COMPULSION: Blu-ray (2oth Century-Fox, 1959) Kino Lorber
com·pul·sion: noun
1. - the action or state of forcing or being forced to
do something; constraint.
2. - an irresistible urge to behave in a certain way,
especially against one's conscious wishes.
Richard
Fleischer’s Compulsion (1959)
deserves further consideration, though arguably, not much praise for honing,
though nevertheless, regurgitating the plot points already fine-tuned in
Patrick Hamilton’s 1929 play, Rope’s End,
foreshortened to Rope, for Alfred
Hitchcock’s 1948 movie adaptation, and later still, rehashed with more
absorbing clarity in Meyer Levin’s novelized account, published two years
before this movie. All of the aforementioned ‘fictionalized’ endeavors derive from one rather morbid
true-to-life tragedy: the heinous murder of fourteen year old, Robert Franks,
committed by two upper crust Chicagoan college students, Nathan Freudenthal
Leopold Jr. and Richard Albert Loeb, merely to prove a point; or rather –
disprove it: that, the perfect crime does
not exist. Murdering Franks merely because they could - for a thrill kill –
Leopold and Loeb would enter infamy as one of the most unrepentant and
remorseless pair, brainwashed by their smug superiority afforded them by a
philosophical book-learned arrogance and their parents’ affluence. And while the particulars of the crime are
nauseating, the killers systematically obscuring the license numbers on a rented
car, luring Franks inside, only to bludgeon him with a chisel, then gag and
hide the corpse beneath a blanket in the backseat, later to be deposited in a
culvert near a lake; the boy’s birth marks and genitals obscured with repeated
applications of acid; the plan then to mail the boy’s father, Jacob a ransom
note; deriving further pleasure from watching the police squirm while
repeatedly being misdirected in their investigation; the ‘perfect crime’ was to hit its first unanticipated snag when Franks’
lifeless remains were unearthed and identified before the ransom could be
delivered; Leopold’s distinct pair of eyeglasses recovered near the body and
traced right back to him. So much for ‘superior
intellect’ and ‘the perfect crime’.
Erroneously
believing Friedrich Nietzsche’s theory of the superman could absolve them of responsibility
for their actions, Leopold and Loeb were in for a very rude awakening when not
even a twelve-hour court room summation put forth by the legendary Clarence
Darrow was enough to get the pair off; though it did sway the hand of justice
from exacting its pound of flesh at the hangman’s noose; capital punishment
swept aside as retributive, rather than transformative justice. That Loeb was
murdered in his prison cell by fellow prisoner, James Day in 1936 and Leopold
eventually released on parole in 1958 is rather a moot point, except to
speculate whether or not the latter found his way to the inside of a theater in
1959 to see what actor, Dean Stockwell had made of his fictionalized
counterpart, Judd Steiner in Fleischer’s movie. That Leopold lived to marry a
widow, teach mathematics, publish an ornithological book and eventually die of
a heart attack in Puerto Rico, really makes me want to throw up. In case, you
have not guessed it – I do not support Darrow in his views on capital
punishment or quest for clemency herein, given that at least one killer was set
free to live out his duration on this planet while Bobbie Franks lay in six
feet of cold earth some seventy-plus years before his natural turn. Justice,
indeed!
Yet, for all
its congenital disrepute – however iniquitous and scornful – Compulsion is a fairly subdued account
of Leopold and Loeb; capped off by an immaculate recital from Orson Welles as
the jowly and weather-beaten, Darrow-esque attorney-at-law, Jonathan Wilk.
