Richard Conte - Film Noir Foundation
Transcription
Richard Conte - Film Noir Foundation
32 Noir City Sentinel FALL 2010 RICHARD CONTE A Private Source of Electricity by Imogen Sara Smith Special to the Sentinel “Y ou’re not like the rest of Papa’s hoodlums,” mobster’s daughter Anne Bancroft tells Richard Conte in New York Confidential. He coolly responds, “I like to use the term ‘employee.’” As the mugs and roughnecks of the early thirties evolved into more sophisticated postwar gangsters, Conte’s elegance sheathed the hood’s raw aggression in silky style. Born Nicholas Conte in 1910, the son of an immigrant Jersey City barber, he became one of Hollywood’s first Italian-American leading men. He changed his name to soften its ethnic flavor, only to be cast as Nick Magellan, Nick Rocco, Nick Garcos. Though he never broke free from the orbit of crime, he moved Hollywood’s depiction of Italians away from the crude, Neanderthal impersonations of Paul Muni’s Tony Camonte (“’Attsa pwutty hot!”) and Edward G. Robinson’s Rico Bandello, toward the dignified mystique of the Corleones. Conte’s swansong in American movies was his brief but crucial turn as Don Barzini, the quiet nemesis who lurks behind every attack on Don Corleone and his sons in The Godfather (1972). In House of Strangers (1949), Edward G. Robinson, having fun with a Chico Marx accent, plays Conte’s father, a Sicilian immigrant and onetime barber who has risen to success as the owner of a bank and revels in his roles as family patriarch and neighborhood “godfather,” from whom petitioners beg loans to buy a horse or treat a sick child. A melodrama simmered with plenty of red wine and garlic, the film is overcooked in parts, but has some sharp, spicy scenes and settings: street markets, speakeasies and steam baths. While the revenge plot heads for the usual moralizing anticlimax, the family disintegrates under the strains of jealousy, resentment and betrayal. The script updates the tale of Joseph and his Brothers, with Max (Conte) as the favorite son, a smart lawyer who has inherited his father Gino Monetti’s overweening self-regard. The others suffer from their father’s neglect and contempt: he treats the dour Joe (Luther Adler) as a low-level clerk, barely notices the weak, vain Tony (Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.) and addresses the muscle-bound Pietro (Paul Valentine) as “dumbhead.” When Gino gets in trouble for unorthodox banking practices (“What I think is-a right, is-a right!” sums up his attitude toward legality), the three mistreated sons smugly refuse to help him, then take over the bank and banish him. Trying to save his father from prison, Max attempts to bribe a juror and Joe betrays him to the police; after seven years in jail he emerges with a smoldering vendetta. His girlfriend Irene (Susan Hayward) tries to break the family spell of hatred, accusing him of being his father’s pawn, sacrificing his future to a dead past. Irene and Max are once seen kissing in front of a boxing ring, and their sparring relationship produces some of the film’s best moments. She’s an imperious, “chromium-plated” heiress who claims Max as a lover despite his engagement to Maria (Debra Paget), a traditional, chaste Italian girl. Irene is drawn to his insolent swagger even as she resists it, sneering, “This isn’t Mulberry Street. You are no longer Il Duce.” Gino Monetti proudly declares himself a man of the New World, in a scene in which he hilariously bullies Maria’s mother (Hope Emerson, who had at least six inches on Robinson) and lectures her about modern American values. But Gino represents the refusal to forget, the insistence on perpetuating destructive feuds. Robinson’s charisma and operatic brio are such that it’s hard not to side with his overbearing, wrong-headed character, and hard to feel satisfied by the redemptive ending in which Max lets his murderous brothers off scot-free. Conte’s signature role was that of the first-generation American, caught between an ethnic old world of family ties and traditional machismo and an unstable modern world of individualism, free enterprise and sexually liberated women. While noir heroes are often alienated loners, Richard Conte’s films most often placed him in the turbulent confines of ethnic families and criminal organizations. C onte said that he learned more hanging around the Jersey City docks than he did in school. He worked as a Wall Street messenger, a floor walker, a truck driver and a barber before landing a job as a waiter at a Connecticut country club in 1935. There he was drafted