KEY LARGO: Blu-ray (Warner Bros. 1948) Warner Archive Collection
“At the southernmost point of the United States are
the Florida Keys; a string of small islands held together by a concrete
causeway…largest of these coral islands is Key
Largo.” So begins the tropically-themed crime odyssey that is John Huston’s
formidable and final teaming of Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall from 1948.
Only a year earlier the one-time lovers, now marrieds had misfired with Dark Passage – a movie that, for all
intent and purposes, kept the couple separated, avoiding all but a handful of
glimpses of Bogart’s iconic visage; idiotically concealed via the gimmick of a
‘first person’ POV. Nothing so daring
on this outing, an uncharacteristic oddity for the pair who had sent cash
registers peeling madly around the world; first, in To Have and To Have Not (1944), then, again, in The Big Sleep (1946). Key Largo is a fine film – even an
exemplary one, but for atypical reasons; void of the acidic repartee between
Bogie and Bacall (her insolence pitted against his playful cynicism). This had made
their aforementioned earlier films so memorable. Not much in the way of the ole
Bogie/Bacall chemistry herein. He plays noble. She does virtuous. At its crux, Key Largo is a minor resurrection of
the iconic Warner crime thriller popularized in a spate of pre-code
gangster-land flicks made throughout the early to mid-1930s. Indeed, Key Largo marks the first time in as
many years Edward G. Robinson donned the persona of an oily and diminutive
mafia thug; a stereotype he practically single-handedly invented and
trademarked in 1931’s Little Caesar;
now, even more ominous and threatening herein as killer on the lam, Johnny
Rocco.
Key Largo is a superb melodrama set during a hellish hurricane;
the maelstrom outside, nothing compared to the hysterics about to be unleashed
within four rooms of the Largo Hotel, managed by wheelchair-bound, James Temple
(Lionel Barrymore) and his contrite daughter-in-law, Nora (Lauren Bacall). The
pair are united in their grief over the loss of Temple’s son/Nora’s husband, George;
a casualty of the war, and, desperately looking forward to an impromptu visit
by his superior officer, Major Frank McCloud (Humphrey Bogart). Set in the
off-season summer months, the hotel is empty, save a mysterious and reclusive
guest occupying several upstairs suites; his entourage of even more spurious
friends lurking about downstairs; Edward ‘Toots’ Bass (Harry Lewis), Richard
‘Curly’ Goff (Tomas Gomez), and, stoic Ralph (William Haade). Arriving
unannounced via bus, after learning of a daring prison break by John (Rod
Redwing) and Tom Osceola (Jay Silverheels), a pair of indigenous young bucks in
fancy shirts, pursued by the local law enforcement, Sheriff Ben Wade (Monte
Blue) and his second in command, Deputy Clyde Sawyer (John Rodney), Frank is
introduced to these ‘friends’ of Johnny Rocco in the hotel bar; about as
inhospitable as one might expect.
Frank also
meets one-time sultry chanteuse cum sad-eyed lush, Gaye Dawn (Claire Trevor, in
an utterly heartrending/Oscar-winning role as Rocco’s emotionally distraught
gun moll). Gaye can pick a winner on the track with only her women’s intuition
and a betting sheet, but she has deplorable radar for attracting the wrong kind
of man. Trevor reportedly kept after Huston about the scene where she was
required to warble a decidedly offbeat rendition of the song, ‘Moanin’ Low’ while presumably suffering
from withdrawal and the shakes for another drink; her requests for rehearsal
repeatedly fluffed off by Huston, who would only say there was ‘plenty of time’. As Trevor later
recalled, after lunch one day she was promptly informed by Huston they would be
shooting this scene next without any rehearsal. Although furious, Trevor girded
her temper and performed the song with a pathetic defenselessness and psychological
insecurity. Prophetically, costar Harry Lewis predicted Trevor would likely win
the Oscar for this moment alone; perhaps, an apocryphal story.
