Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Deadline at Dawn (1946)

I really enjoyed this film. Deadline at Dawn is the film adaptation of the novel by Cornell Woolrich, which I also enjoyed. The film makes so many changes to the plot in the novel that I can’t even say it’s helpful to read the novel before seeing the film!

Click here to read my article about the novel, which has the same title as the film, by Cornell Woolrich.

Deadline at Dawn opens with a hallway and the stairs leading up to it. The credits start quickly while the camera stays on this shot. A blind man taps his way up the stairs toward the camera, turns, walks down the hall away from the camera, and knocks on the door farthest from the camera: a great introduction that could be missed if viewers are paying more attention to the credits than to the action. The blind man could be a metaphor for the film’s viewers, who will be following the plot blindly, without knowing where it will lead. I didn't know what to expect the first time that I saw it.

As soon as the credits finish, the camera is close to the blind man knocking. He awakens a woman, Edna Bartelli, who opens the door and lets him into her apartment. She calls the man Sleepy Parsons. He’s her ex-husband, and he wants the $1,400 that she owes him. But she says that she doesn’t have it, that the sailor she met earlier must have stolen it. Sleepy Parsons doesn’t believe her and sits down on her bed.

After the sequence between the blind man and a woman named Edna, the camera dissolves from Sleepy Parson’s boutonniere to a sailor’s hat. What’s missing in between? Viewers have no idea, and they won’t find out until all the plot details are woven together at the end.

Alex Winkler, a sailor, is recovering from a drinking bout in a newspaper kiosk on a city street. Ray, the newspaper vendor, is allowing him to stay until he can get back on his feet. When Alex gets up and decides to leave, he accidentally drops a wad of bills, and Ray returns it to him. The sailor doesn’t recognize it, but he takes it because he thinks getting so drunk made him forgetful. Ray also reminds Alex to take his radio; it is part of his military gear because he is a radio technician. Alex does remember that he has seven hours before his bus leaves for Norfolk, Virginia, where he must report for duty.

Alex is planning on getting some fresh air, but the crowds on the New York City sidewalks surround and sweep him along until he decides to enter a dance hall, where he meets June Goffe. She is comfortable enough with him to invite him up to her apartment for sandwiches (and nothing else, she tells him). Alex tells June about the money he has and how he got it now that his memory is much clearer. He got drunk at a restaurant where he met Edna Bartelli. Edna’s brother cheated Alex when they started gambling together. Edna wanted Alex to come to her apartment and fix her radio, but she refused to pay him for this work, and he passed out from drinking too much. When he came to, he took the money because he felt that Edna and her brother owed it to him.

June convinces Alex to return the money. Alex in turn convinces June to accompany him. They arrive together at Edna Bartelli’s apartment building, and Alex goes upstairs to the apartment while June plays lookout. She promises to turn on Alex’s radio as a warning if anyone enters the apartment building. When Alex returns, he tells June that he found the woman dead. June goes up to see for herself, with Alex racing up behind her.

Alex and June decide that they must find Edna Bartelli’s killer. They must do it before dawn, when her body will probably be discovered, and they must do it before Alex must board his bus and report for duty in Virginia. They will follow different leads, each on their own to make better use of the time remaining to them. They leave Edna’s apartment with two different missions and a common goal.

(This article about Deadline at Dawn contains spoilers for both the film and the novel.)

Neither one of them is successful with their slim clues, and both return to Edna’s apartment. A cab driver, Gus Hoffman, who drove Alex and takes him back to where they started, waits behind and sees that Alex is returning to Edna Bartelli’s apartment; he waits long enough to see June return to the same place. He comes up after Alex and June and knocks on Edna Bartelli’s front door. June answers and says that she is Edna Bartelli, but Gus knows this isn’t true. He doesn’t explain how he knows this, and June and Alex are too nervous to ask him questions.

Gus inserts himself into the investigation and finds letters that Edna had written to blackmail several men, including her own brother. He helps June and Alex out of the kindness of his heart. He sees that they are falling in love and wants them to stay together. From this point onward, three people—June, Alex, and Gus—are looking for clues and following up leads, which is a departure from the novel, in which only two people are involved. The cab driver Gus has a very important role in the film adaptation. There are several cab drivers in the novel, but none of them are even given a name and none of them do any investigating to help the main characters.

In the novel, Alex Winkler is Quinn Williams, an out-of-work electrician’s assistant who is desperate for cash. The story still takes place in New York City, but the year is 1939, when the United States is still in the grip of the Great Depression and has not yet become involved in World War II. The addition of Gus Hoffman as a main character and the name and occupation changes aren’t the only differences between the novel and the film. Stephen Graves is the murder victim in the novel, and the murderer is a different character altogether in the film.

At one point, June becomes frustrated about the lack of progress in the investigation because she wants to see Alex cleared of any wrongdoing. She and Gus, the cab driver, are on one part of the search for clues in the murder investigation, and Gus can see what June doesn’t realize quite yet: that she is falling in love with Alex. Gus tells her, “The logic you are looking for, the logic is that there is no logic. The horror and terror you feel, my dear, come from being alive. Die, and there is no trouble. Live, and you struggle . . .” Gus’s speech to June about the meaning of life, love, and logic seems to explain existential angst in general (the underlying premise for almost all film noir) and the human condition. His words don’t come from the novel, of course, because his character doesn’t exist in it, but they seem to replace the views expressed by Bricky Coleman, the name of the main female character in the novel: that the city, New York City, is an evil place that defies logic, and if you stay in it too long, it is almost impossible to escape.

By the end of Deadline at Dawn, viewers see the logic to the film’s plot. They (and the characters) are given a very satisfying ending that may not appeal to fans of Woolrich’s novel, but it explains everything. The novel does the same, but its conclusion and many of the details leading up to it are so different. Both the film and the novel are wonderful on their own merits. I am finding this true more and more often about film noir adaptations. I usually enjoy a novel so much more, but the film noir genre seems to have made adaptations a real art form. I enjoyed the changes in the film version of Deadline at Dawn as much as the plot in the novel.

Release dates: March 18, 1946 (Sweden), April 3, 1946 (United States)    Directed by Harold Clurman    Screenplay by Clifford Odets    Based on the novel Deadline at Dawn by Cornell Woolrich    Music by Hanns Eisler, C. Bakaleinikoff    Edited by Roland Gross    Cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca

Susan Hayward as June Goffe    Paul Lukas as Gus Hoffman    Bill Williams as Alex Winkler    Joseph Calleia as Val Bartelli    Osa Massen as Helen Robinson    Phil Warren as Jerry Robinson    Lola Lane as Edna Bartelli    Jerome Cowan as Lester Brady    Marvin Miller as Sleepy Parsons    Roman Bohnen as the man with the injured cat    Steven Geray as Edward Honig    Joe Sawyer as Babe Dooley    Constance Worth as Nan Raymond    Joseph Crehan as Lieutenant Kane    Byron Foulger as the night attendant    Eugene Pallette as a man in the crowd    Jason Robards Sr. as a police officer

Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures    Produced by RKO Radio Pictures

2 comments:

  1. I very much like your comment about how changes from source material to screen weren't always for the worse, and that frequently both source and adaptation could stand on their own merits despite the differences. Cornell Woolrich inspired so many great noirs, but his works were very dark -- often too dark to adapt faithfully and still succeed at the box office.

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    1. Thank you for stopping by, Brian! I'm finding more and more often that film noir adaptations are just as good if not better than the novels that they are based on. And the changes from novel to screen mean that it is all the more worth it to read the novel *and* see the film. More that is good for noir lovers!

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