into the floor show by entertainment director Joe Pevney (who would appear with Conte in Thieves’ Highway.) Initially convinced that acting was for sissies, he found himself moved by the script— about a man unjustly accused of murder—and gave such an intense performance that he was invited to join the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York. There he soaked up culture, studying drama, music and dance, and married actress Ruth Strohm. He did well on Broad- E FALL 2010 Noir City Sentinel 33 way and in 1943 signed with 20th-Century Fox. In Hollywood he took up painting and hung out with other East Coast liberals like Gene Kelly and John Garfield, joining Bogart and Bacall on their famous trip to Washington to protest the HUAC hearings. Like other actors recruited to combat the wartime manpower shortage in the movies, he had a quick rise to prominence through the celluloid branch of the armed forces. Cast as the obligatory wisecracking ethnic city boy in A Walk in the Sun (1945), a pensive war movie about an infantry detachment in Italy that loses its commanding officers, Conte lifts the film with his élan, throwing off a dazzle like sunlight on a knife’s edge. When a buddy asks him what he’s going to do after the war, he replies without hesitation, “Join the mob.” It was a prescient response. Once ethnic city boys were no longer needed to diversify army units, Conte turned to crime, though for years he alternated sides of the law. He was a detective in The Spider (1945), a low-budget whodunit with a bit too much comic relief to classify as noir. In Somewhere in the Night (1946), a yarn about an amnesiac vet, he demonstrated his versatility: quick as a switchblade he could go from smooth-mannered nice guy to vicious killer. As a wrongly imprisoned man in the documentary-style Call Northside 777 (1948), he gives a performance of simple, almost painful intensity; when he’s strapped into a lie-detector you can feel his throbbing pulse, twitching muscles and strained breathing. Conte always seemed to be plugged into some private source of electricity, as though you could get a shock from touching him. He needs that feverish brilliance in Cry of the City (1948), since he spends most of the movie lying in bed or limping around, dragging a gunshot-riddled leg and crumpling with pain. He’s as dangerous as a wounded animal, lying low, striking unpredictably, but his most powerful weapon is not violence, it’s his ability to seduce people into helping him. Proud, remorseless, flippant, persuasive and sharp as a shiv, he easily seduces the audience, as well. The film dusts off that old chestnut about two boys from the same neighborhood who grow up on different sides of the law: Victor Mature’s Lieutenant Candella is a staunch, incorruptible police detective, while Conte’s Martin Rome is a hoodlum who has shot a cop during a robbery. But the plot merely forms a scaffold for scenes in which Rome and Candella The wrongly accused Conte relies on crusading reporter Jimmy Stewart to free him from prison in Call Northside 777 Conte is charismatic villain Martin Rome opposite Victor Mature's stolid lawman in Cry of the City alternately vie for leverage and influence over an quickness, and Candella comes across as a monomaeclectic parade of supporting characters, all driven by niacal Javert whose hatred is aroused as much by his fear, greed or some combination of the two. enemy’s charisma as by his crimes. The scenes in When we first see Marty he’s near death, with a which the policeman visits the Rome family seem priest muttering over him and hushed family mem- intended to soften his character, but his success in bers gathered around in a hospital that looks like a turning everyone against Marty—even his hero-worchurch. Though badly wounded in the shoot-out, he shipping kid brother and the innocent, angelic girlpulls through and is soon holding court while chained friend he worked so hard to protect—only builds to a hospital bed. He cavalierly dismisses the cops sympathy for the endangered outcast. when they come to question him about a jewel theft, Crime and the law both use and hurt people: in lunges to strangle the lawyer Niles (Barry Kroeger) a sad little scene, Marty’s father (Tito Vuolo) has to when he threatens Marty’s girlfriend Teena, and uses resign from the Knights of Columbus because of the his wiles on the dumpy, middle-aged nurse, Miss black mark against his family. The film is full of these Pruett (Betty Garde), to talk her into hiding Teena. moments—like the revelation that Miss Pruett lives Transferred