Adapted by
Richard Brooks and John Huston from Maxwell Anderson's overwrought 1939 play,
which played a solid 105 performances on Broadway, Key Largo is very much an ensemble piece dedicated to the
time-honored precepts and virtues of the ‘ole
dark house’ suspense drama. Thematically, Brooks and Huston made
considerable revisions to the play, contemporizing the baddies – from Mexican
banditos to gangland thugs for the movie. Anderson had written the dialogue in
free verse – a sort of Shakespearean preamble not unlike the highly stylized
ruminations of Damon Runyon. By contrast, the characters in Huston and Brooks’
revision speak in a simple argumentative lingo, more a holdover from the
studio’s gangster flicks than anything else, but with a touch of burnt-out
class. Lost in translation is Anderson’s fatalistic verve, also, the verbal
diarrhea of moralistic hypothesizing, consolidated in a few scenes and elevated
by Huston’s superior handling of both the situations and the vernacular,
pitting two titans of the screen (Bogart and Robinson) – the former, a
hard-bitten ex-idealist, the other an old-time mafia hood, ruled by cruelty and
brute arrogance.
Brooks and
Huston also heavily rewrote Bogart’s character, an ignoble deserter from the
Spanish Civil War in the play who gets his comeuppance in the end, reworked for
the film to fit the conventions of Bogart’s then leading man status; the
undisputed hero of this piece and tough with or without a gun; defeating the
bad guys and returning to the Temples a better man. Key Largo is immeasurably blessed to have John Huston at the helm;
arguably, a man’s man who understood this sort of material far better than any
of his contemporaries. And in Bogart, Huston has the epitome of the solitary
loner on the cusp of a reprieve. There is a redemptive quality to Bogart’s
performance, partly apologetic for not being the war hero everyone expects, and
thoroughly tantalizing as he matures into the guy an idealistic young girl like
Nora could admire; a real romantic elixir for the widow Temple.
Before long we
are treated to a tour de force performance by Edward G. Robinson as maniacal
mob boss, Johnny Rocco, so visually described by Huston, reclining in a ball
and claw bathtub, submerged from the gut down, with a portable fan blowing cool
air to sooth his brow, cigar firmly chomped between his thick lips, as a ‘crustacean with its shell off’ and
something of a refined cliché of the Mafioso persona Robinson had cultivated
for Little Caesar; perpetually
grimaced and periodically threatening to put the lights out for anyone who
double-crosses him. Rocco proves his mettle with cold steel, threatening to
murder Frank and cold-bloodedly assassinating Deputy Sawyer after he dares to
escape; the body weighted down and dumped by Ralph and Curly into the turbulent
sea. Huston derives a lot of his high-stakes drama from Robinson’s ability to
play Rocco with terrifying uncertainty; veering from heartless and prophesizing
kingpin living in exile to imploding rat on the verge of a psychotic breakdown;
God’s natural wrath ratcheted up with Biblical ramifications, the storm
possibly set to destroy all who dwell inside the Largo Hotel, and thus deprive
the world of a Johnny Rocco, a dramatic highpoint that Huston unabashedly plays
with limited wind and rain effects; the terror written across Robinson’s
beady-eyed and jowly visage.
At the time of
Key Largo’s shoot, made in a
staggeringly brief 72 days, there was some consternation arising from Bogart’s
previous movies being embraced by The Daily Worker – a blatantly communist
publication. Bogart could not have cared less how or who was reviewing his
work, but Bacall remained marginally concerned the sting of such devotion from
the left would cling to his reputation, enough to open and FBI file on the man
himself. As for Bogart, he was more involved and pleased with the recent
critical reviews he was getting for his other collaborative effort with Huston,
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
(1948); a picture Jack Warner had initially not wanted to make. Key Largo is decidedly a pared down affair
for Huston and Bogart; shot entirely on soundstages, the establishing shots of
the hurricane excised from another picture entirely, the Ronald Reagan
programmer, Night unto Night
(withheld from general release until late 1949). Warner publicity played up the
fact that by the time Key Largo went
before the cameras the billing status between Bogart and Robinson had reversed
with Bogart now the bigger box office draw; the question of ‘billing’ hinting
at a competitive antagonism brewing between these two. It was rumored Robinson
took minor umbrage to second billing; recollections in his autobiography
differing and more conciliatory. “Why not
second billing? At fifty-three, I was lucky to get any billing at all!”
