The
Lady from Shanghai is one of those films that I find a little intimidating.
It is directed by Orson Welles, and almost everyone, especially if they are
film noir fans, has seen it. It also has a well-deserved reputation for a plot
that is hard to follow, and many claim that it doesn’t make sense. It didn’t do
well at the box office when it was first released in 1947, but its stature has
grown in the years hence. And apparently audiences in France have loved it all
along. The film does have a convoluted plot, perhaps more convoluted than other
films noir. Today, audiences can rewatch the film several times on DVD or
Blu-ray (as I did), and the plot does make more sense with repeat viewings,
which is so true of many films noir.

The narrative begins in New York City, where Michael
O’Hara (played by Orson Welles) spots Elsa Bannister (played by Rita Hayworth) riding
past him in Central Park in a horse-drawn carriage. He is immediately smitten
with her, and he tells viewers as much in his voice-over narration using an
adopted Irish brogue. In this narration, he admits to not being in his right mind for quite some time
after seeing Elsa Bannister and that once he saw her, he wasn’t thinking except
to think of her. Elsa Bannister’s carriage is waylaid by three men in
Central Park, and Michael O’Hara is there to save her.

Michael soon learns that Elsa is married to Arthur
Bannister, who calls himself the greatest criminal lawyer. Now, Michael wants
to avoid her, and he refuses her invitation to work on her yacht. He goes to
the pier to find work on a boat sailing out of New York City, but Arthur
Bannister comes looking for him, determined to hire him as part of his yacht
crew. He and his wife are traveling to San Francisco by way of the Panama
Canal. Michael refuses at first, but Arthur Bannister gets drunk with Michael
and two of his sailor friends, and Michael and one of his friends, Chaim
(Goldie) Goldfish, are forced to take the too-drunk Arthur Bannister to his
yacht.
The trip aboard the Bannisters’ yacht in The Lady in Shanghai
ends in San Franciso with many on-location shots. Click here to visit “Reel SF:
San Francisco movie locations from classic films” for comparisons (then and
now) of various location shots for The Lady from Shanghai. The list is
extensive, both for The Lady from Shanghai and for the other movies
spotlighted at the website. Click on MOVIE LIST at the top right of the site to
see the full list of films.
When they arrive at the yacht, Elsa comes to Michael,
claiming to need help and protection. Michael doesn’t know what to make of her,
but Goldie is anxious to get work, and he convinces Michael that both of them
could probably be hired to work for the Bannisters. Michael reluctantly agrees;
he is hired as bosun, and Goldie is also hired as part of the crew.
It doesn’t take long for the tense atmosphere aboard
the yacht to be revealed, especially after the arrival of Arthur Bannister’s
law partner, George Grisby. Grisby appears to be baiting Michael and also seems
smitten with Elsa. Arthur Bannister repeatedly calls his wife Lover, although
it is implied that he and she no longer have sex, if they ever did. (Arthur has
braces on both legs and walks with two canes.) Elsa tells Michael that Sidney
Broome, the yacht’s steward, is not a steward at all but a private detective
hired by her husband to spy on her so he can cut her off without any money if
they ever get a divorce. When the yacht stops in Acapulco, Mexico, George
Grisby offers $5,000 to Michael to kill him, Grisby. And according to Michael,
the story just gets crazier and crazier as time goes on.

Michael O’Hara’s voice-over narration continues at
times throughout the narrative, and Michael tells his story in hindsight. The
entire film could be called a flashback, and flashbacks are one of the many
features of film noir. The story is told by Michael from his perspective, and
he relies on his own memory to tell it. He starts by telling viewers that he
wasn’t in his right mind once he met Elsa Bannister, and this theme of insanity
is repeated throughout the film.
The
Blu-ray that I watched came with three audio commentaries, one of them by film historian Imogen Sara Smith, who
mentions that Orson Welles showed the expressionistic
film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) to the cast. He wanted something
off-kilter and fantastic, which is definitely true of this expressionistic
German film. Welles wanted insanity, characters acting like somnambulists, and
a break with reality. Smith also mentions that the
interior amusement park scenes at the end of the film were created by Orson
Welles himself, and he was inspired by The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari once
again and by modern art. So the next time that I watched The Lady from Shanghai, I decided to focus on
the theme of insanity, which I think is one of the reasons the plot seems so
convoluted.
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is another great film that explores the theme of insanity. It utilizes
expressionistic techniques to tell its story, and German expressionism is a
large influence on film noir in general. Click here to learn some basics about
German expressionism, and click here to see my blog article about the film.
(This
article about The Lady from Shanghai
contains spoilers.)
The theme of insanity and not being in one’s right
mind is mentioned directly several times in The Lady
from Shanghai. Michael O’Hara saying at the start of the film that
he is not in his right mind after seeing Elsa Bannister is just the beginning,
and this particular example is easy to dismiss because many people would use
Michael’s words to describe the feeling of infatuation and even love. In this
example, not being in one’s right mind could be taken as a euphemism. After he
and Goldie set sail on board the Bannisters’ yacht, however, things start to
change. Michael says to Bessie, another member of the crew who is also the
Bannister’s domestic servant on land, “Talk of money and murder. I must be
insane. Or else all these people [the Bannisters, George Grisby] are lunatics.”
Michael is a little unnerved at this point, but more insanity is ahead.
When the
yacht makes a stop in Acapulco, Michael tells a story to Elsa, Arthur, and George
Grisby about fishing “off the hump of Brazil.” He caught a shark in a sea that
was already dark with blood. The shark got loose and bled into the sea, and the
blood drove the rest of the sharks mad. They started attacking and killing each
other, which, he tells the Bannisters and Grisby, reminds him of them.