to a prison cell, he’s befriended by a with her selfish, cranky, overbearing old mother— dimwitted trusty who helps him to escape. that broaden and deepen its portrait of the city. As in Outside, he first pays a visit to Niles, the smirk- Odd Man Out, the wounded man’s journey illumiing, plump-as-a-slug lawyer who has the stolen nates the people who help or betray him. But where jewels; after forcing him to open the safe, Marty stabs Mason is passive and helpless, Martin Rome never him through his desk chair. Denied refuge by his par- stops fighting. ents, he turns to an old girlfriend (Shelley Winters in a leopard print coat) who whines about the risk, but finds an unlicensed foreign doctor to patch him up in the back of the car while she drives around the damp city Fred Clark and Victor Mature surround the seductive Conte in Cry of the City streets, using neon signs for light. In the film’s best scene, Marty almost meets his match in the massive form of the masseuse Rose Given (Hope Emerson again), who looms over him while he works his bright-eyed, caressing charm, offering to sell her the jewels in exchange for two tickets out of the country. “You’re a cute little man,” she coos, and starts to massage his shoulders, then gets her hands around his neck and squeezes. The scene is funny, creepy and perversely titillating all at once. How could Candella hope to compete? Mature’s heavy, stolid presence contrasts with Conte’s mercurial 34 Noir City Sentinel FALL 2010 Charles Bickford, Conte, and Gene Tierney in Whirlpool T he opening shot of Thieves’ Highway (1949) takes us far from the dark city: a hay cart trundles through a field above sunny Fresno, California. In his last American film before leaving the country to escape the blacklist, Jules Dassin slices the produce business open to reveal capitalism’s rotten core. Even something as nourishing and wholesome as an apple becomes a poisoned agent of strife when it’s equated with money. A Polish farmer, enraged at being paid less than he was promised for his apples, flings boxes of them off a truck, screaming, “Seventy-five cents! Seventy-five cents!” The apples roll wastefully across the ground, an image foreshadowing the film’s most famous shot, when after the same truck has careened off the road and exploded, apples roll silently down the hillside toward the flaming wreck. When the dead trucker’s partner finds out that money-grubbers have gone out to collect the scattered load to sell, he kicks over crates of apples, fuming, “Four bits a box! Four bits a box!” Nick Garcos (Conte) returns home after a long stint as a navy mechanic; his ebullient reunion with his parents is shattered when he learns that his father has lost his legs in a trucking accident caused by a crooked produce dealer named Mike Figlia. Nick sees his immigrant father as a “pushover” and sets out for revenge, teaming up with an experienced trucker to haul the season’s first Golden Delicious apples to San Francisco so he can find Figlia. Despite his tough talk and fondness for threats like, “Gyp me and I’ll cut your heart out,” Nick is naïve compared with the sharpies and hustlers he encounters, including his hardbitten partner. Ed (Millard Mitchell) exemplifies the working man as tough guy, willing to cheat and chisel, ready to drive thirty-six hours in a truck held together with “spit”––anything to make a living. After the grueling drive, Nick arrives alone in Frisco’s produce market. Even at night it’s bustling with trucks and pushcarts and shouting men; dripping produce, ashcan fires; crowded diners, haggling buyers. The film’s gritty, vibrant settings are matched by visceral performances, at once naturalistic and flamboyant. Conte brings a vivid sensuality to his role. The graceful way he moves through the market, leaping over boxes and bending to splash water on his face, conveys a freedom and pleasure in physicality that’s missing from most noir tough guys, who wear their boxy grey suits like armor. Collapsing with exhaustion, Nick accepts a prostitute’s invitation to come up to her room; she’s been paid to pick him up by Figlia, who has already spotted Nick and wants to steal his load. But Rica (Valentina Cortese) falls for her sexy mark and warns him. He confronts the crass, shameless Figlia (Lee J. Cobb, having a ball) and squeezes fair payment out of him, only to be mugged later on by goons hired to get the money back. Everyone in the movie is “just trying to make a buck,” and cash haunts the film, from the opening scene in which Nick gleefully shakes out his wallet, through the “dirty money” that almost destroys the friendship of trucker buddies Pete and Slob, to the climax when Figlia scatters crumpled bills along a bar, trying to bribe the vengeful Nick to spare him. Conte is genuinely scary in this last scene: his eyes glitter as he fondles an axe-handle and whispers to Cobb, “Put your hand on the table.” Rica says that all she wants is “lots and lots of money,” but she turns out to be far less mercenary than Nick’s blonde fiancée (Barbara Lawrence). We know she’s no good from the start, by her ungracious reaction to the Japanese doll Nick gives her—until she notices the ring on its hand. When she hears he’s made a killing she rushes up to marry him, and leaves in a huff when she learns he’s lost the money, inspiring Rica to remark tauntingly, “Aren’t women wonderful?” Cortese is a quicksilver blend of playfulness, hurt and defiance. She displays open lust for Conte—rubbing her dark curls against his face and playing tic-tac-toe on his bare chest with her fingernails—and also a melancholy lyricism, as when she says the seagulls that fly outside her room make her dream of drowning. Confined within her cramped apartment, Nick and Rica circle each other warily, flirting and insulting each other, veering from barbed distrust to combustible passion. He presses her body against his, then tells her she looks “like chipped glass.” During their first kiss they seem to be seconds away from getting in deep trouble with the Hays Office. In film noir lust usually leads people astray, but here it leads Nick to his authentic self. As in A. I. Bezzerides’ source novel, Thieves’ Market, sensuality always marks the FALL 2010 Noir City Sentinel 35 humane, life-affirming elements in the movie, and the earthiness seems directly linked to ethnicity: Nick’s Greek father chopping vegetables and singing along with a phonograph, the Polish farmer’s children playing in the sun-dappled orchard, the way both Nick and Rica wallow in the pleasure of a hot shower. The late forties marked Conte’s brief peak; he would rarely get roles or films worthy of him again. He was miscast as a strangely obtuse psychoanalyst in Whirlpool (1949) who fails to notice his wife is cracking up. The Sleeping City (1950) is a bleak, needlesharp little movie about hospital corruption, but Conte’s role as an undercover detective is upstaged by the grim Bellevue locations and Richard Taber’s skuzzy turn as the rat-like Pop Ware. He’s a likable afterthought as a reporter in Fritz Lang’s lackluster Blue Gardenia (1953), and his best efforts can’t make much of flimsy pot-boilers like The Raging Tide (1951), about a slot-machine kingpin who discovers the simple pleasures of life as a fisherman, or Highway Dragnet (1954), a dirt-cheap car-chase flick with a slumming Joan Bennett. His broad shoulders carry the lackluster load in a pair of obscure 1955 crime dramas, The Curse of the Red Monkey and the interesting if inert Steve Fisher–penned The Big Tip-Off. Like other swarthy actors in Hollywood, Conte offered all-purpose foreignness, becoming an Arab bandit in Desert Legion (1953), a Mexican boxer in The Fighter (1952), and something biblical in Slaves of Babylon (1953). Ethnicity and crime were brands he could never wash off, though he always wore them with panache. In the sixties, Conte turned up in Ocean’s Eleven and Sinatra’s Tony Rome movies, light-hearted anti-noir crime movies set in Las Vegas and Miami. He acted on television and spent his last five years in bloody Italian mafia thrillers (“spaghetti noir”?) before dying of a heart attack in 1975. I n the waning years of noir, Conte starred in a trio of films exposing crime syndicates run along the lines of big business, part of the postKefauver fascination with the mafia. In The Big Combo (1955), old-school mobsters named Grazzi and Bettini have been replaced by the sinisterly anonymous Mr. Brown—no known first name. Since he’s played by Conte, one suspects that his name may once have been Brunelleschi, but his ethnicity is no longer important. “Brown’s not a man, he’s an organization,” someone says early in The Big Combo. But Brown is very much a man, and as with Martin Rome, his most potent weapon is not a gun. He overpowers an armed subordinate through sheer force of will, lectures a hapless boxer that the secret of power is hate, and boasts of his power over women, since “they can tell the difference. They’ve got instinct.” The spell Brown casts over women isn’t as solid as he thinks it is, and he’s brought down by his shame-stricken mistress and horrified wife. Again like Cry of