off the road. John, whose arm has been fractured, and Red, emerge from the wreck. While Doc tends to John's arm, it is revealed that a bank has been robbed of $350,000 and a guard has been killed. Red pulls out a gun. The thieves are going to steal Doc's car, but wanting no witnesses, Red shoots Doc with a rifle that he places in Vanning's hand and then shoots Vanning with a pistol to make the scene look like a murder-suicide. The shot misses Vanning, but Red believes he's dead because a ricocheted piece of rock had struck Vanning and drawn blood. When Vanning comes to, he finds the men and the car gone, but discovers that they had taken Doc's medical bag instead of the one with the money. The killers soon realize their mistake and return. Vanning flees with the money through the snow to a deserted shack.

In the present, Jim manages to escape from John and Red. He goes to Marie's apartment and angrily confronts her, believing she set him up. She convinces him that she was an innocent bystander and he convinces her that he is not guilty of Doc's murder as news accounts have suggested. When they spot John and Red coming out of a car on the street, they go out the building's back door to Vanning's apartment. There he tells her more of his story. He wants to retrieve the money from Wyoming to prove his innocence and has been waiting for the roads to clear there, but he will have to search for it because he really cannot remember where he let it go.

Marie agrees to go to Wyoming with Vanning after she has finished a modeling job at a fashion show. Vanning goes to the city bus station to buy tickets to the town of Moose. Fraser follows him and buys a seat on the same bus. Marie displays several outfits at the fashion show but spies John and Red in the audience. When Jim arrives, she breaks away to tell him and the two run off.

When they reach Moose, Fraser reveals himself and his job to Vanning and that he believes in Vanning's innocence. In a rented car, Fraser, Vanning, and Marie drive to the campsite and head toward the shack that Vanning has recalled. They realize that John and Red have gotten there first and have found the bag with the money. Following a standoff, Red, intent on keeping all the money for himself, shoots John and retreats to a nearby snowplow which he drives toward the shack. Vanning manages to knock Red out of the cab and steer the plow away,, but it runs directly into Red.

Cast

Production

The film was based on a novel by David Goodis which was published in 1948.[3]

In 1950 it was adapted for TV as Sure as Fate.[4]

In July 1955 it was announced film rights had been purchased by Copa Productions, the film company of Ted Richmond and Tyrone Power who released through Columbia. Raphael Hayes was going to write the script. Richmond wanted Edmond O'Brien or Barry Sullivan to play the male lead and Barbara Stanwyck to play the female lead with filming to begin in September.[5] William Wright was going to produce. Power did not want to appear in the film.[6]

The lead role eventually went to Aldo Ray, who was under long term contract to Columbia but been on suspension for refusing the lead in Beyond Mombassa. Filming ended up beginning on 12 March 1956. Jacques Tourneur signed to direct and Anne Bancroft was cast in the female lead.[7]

Filming took place in downtown Los Angeles on Hollywood Boulevard and other locations, including MacArthur Park and the J.W. Robinson department store, where the fashion show scene was filmed. The Wyoming scenes were filmed in Teton County. [8]

Release

Nightfall was shown as early as December 1956 in Boston in the United States.[9]

Reception

Critical response

From contemporary reviews, Marjory Adams declared Nightfall as "all that a suspense-yearning public could hope for" as well as that "If it comes to analyzing the plot, "Nightfall" has enough holes in it to drive two truck though them", clarifying that "if you just let the numerous hectic episodes drag you along by the hair, then "Nightfall" becomes a wild and terrifying experience to set the heart pounding."[10] Variety published a review in December 5, 1956 stated that the film had "a generous slice of mystery, action and suspense" but "this modest budgeter adds up to only fair entertainment."[11] A review in the Monthly Film Bulletin stated that despite the plot being "complex and unlikely", the makers of the film have "developed it in an atmosphere of deliberate obscurity." noting that "motivations remain vague, and the background to the story is revealed mainly though flashbacks" and that the final sequences starting with the dress show were revered better as "undisguised melodrama".[12]

From retrospective reviews, Critic Dennis Schwartz liked the film and wrote, "Splendid adaptation by Stirling Silliphant of David Goodis's 1947 novel. Jacques Tourneur (Out of the Past and I Walked with a Zombie) gets the most out of this minor film noir about a paranoid man haunted by his past".[13]

