This blog is reposted from another movie site where I published it today.
1941 is the year that is widely assumed to be the year that the Film Noir
genre started. It is thought as such because of the releases of The Maltese
Falcon and High Sierra, both from Warner Bros. but there was another film that
year that could qualify as a noir, and that is A Woman's Face, an MGM production
starring Joan Crawford and directed by George Cukor. Despite the semi-happy
ending, and two or three lighter scenes in the second half of the film, there is
no denying that this is a noir. At times the noir feeling is so intese that one
might forget that MGM did the fim. At the time of the film's release, it was
Joan Crawford's most sinister role. She plays Anna Holm, a hardhearted
blackmailer with severe scarring on her face that is later removed through
plastic surgery. In one early scene, when a female blackmaling victim laughs at
her mockingly, Crawford's character repeatedly slaps her over the face and rips
the pearls from the woman's neck. Many of the images in the film are filled with
shadows and darkness, furthering the conclusion that this film is an origin of
noir. If Crawford's character is ruthless, then Conrad Veigt's character,
Torsten Barring, is downright demonic. He recruits Crawford to help him in his
evil scheme to kill a young boy who stands in his way of a massve inheritence.
His behavior in one scene where he says that the devil is his god is
particularally evident of his depravity. Even the supporting players are given
darker roles; Marjorie Main turns in a startalingly sinister performance as a
suspicious housekeeper. There are two major susence setpieces both involving the
yong boy. In the first, the boy and Crawford are in a ski lift going over
trecherous waterfalls. Crawford fiddles with the lock that would send the boy to
his death but finds she cannot do it. It is a sequence worthy of a Hitchcock
film. The other sequence is a sleigh ride gone awry near the end of the film, as
Veight is heading toward the falls plotting to throw the boy overboard, with
Crawford (now Veight's enemy and wielding a pistol hping to kill him) and Melvyn
Douglas in another sleigh trying to rescue the child. It keeps a viewer at the
edge of the seat. So, all this being said, it is hard to say why this film is
always overlooked when the origins of noir are talked about, for it truly is a
trailblazer in the field of film noir.