the City, the film pits Conte against a cop fanatically determined to bring him down; here it’s Lieutenant Leonard Diamond (Cornel Wilde), a man in the grip of a monomania. Diamond has a yen for Brown’s mistress, Susan (Jean Wallace), a once-classy debutante who has become a dazed, self-loathing prisoner; Brown uses his two not-socloseted gay torpedoes, Fante and Mingo, like harem eunuchs to guard her whenever she goes out. But even this jealousy doesn’t seem enough to account for Diamond’s dogged, obsessive hatred of Brown. The selfsatisfied gangster his own theory: “The only trouble with you is you’d like to be me,” he tells the cop, whom he taunts with his low salary. “You think it’s money, it’s not: it’s personality. You haven’t got it.” Style easily dominates substance in The Big Combo. There’s no excuse to root for Mr. Brown, who calmly murders even his loyal employees, enjoying lobster while they expire in agony, and who orders his mistress to change into something white because “a woman dresses for a man.” But Conte, who softens his voice to a purr and glows with a sinister smile, gets all the best lines, including his repeated motto, “First is first and second is nobody.” The film revels in his eerie omnipotence and his blend of sadism and sensuality, as it revels in brassy burlesque jazz, greasy alleys and the extreme chiaroscuro stylization of John Alton. Diamond, by contrast, is withered, joyless: he goes through the movie hectoring, browbeating and self-righteously lecturing everyone in sight about the evil of Mr. Brown, even grimly harassing Susan in the hospital after she has attempted suicide. He shatters the peace of the spaghetti-loving Bettini, who has successfully adopted a new identity, and threatens the stability of Brown’s fragile wife Alicia, sequestered in an asylum where she tends flowers. He causes the death of the ship’s captain who knows Brown’s secret, and of the kind-hearted stripper whom he uses as an occasional salve for loneliness. Yet the film gives its official stamp of approval to Diamond, who sneers, “Let’s go, hoodlum,” as he triumphantly arrests his nemesis. The same year, Conte starred in New York Confidential, which lacks the visual flair and perverse flavor of The Big Combo, but is the purest evocation of blandly corporate corruption pervading the country. It suffers from heavy-handed narration, schmaltzy music and a predictably schematic, clichéridden script, yet remains both entertaining and potent. The Syndicate, in this portrayal, is a new form of society as radical as communism: its central rule is that the organization is always more important than the individual. It thus becomes a monstrous machine that devours its own members in an endless cycle of self-destruction. The film draws us in with detailed, warmly human portraits of likable mobsters who speak in colorful gangland patter. Charlie Lupo (Broderick Crawford) is a blustery but anxious Mr. Big who lives in an art-stuffed mansion with his mournfully loyal mother and his daughter Kathy (Anne Bancroft), a debutante poisoned by shame and disgust at having a “hood- 36 Noir City Sentinel FALL 2010 Conte smacks costar Audrey Totter in Under the Gun. Maybe he preferred her as a blonde? lum” father. Lupo agrees to force his best friend, Ben Dagajanian (J. Carroll Naish), to leave the country rather than risk a deportation case that would draw attention to the Syndicate. He praises loyalty (“Most of the pigs that work for us can’t even spell it”), yet tows the party line that the organization comes first, ensuring his own eventual destruction. Nick Magellan (Conte) is dispatched from Chicago to kill a gangster who broke the rules, making an “unauthorized hit” for personal vengeance. Quiet, polite and ruthless, wielding a gun with a silencer, Nick wins Lupo’s approval with his “clean” technique, loyalty and “class.” Eventually he becomes Lupo’s second-in-command and surrogate son. He’s drawn to the troubled Kathy, who compares him to “a cobra, always relaxed, yet always ready to strike.” He tries to crush her dreams of respectability and decency, telling her that everyone steals, the world is merciless, and money is all that matters. The biggest crooks of all are politicians and Washington lobbyists; everything begins to go awry after the Syndicate is double-crossed by one of these “country club hypocrites.” Finally, after Kathy has committed suicide, Lupo decides to turn states’ evidence, and Magellan is sent to kill him. He obeys reluctantly—he’s the only one for the job, precisely because Lupo trusts him— and afterward