MOONTIDE (2oth Century-Fox 1942) Fox Home Video
Archie Mayo’s Moontide (1942) is a curious
hybrid. It was supposed to make an American star out of French actor, Jean
Gabin based on his already megawatt personality in French cinema, though a
relative unknown elsewhere. On the one hand, it professes to be a noir thriller,
but then veers into a sort of Euro-art house offshoot, more familiar territory
for Gabin. Not so much, for costar, Ida Lupino who should have done more with
this. The difficulty here is not so much that Gabin’s performance in Moontide
is bad. On the contrary, he acquits himself of the role of Bobo (originally
called Frenchy), a disreputable lady’s man/sailor who walks – or rather,
saunters - through life without a care in the world. No, the biggest hurdle is Moontide’s
generally awful screenplay from Nunnally Johnson and John O’Hara. Based on
Willard Robinson’s sordid novel, this property was condemned outright by
Hollywood’s self-governing board of censorship for its overt references to cannibalism,
rape and prostitution. So, to discover these aspects of the story virtually
expunged is no great surprise, although, it does leave Moontide utterly
emasculated of its’ most potent and juicy content.
In hindsight, it’s fairly easy to see why Moontide
did nothing to establish Gabin as Hollywood’s latest Euro-import, the actor’s
continental charismatic never entirely translating into box office pay dirt on
this side of the Atlantic. Gabin’s shortcomings, as far as American audiences
were considered, were formidable; a face like a pug, and a wild shock of blonde
curly hair, impossible for Central Casting to tame, wed to a stocky build –
hardly, the matinee idol type. Also, his accent, to sincerely limit the kinds
of role he could viably sell. Interesting, Zanuck should not have been unnerved
by any of this; also, the novel’s salacious material. But Moontide makes
an even more formidable casting error by hiring the irrepressible Thomas
Mitchell for the role of Tiny, evil incarnate and working against type. Initially
conceived with Fritz Lang in mind to direct, Lang is rumored to have walked off
the set, due to lingering ‘issues’ regarding Marlene Dietrich – who, at varying
intervals, had been the lover of each man. Worse, plans to shoot on location in
San Pedro Bay had to be scrapped after the bombing of Pearl Harbor officially
declared the West Coast a security zone. Attempting to refashion a fog-laden
bay on the Fox backlot, the sets were instead confined to a sound stage with James
Basevi and Richard Day’s art direction, complimented by Charles Clarke (an
uncredited Lucien Ballard’s) moodily lit noir cinematography, lent a synthetic
and distant air of mystery. Indeed, these spectacular production values – augmented
by convincing fog and wave machines, to alternately create a grimy and menacing,
or, scintillating and starry-eyed backdrop – earned Clarke an Oscar-nomination.
Given all the effort that went to will an art
house-styled masterpiece from this otherwise turgid little melodrama, it
remains a distinct pity Moontide did not have anything better to say.
Indeed, Gabin was deeply unhappy working as a mere cog in Fox’s vast assembly line.
The heavy-handed direction by Mayo, with its even more weighty focus on Gabin,
resulted in a nebulous and vacillating story, further stifled by the manufactured
décor. Artifice is one thing. But Moontide’s scenes play more like a
series of incoherent tableau with narrowly more animation or propensity for
storytelling than a display at Madame Tussaud’s wax museum. The picture never
draws from life, only Gabin’s emoting and disregard of it. The doomed affair du
Coeur lacks finesse, and the chemistry between Gabin and Lupino is wholly absent.
One suspects, Mayo and Gabin are aiming high, but nevertheless straining for an
elegiac pragmatism, Gabin’s disenfranchised, and frequently inebriated sailor,
Bobo unable to remain tethered to that provisional home life while operating his
bait n’ tackle with Anna (Ida Lupino), a ragamuffin, temporarily derailed in
her attempted suicide. The narrative becomes mired in the perpetual opacity of
its constricting and death-obsessed realism, by the end, almost to become a perversion
of it. Fate arrives a la Tiny, the crude blackmailer, offset by the benign and queerly
incorporeal logician of life, Nutsy (Claude Rains). But again, it’s the O’Hara/Johnson
screenplay, front-loaded with twisted derailments and a love scenario
chronically to run afoul of these waterfront malefactors, that continues to
deprive the movie of its otherwise profoundly witnessed and distinctive stolen
moments.
The story opens with Bobo arriving at The Red Dot, a
seedy waterside nightclub where he tries to make the acquaintance of a
‘working’ girl whose boyfriend of the evening thinks otherwise. Bobo’s best
friend is Tiny; a clingy, somewhat effete sadist who derives rather bizarre
pleasure from snapping his wet towel against Nutsy’s naked buttocks. For some
reason, Bobo never quite makes the connection Tiny is hot for him. Instead,
Bobo meets Anna, a careworn prostitute who attempts to drown herself after she
has been brutally gang raped. Bobo’s kindness resurrects Anna’s hopes for
genuine happiness. Indeed, Bobo – who never considered women as anything but
playthings, experiences a conversion to romantic love. He marries Anna, sending
Tiny into a reckless desire to destroy them both by providing Bobo with a frame-up
for a murder he has committed. After endeavoring to brutalize Anna, and,
succeeding in crippling her, Tiny is hunted down by Bobo and forced onto a
jetty in the fog where the surf consumes him.
In the original novel, Anna is raped and killed
by Tiny, leaving Bobo to avenge his wife by murdering Tiny. Hollywood’s censorship
prevented any of these plot points from reaching the screen, thereby blunting
the impact of the story. Unfortunately for all concerned, Moontide did
not do well at the box office. It also did not make Jean Gabin a star in
America. In retrospect, it’s perhaps easy to see why. Gabin’s soothingly French
charisma is vocally expressed, but emotionally suppressed by the awkward
dialogue he is given - his deportment making for a really odd cross between
Paul Henreid and Humphrey Bogart. Ida Lupino, who had departed Warner Brothers
to freelance, was corralled into the Fox stable temporarily by Darryl F. Zanuck
(her biggest fan on the lot). Still, and despite Zanuck’s great admiration for
her, Lupino’s career at Fox was destined to hardly dazzle. Lupino was a good
drinking buddy – that’s all. In Moontide, she turns in a rather
sympathetic performance as damaged goods given a new lease on life, though her face
– as yet to reveal the ravages of her hedonistic lifestyle – is still more kittenish
than careworn. Thomas Mitchell’s closeted homosexual is not the actor’s finest
hour. Neither is Claude Rains’ village idiot. Despite both men being
exceptionally fine craftsmen and veritable cinema chameleons, Moontide unequivocally
proved even Mitchell and Rains had their limitations.
Fox Home Video’s DVD is beautifully rendered. The
image throughout is crisp, though never harsh. Presumably, Moontide did
not get a lot of play time over the years, and thus, its elements survived the
ravages of time. The gray scale exhibits exceptional tonality throughout with
fine details evident even during night scenes. Age-related artifacts are present,
but tempered, and film grain looks indigenous to its source. The audio is Dolby
Digital 1.0 mono as originally sounds adequate. An audio commentary from Foster
Hirsch is exceptionally thorough, while the featurette ‘Turning the Tide’
is a fairly accurate account of the film’s ill-fated production.
FILM RATING (out of 5 - 5 being the best)
2.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5
EXTRAS
2
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