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Tight Spot: Phil Karlson in the Fifties

Friday, June 5, 2009
6:30 p.m. Kansas City Confidential
Phil Karlson (U.S., 1952)

John Payne was the perfectly imperfect star for Karlson’s kind of noir: a former pretty-boy crooner whose face eroded into a sagging scowl, Payne conveyed a mixture of baffled resignation and simmering resentment in his portrayals of fate-battered characters. Kansas City Confidential pits Payne against Preston Foster, a criminal puppetmaster who jerks the strings of Neville Brand, Jack Elam, and Lee Van Cleef, the most grotesque trio of heavies this side of Dick Tracy. In a plot laden with paranoid convolutions, Foster’s gang pulls off a sensational heist and Payne gets blamed; wronged but not innocent, the patsy turns persecutor, eventually tracing the robbers to a tropical resort where they await the big payoff. (Spying and stalking one another while attempting to pose as casual tourists, the men become caricatures of Americans-at-leisure.) Eerie imagery—jumpsuited men in blank gray masks, sweat-smeared faces in stark close-up—amplifies the atmosphere of suspicion, which is interrupted but not relieved by ironic humor and sudden eruptions of violence.

—Juliet Clark

• Written by George Bruce, Harry Essex, based on a story by Harold R. Greene, Rowland Brown. Photographed by George E. Diskant. With John Payne, Coleen Gray, Preston Foster, Neville Brand. (98 mins, B&W, 35mm, From MGM)