Michael
at least is aware that things aren’t right and that the Bannisters and Grisby
aren’t telling him everything they know. He tells Elsa about Grisby’s offer to
pay him if Michael will kill him (Grisby), and he also tells her, “I’m sure
he’s out of his mind.” After Grisby and Broome are murdered, Michael begins to
have some doubts about almost everything: “I began to ask myself if I wasn’t
out of my head entirely. The wrong man was arrested. The wrong man was shot.
Grisby was dead and so was Broome. And what about [Arthur] Bannister? He was
going to defend me in a trial for my life. And me, charged with a couple of
murders I did not commit. Either me or the rest of the whole world is
absolutely insane.”
Michael
escapes from the courthouse where his murder trial takes place by pretending to
take some of Arthur Bannister’s painkillers. He takes more than he intended to
and passes out in a theater in Chinatown. Li Gong, another of the Bannisters’
servants, and his Chinatown gang take him to the Crazy House at the amusement
park, which is closed for the season and thus a perfect place to hide him. When
Michael comes to, he is disoriented at first, but he is able to regain his
senses: “Well, I came to . . . in the Crazy House! And for a while there, I
thought it was me that was crazy. After what I’d been through, anything crazy
at all seemed natural. But now, I was sane on one subject: her [Elsa Bannister]
. . . I knew about her.”

Out of
all the main characters—Elsa and Arthur Bannister, George Grisby, and Michael
O’Hara—Michael is the only one alive at the end of the film. His story, his
metaphor, about the sharks and their feeding frenzy was more accurate than he
could have predicted earlier in the story. The insanity is finally over, but at
great cost. Perhaps the cost was inevitable. The Bannisters’ and Grisby’s
murderous insanity would have continued forever, it seems, if they hadn’t been
stopped. Elsa Bannister admits this to Michael as she lays dying in the Crazy
House. Michael, on the other hand, tells her that he refuses to play a part in
any more insanity.
As I noted, the Blu-ray version of The Lady from Shanghai, published by Kino
Lorber in 2023, comes with three audio commentaries: one each by film historian
Imogen Sara Smith, novelist and critic Tim Lucas, and filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich. I have to be honest: I have never been a
big fan of Bogdanovich or his films, and I found his commentary to be the least
interesting of the three. He literally reads from his notes and recorded
conversations that he used for a book about Orson Welles, which was published
after Welles’s death. And he also reads from a long letter from Welles to Harry
Cohn at Columbia, the studio responsible for distributing The Lady from
Shanghai. He did make some interesting points, such as Welles liked
on-location shooting because he liked surprises and dealing with challenges. (In
contrast, the director Alfred Hitchcock preferred studio shooting because he
could control everything.) But Bogdanovich glosses over Rita Hayworth’s
childhood abuse and its effect on her marriage to Welles, and he tries to make
the case that Welles did his best to deal with it, but Welles and Hayworth were
married for only four years. It’s probably best to remember that Bogdanovich
thought of Welles as a personal friend.