surveys the corpse of his mentor with frozen bitterness, a sense of waste and desolation so total that when he himself is gunned down minutes later (an “insurance policy”), it’s almost a relief. The Brothers Rico (1957) brings together the dissection of corporate-style crime with the portrait of an Italian family torn apart by the strains of the modern world. It’s a small, lowkey movie, but it has a chilling heart. Conte plays a man who undergoes a tragic disillusionment as he’s duped into betraying his own brother. He learns the hard way to accept his Mama’s advice: “Don’t trust nobody.” Eddie Rico (Conte) is a former mob accountant who has left the organization and literally laundered his criminal past, becoming the successful owner of a commercial laundry in Bayshore, Florida. The long, low, white building that houses his business is symptomatic of the film’s look: flat, bright, horizontal. While the bland, TV style may put off some noir fans, it suits the film’s depiction of a brave new world that is cold, prosperous, and amnesiac. The opening scenes establish Eddie’s sexy, idyllic relationship with his wife Alice (teasing the Production Code, their twin beds are pushed close enough together for him to sleep with his hand on her chest), who has been unable to bear a child. The couple is on the point of adopting a baby, but a phone call in the middle of the night proves Eddie is still the property of the Organization. He’s summoned by the big boss, Sid Kubik, who urges him to find his youngest brother, Johnny (James Darren), who has gone missing after participating in a mob hit; his “friends” fear that his new wife may persuade him to go to the D.A. Eddie blindly trusts “Uncle Sid,” who owes his life to Mama Rico (she took a bullet meant for him), and who claims that in his heart, he’s a member of the family, which will always come first. Larry Gates, who plays Kubik, is a bleached, android-like actor; he sports a white polo shirt and yachting cap and luxuriates in a sleek Miami apartment full of oriental art, an incongruous setting for his unctuous claim that “families should stick together.” Eddie loyally goes in search of Johnny, upset by the mere suggestion that Uncle Sid could betray him. After all, Eddie keeps insisting, “He’s not an animal.” When he reaches El Camino, California, where Johnny and his pregnant wife are hiding out on a farm, Eddie is confronted by the truth: he has been used to track down his brother, who is marked for death. In the film’s most wrenching scene, Eddie is held in his hotel room by two casually heartless, amiably amoral mob soldiers as Johnny is forced to walk out to his executioners, going quietly to spare his wife and child. When the anguished Eddie pleads for his kid brother, the impassive local boss muses, “We’re all brothers, aren’t we? Did that ever stop anything?” Everyone, even Alice, tells Eddie he can’t fight, he can’t buck the system: his only hope is to run away. Of course he doesn’t, and in the film’s rushed denouement he guns down Kubik and exposes the syndicate to the D.A. But the happy-ever-after epilogue, back in sunny, palm-lined Florida as Eddie and his wife head to the orphanage to pick up their baby, can’t erase the icy bleakness of the middle section, which depicts a world scrubbed of all human empathy. No murders or beatings are shown; no emotions are allowed. Back on Mulberry Street—always seen at night, with fire-escape shadows slanting over bricks—Mama Rico lives above her candy store, with her own mother who happily giggles over the TV Eddie bought for them, even though she doesn’t speak a word of English. Eddie is embarrassed that his mother keeps calling her new refrigerator an “ice box,” and he tells his wife, when she worries, “You sound like a superstitious peasant from the old country.” But it’s really Eddie who is stuck in the past: he believes in loyalty and has faith in the reasonableness of the organization; he’s been away from it too long to know how it’s changed. In noir, people usually struggle against the unyielding grip of the past; but here, for a change, the tragedy is that the bonds of memory have no power over the present, a world as inhuman as the UFO movies Grandma Rico watches on TV. When Eddie offers to send her to a rest home in the country, his mother refuses: “If she go away from Mulberry Street, she die.” It’s odd for a film to celebrate the comfort of its shadows, but in a sterile world of shiny jets, glassy airports, and men who are serenely untroubled by killing, noir itself walks out to meet its executioners. n L