Key Largo’s middle act is a superb clash of wills between
Bogart’s defeatist and Robinson’s boorish gangland goon begun when Rocco tosses
Frank a presumably loaded revolver, encouraging him to take his best shot. It
ends in Rocco’s favor – at least, for the time being – Frank, casting the
pistol aside and wisely reasoning, “One
Rocco more or less isn’t worth dying for.” Nora is openly ashamed. Indeed,
it goes against the grain of virtually every character Bogart had played until
then, the scene capped off by James Temple’s pitiful struggle to climb out of
his wheelchair and assault the gloating kingpin himself with his fists.
Stricken with debilitating arthritis at the height of his career, Lionel
Barrymore’s latter film roles are a fascinating reflection of the actor’s life
imitated in his art. Temple is a caustic man, knocked down a peg or two by the
loss of his son; also, brought to heel by ailing health, and yet, equally as
unafraid to face down the likes of Johnny Rocco who might just as easily pump a
bullet into his belly regardless of his infirmity.
As the storm
outside intensifies, so does the drama unfolding inside the Largo Hotel.
Sheriff Wade returns to make his inquiries as to what has become of his second
in command. Earlier, Deputy Sawyer informed him of a hunch the Osceola brothers
might return to Mr. Temple, whom the indigenous native peoples hold in very
high regard. Alas, Rocco has refused to allow the Indians refuge inside the
hotel. Terrified, they have been left to huddle together on the veranda, pelted
by the wind and the rain. Told by Curly Sawyer never returned to the hotel,
Wade suspects something is afoot – his suspicions confirmed when, in attempting
to return to his automobile, the headlamps cast a dim pall across a body lying
face down in the surf. Of course, it is Sawyer; dredged up from the bottom of
the sea. Rocco suggests the Osceola brothers are responsible for Sawyer’s
death, directing Wade to the boathouse near the docks where John and Tom, along
with the rest of the tribe, have taken refuge. Without delay, Wade confronts
the men. In their haste, they flee and are shot dead by Wade.
Meanwhile, the
skipper (Alberto Morin) of Rocco’s getaway boat to Cuba, for fear of being
dashed to pieces, has disobeyed his direct orders to remain dangerously close
to the shore. With no other means of escape, Rocco orders Frank to navigate the
Santana, the only other watercraft moored nearby, before Wade can return to
investigate the scene of the crime. In
the meantime, Rocco’s contact, Ziggy (Marc Lawrence) arrives with a trio of
‘investors’ eager to buy up Rocco’s counterfeit money. The deal done; Rocco and
his motley crew board the Santana, Frank disregarding Gaye and Nora’s advice to
make a break for it and instead putting out to sea at once. In the middle of
the ocean, Frank systematically takes out Rocco’s boys; wounded in the exchange
of gunfire, but otherwise alive and able to steer the Santana back into port.
Rocco barters with Frank to charter him to Cuba. But Frank bides his time,
observing from the roof as Rocco emerges from below deck with yet another
pistol drawn to finish the job. Instead, Frank dispatches with Rocco in short
order, using his radio to contact the harbor patrol and alert them to his
whereabouts. Back at the hotel Nora learns the news, throwing open the shutters
to reveal sunlight already begun to filter through the clouds. Their odyssey is
at an end. Frank is coming back to them, and likely to remain a fixture in
their lives for a very long time.
The ending to Key Largo is a tad perfunctory and more
than mildly anticipated. This is, after all - and apart from its’ many other
attributes - a Bogart picture, made under the auspices of a studio-system with
all pistons firing, if generally determined to see the star come out alright.