Critic Jay Seaver gave the film a mixed review, writing, "Nightfall isn't worried about purity of genre; it occasionally threatens to become an almost light-hearted caper movie.... The storytelling is more than a bit cumbersome. Stirling Silliphant's script starts shaky, with Vanning making annoyingly vague comments about not being able to remember the source of his woes, and Marie's appearance in the somewhat low-class bar where she meets him almost seems out of character by the end. The direction is similarly uneven; Jacques Tourneur has some impressive items on his résumé but also a fair amount of mediocrity, and this one's somewhere in between. He gets us into and out of flashbacks smoothly, and knows when to sit back and let the actors do their thing. If the end fizzles, it might be less Tourneur's fault and more the environment he was working in—the finale really calls for a bit of blood spatter, but you just didn't get that in 1957, so the tension that has been built nicely doesn't quite have the release one might like."[14]

Noir analysis

Film critic Alain Silver makes the case that even though the film's locations include bright snow-covered landscapes, the protagonist in the film is "typically noir." He writes, "Despite being made near the end of the cycle, the dilemma of Nightfall's protagonist is typically noir. Although he is a victim of several mischances, Vanning's paranoia compounds these problems significantly. Tourneur relegates those causal incidents to a flashback halfway through the film; but he does not allow them to be distorted by Vanning's point-of view. Rather, they reflect Vanning's struggle to comprehend how such violent but basically simple past occurrences have put him in such dangerous and complicated present predicament."[15]

Writer Spencer Selby called the film a "paranoid thriller which seems to be Tourneur's return to some of the territory he explored in Out of the Past."[16]

Legacy

The film was influential in Quentin Tarantino creating the Bruce Willis character in Pulp Fiction. Tarantino said, Willis "reminded me of a 50s leading man... a Ralph Meeker, Aldo Ray and Brian Keith kind of man. I went to his house and we did actually watch one print of an Aldo Ray movie, we watched Nightfall [1956]... [Ray and Brian Keith] have fantastic banter. And Brian Keith is excellent. "[17]

See also

References

  1. NIGHTFALL Monthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 23, Iss. 264, (Jan 1, 1956): 155.
  2. Nightfall at IMDb.
  3. Hunted Man: NIGHTFALL. By David Goodis. 214 pp. New York: Julian Messner. $2.50. By SEYMOUR KRIM. New York Times 11 Jan 1948: BR32.
  4. NEWS OF TELEVISION AND RADIO By SIDNEY LOHMAN. New York Times 20 Aug 1950: 87.
  5. FILMING SLATED FOR 'NIGHTFALL': 1949 Novel Will Be Basis for Copa Productions Movie -- Raphael Hayes Scenarist By THOMAS M. PRYOR New York Times 6 July 1955: 23.
  6. MOVIELAND BRIEFS: Katzman Seeking Deal With Arnold Los Angeles Times 15 July 1955: 18.
  7. Louella Parsons: Aldo Ray Gets Recall at Columbia The Washington Post and Times Herald 20 Feb 1956: 19.
  8. "Nightfall (1956) - Filming and Production". Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  9. "Film Times". The Boston Daily Globe. December 6, 1956. p. 38. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  10. Adams, Marjory (December 6, 1956). "New Films in Hub: "Nightfall" Hectic Melodrama". The Boston Daily Globe. p. 38. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  11. Blottner, Gene (19 March 2015). Columbia Noir: A Complete Filmography, 1940-1962. McFarland. p. 166. ISBN 978-1476617619.
  12. "Nightfall, U.S.A., 1956". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 23 no. 275. London: British Film Institute. December 1956. pp. 155–156.
  13. Schwartz, Dennis. Ozus' World Movie Reviews, film review, March 24, 2005. Last accessed: January 22, 2008.
  14. Seaver, Jay. eFilmCritic, film review, August 24, 2005. Last accessed: January 23, 2008.
  15. Silver, Alain, and Elizabeth Ward, eds. Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style, film noir analysis by Alain Silver, page 206, 3rd edition, 1992. Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 0-87951-479-5.
  16. Selby, Spencer. Dark City: The Film Noir, film listed as film noir #280 on page 166, 1984. Jefferson, N.C. & London: McFarland Publishing. ISBN 0-89950-103-6.
  17. "The Interview: Quentin Tarantino". Sight and Sound. Vol. 26 no. 2. February 2016. p. 25.
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