Friday, April 22, 2011

The Reckless Moment

Although my first love will always be screwball comedies, especially of the late '30s, there are several other genres that I am interesed in.  The one thread I will try to hold to in this blog is that the films I mention will not be the best known.  There is already much written and many have seen for themselves the famous classic films.  So this blog is for those that might have been missed.  The Reckless Moment is a film noir from 1947 starring James Mason and Joan Bennett.  Joan Bennett may be most known for her role in the classic Father of the Bride in which she played the wife of Spencer Tracy and the mother of Elizabeth Taylor.  Here she is again a wife and mother of a typical American family, only this time the spotlight is on her. 
James Mason, famous for his role in Lolita, is here a soft spoken, sympathetic albeit criminal character.
Both Joan and James were stars at this time having been around for a few years.  Joan was perhaps better known, she was the sister of 30's star Constance Bennett, and had lured Edward G. Robinson to his ruin in Woman in the Window, another classic film noir from 1944.  Here she is in 1940.



 
In Reckless Moment, she plays a respectable woman faced with an impossible situation.  A man with no morals, who has tried to date her 17 year old daughter, dies accidentally after falling near her house.  In a "reckless moment" she decides to hide the body in order to protect her teenage daughter.  Enter James Mason, a suave blackmailer who in developing feelings for Bennett surprises even himself.  As usual it's the tight timing and good acting that carries the story.   As they become more entangled, the characters remain true, unlike in many films where about faces are made that don't make sense for the character or the film.  The one overactor is Geraldine Brooks, who plays the daughter a little too hysterically and never quite realistically enough.  But Mason and Bennett save the picture from fallinig apart.   A key moment is the first time Mason and Bennett meet.  Something about the way he looks at her even before he speaks lets you know that she has stirred something in him.  This is mild film noir that also manages to give a feeling for what American family life might have once been like.  Bennett, even while distracted by dead bodies and financial worries, remains the perfect mother, ever aware of her children's manner and attire.

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