But the other two commentaries by Smith and Lucas
provide lots more information and details. Imogen Sara Smith’s commentary
focuses mostly on the film’s production, background, and shooting. Tim Lucas’s
focuses quite a bit on the novel, If I Die Before I Wake by Raymond Sherwood
King, which is the basis of the film. Both commentaries are well worth a listen
because of all the detail they provide. Here are some highlights from each.
Blu-ray audio commentary by film
historian Imogen Sara Smith
◊ Orson
Welles always intended the film to be offbeat, but Columbia wanted a vehicle
for Rita Hayworth, their biggest star.
◊ Rita
Hayworth wanted to work with Orson Welles, even though they were no longer
living together. They were still married but living separately.
◊ Suicide
is another recurring theme in the film.
◊ The
court scenes in which Michael O’Hara is tried for the murders of George Grisby
and Sidney Broome are staged as a circus. The audience is raucous, and its
members are looking to be entertained.
◊ The
Lady from Shanghai is told mostly from Michael O’Hara’s point of view, and
viewers are just as confused as he is. Disorientation is a feature of film
noir.
◊ George
Grisby ogles Elsa Bannister. Smith wonders if this is perhaps a comment on
studio executives. The scene with him watching her through a telescope while
she sunbathes and dives is funny, but it is pushed to the extreme. Hayworth was
abused by her father, and her first husband tried to bolster his career by
sending her to studio executives.
◊ George
Grisby mentions the end of the world and nihilism, which is a reference to the
atomic bomb. Welles is one of the first filmmakers to mention the atomic bomb
and nuclear destruction in a film. Grisby wants to escape nuclear destruction
by moving to a South Sea Island, but the United States tested the bomb on a
South Sea Island: Bikini Atoll.
Blu-ray audio commentary by novelist and
critic Tim Lucas
◊ Tim
Lucas gives a lot of background information about Raymond Sherwood King
and the publication of his novel If I Die Before I Wake. He talks about
its long path to publication and to its adaptation first as a radio play before
it was put on film by Orson Welles. The novel was originally published in May
1938.
◊ The
film’s release date in the United States was April 14, 1948. Its release was
delayed by one year after production.
◊ Orson
Welles refused to take credit or responsibility for the film. There is no
credit for the director.
◊ There
is no mention in the film’s credits of which novel by Sherwood King is the
basis of the film.
◊ The
novel takes place only in New York and on Long Island. The film goes from New
York to Acapulco, to San Francisco.
◊ The
characters in the film are more sinister than they are in the novel. In the
novel, Elsa Bannister is portrayed like a lost child. In the film, she is more
cunning and conniving. She is really the femme fatale of the film.
◊ Lucas
erroneously states that the group of well-dressed Asians listening to the
biased radio broadcast about Michael O’Hara and his murder trial seemingly have
no link to the courtroom drama, but they do foreshadow the subsequent scenes in
Chinatown and at an amusement park, where one of them works. But Tim Lucas is
wrong about one thing: one of the Asian men, Li Gong, works for the Bannisters,
and he and his gang take Michael O’Hara to the amusement park at the request of
Elsa Bannister.
◊ Elsa
Bannister’s last scene, her death scene, shows that Rita Hayworth was a good
actress.
The
Lady from Shanghai is not the only film noir to have a convoluted plot.
It’s true that its plot seems more opaque than those of other films, but I have
written many times before about other films noir needing repeat viewings to
catch all the details and make sense of the plot. And the same can be said for The
Lady from Shanghai. It’s well worth the effort. It is a remarkable story
and an amazing example of Orson Welles’s particular style of filmmaking. And it
is a great chance to see Rita Hayworth meet the challenge of a difficult role.
So many films noir have complicated plots that reward repeat viewings, and The
Lady from Shanghai is no exception. I have seen the film several times now,
and I enjoy it more and more each time.
December
24, 1947 (France), April 14, 1948 (United States), release dates • Directed
by Orson Welles • Screenplay by Orson Welles, William Castle,
Charles Lederer, Fletcher Markle • Based on the
novel If I Die Before I Wake by Raymond Sherwood King • Music by Heinz Roemheld • Edited
by Viola Lawrence • Cinematography by Charles Lawton Jr, Rudolph
Maté, Joseph Walker
Rita
Hayworth as Elsa (aka Rosalie) Bannister
• Orson Welles as Michael O’Hara • Everett
Sloane as Arthur Bannister • Glenn Anders as George Grisby • Ted
de Corsia as Sidney Broome • Evelyn Ellis as Bessie • Gus
Schilling as Chaim (aka “Goldie”) Goldfish
• Erskine Sanford as the judge • Carl
Frank as District Attorney Galloway
• Louis Merrill as Jake • Harry
Shannon as the cab driver • Wong Chung as Li Gong • Philip
Morris as port steward Officer Peters
• Anita Kert Ellis as the singer
dubbed for Rita Hayworth
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
• Produced by Mercury Productions