On this score, Key Largo does not
disappoint. However, after all the escalation of tension Huston has carefully
crafted throughout, the hasty dispensing of Rocco and his cohorts feels ever so
slightly rehearsed to ensure the inevitable. Worse, the finale leaves one of
the principles – Gaye – dangling in uncertainty. This one-time wild child
sexpot, long after her looks and talent have faded, has since found the virtue
in virtue itself, and been instrumental in seeing Frank through several of his
more volatile clashes with her ex-paramour. She is, in fact, much more the gal
any man might hope to have as his champion, perhaps even more so than the nobly
sweet and innocent, Nora. Indeed, Bogart’s careworn ex-military seems a better
fit for Gaye Dawn than the Sweet Polly Purebred of these sundrenched pampas and
palms. One intriguingly ponders what
Bacall might have made of the role of Gaye Dawn given the opportunity and half
the chance. Certainly, her debut opposite Bogart in To Have and Have Not did more than suggest she could play déclassé
dames with more guts than heart; the scales only moderately tipped in Bacall’s
favor before the final fade out in both that movie and The Big Sleep. But then, we would have been deprived of Claire
Trevor’s magnificent turn as this browbeaten casualty, stripped pathetically
raw and bare after slumming it with the wrong guy; so abused and demoralized
she can no longer find comfort in anything except a good bottle of scotch.
Stylishly
photographed in B&W by Karl Freund, and given a superb underscore by Max
Steiner, Key Largo looks every bit
the A-list feature without actually sporting one of the studio’s A-list
budgets. At the outset Jack Warner told producer, Jerry Wald he was slashing Key Largo’s budget to just a little
over half the initially promised outlay to ensure the studio did not have
another costly fiasco like Dark Passage.
Undaunted, Huston worked his miracles without Warner’s benefit of confidence;
rewarded when Key Largo returned a
sizable gross of $8,125,000 domestically – making it an even more commercially
successful picture than the more highly acclaimed, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Leo K. Kuter’s art direction is
partly responsible for the picture’s success; constructing a convincing façade,
docks, ocean view vista and hotel interiors entirely inside several cavernous
soundstages on the studio backlot. The artifice works to this day; the sins of
make-believe expertly camouflaged in magnificent monochromatic textures of
shadow and light. Huston’s staging of the hurricane with little more than
howling wind and thunder effects, a few pulsating lights to suggest bolts of
lightning, and well-placed showerheads to rain down buckets of water from the
ceiling, creates a genuine and parallel unease to the spiral of suspense taking
place on the other side of these rain-soaked walls.
Viewed in its
proper context, it’s the performances that outshine the special effects;
Bogart, at the top of his game – and fame – and Bacall, emoting with
uncharacteristic incorruptibility that does not always suit her
characterization, though nevertheless manages to be genuine to the lady
herself. Edward G. Robinson is perfect casting par excellence: ditto for Lionel
Barrymore and Claire Trevor. In
hindsight, it remains a pity John Huston and Bogart had only two more
opportunities to work together after Key
Largo; neither with Bacall, although she did accompany her husband to
Africa during the shooting of The
African Queen (1951). No, Key Largo
marks the end of the line for this short-lived, if memorable, alliance between
Bogie and Bacall; their indelible impression left behind, particularly from
this movie, serving as the inspiration for Bertie Higgins’ like-minded pop tune
from 1982.
Key Largo on Blu-ray never attains the level of perfection of The Big Sleep. Part of the
issue may be related to surviving elements. The biggest disappointment herein is contrast. This 1080p transfer lacks the deep
level of saturation with velvety blacks. Instead, everything settles into a
mid-grade tonality, the grey scale pleasing in its own right, but generally lacking the
overall punchy quality one has come to expect from Warner Archive’s more
meticulous mastering efforts. How much of this is indigenous to the source?
Hmmm. Even the old DVD of Key Largo had
deeper black levels. Were they boosted? Hmmm, again. Apart from this, the new Blu-ray bests the old DVD in virtually
every way. A high bit rate ensures fine detail is stunningly realized and tonality, while seeming
slightly anemic, is not egregiously distracting, if distracting at all. Once
acclimatized to the overall flatness of the image, it is actually quite
possible to admire its attributes, while mildly setting aside its shortcomings.
The audio is mono as originally recorded
and sounds quite aggressive in spots; the thunder clasps during the hurricane
delivering some unexpected sonic resonance. Apart from a badly worn theatrical
trailer, Key Largo comes with no
extras. Bottom line: while not as outstanding in hi-def, the Warner Archive
release of Key Largo gives more than
an adequate representation. It tops the
DVD to be sure, and for most, that will surely be enough. Bottom line:
recommended.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
4
EXTRAS
0
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