Welles was hardly in an enviable position in 1959; having burned virtually every
bridge in Hollywood after the disastrous implosion of his final American-funded
picture, Touch of Evil; the actor
informed on his last day of shooting by producer, Richard Zanuck that his entire
salary for Compulsion had already
been garnished by the IRS for back taxes. Welles’ genius never did equate to
anything but heartbreak for the man, though it undeniably translates to more
than a handful of exceedingly fine-tailored performances for the rest of us to
admire. The part of Jonathan Wilk is what Welles might have coined the ‘Mr. Woo’ of the piece; Welles, later to
explain how the first two acts in which a pivotal character is absent from the
screen, then suddenly appears to give a brief, if memorable performance,
essentially overtakes the entire piece in the public’s estimation through sheer
forcefulness. And Wilks (a.k.a. Woo)
is a part virtually engineered, in tandem, to master the sheer bloat in Welles’
physical girth, gravitas, grand-standing bravura and maniacal ego. Welles, who
insisted on doing his own makeup (a holdover from his days in the WPA he
carried with him beyond his RKO movie career) transforms himself into the
epitome of a barnstorming legal beagle with all the fire and brimstone leveled
at ‘then’ prevailing Old Testament jurisprudence, decidedly in favor of capital
punishment.
Compulsion opens with a fairly lurid vignette set in 1924, the
year Leopold and Loeb committed their shocking thrill kill. We catch a glimpse
of Judd Steiner – a.k.a. Leopold (Dean Stockwell) and Artie Strauss (Bradford
Dillman) stealing a typewriter from a fraternity house; the instrument to craft
the morbid ransom note planned to be sent Jonas Kessler (Wendell Holmes); the
father of the late, Paulie – a fourteen year old abducted from the school yard
whose body is later discovered drowned near a remote lake. Artie, the more
flamboyant of the two, orders Judd to run over a hitchhiking drunk in the
street; a second crime narrowly averted at the last possible moment as Judd
swerves to avoid catastrophe. Returning home at an obscene hour, Judd is
lectured to by his elder brother, Max (Richard Anderson) who threatens him with
thinly veiled references about his ‘unnatural’ friendship with Artie (about as
close as fifties’ American cinema dared tread on the subject of homosexuality).
Indeed, Judd is a recluse; a renowned ornithologist, his room a veritable
museum of taxidermy birds (in hindsight, Mark-Lee Kirk and Lyle Wheeler’s art
direction foreshadowing Norman Bates’ office and backroom sitting area in
Hitchcock’s Psycho, 1960). From here we flash ahead, first to a newsroom
where Sid Brooks (Martin Milner) is assigned to investigate the discovery of a
body in the morgue. The Medical Examiner (Jack Lomas) is unmoved by the
disturbing condition of the corpse (we never see). But Sid is quite shaken,
dislodging a pair of round-lensed eyeglasses from the stretcher. These
innocuous-looking spectacles fall to the floor. Their curious ‘Harold Lloyd’
quality; also, their petite-ness, leave Sid mildly perplexed.
Next, we move
to a university criminology lecture attended by Judd, who unsuccessfully attempts
to help sneak Sid past Prof. McKinnon (Jack Raine). After class, the pair hooks
up with Artie, holding court with a group of their fair-weathers while spinning
a yarn about a small tear in his sport jacket; the fallout from his supposedly
narrow escape from police for smuggling liquor across the Canadian border. Also
in attendance is Sid’s gal pal, Ruth Evans (Diane Varsi) who is empathetic, and
mildly sexually attracted, to Judd. Artie makes everyone promise to meet later
at a jazz club. There, Ruth pursues Judd a little more. He awkwardly shares a
few of his flawed theories about life with her; then, a more intimate story
about losing his mother while he was still very young. Ruth is touched, placing
her hands on his to comfort; a very human reaction for which Judd is wholly
unprepared. Judd invites Ruth to partake of his bird-watching skills at a
remote lake the next afternoon and she agrees, flirting that any opportunity to
spend more time with him alone is a bonus. But the jovial mood turns sour when
Sid, arriving too late to the party, confides in all that the ‘morning edition’
will publish a new find in the Paulie Kessler criminal investigation; the
glasses discovered near the body do not belong to the victim, though quite
possibly, the killer. More enraged than disturbed by his cohort’s incompetence,
Artie cuts his hand by smashing a glass at their table upon hearing the news.
His reaction is so transparently suspicious it is a wonder no one at the party
connects the dots. Instead, Judd escorts Artie home – the two frantically
discussing how best to cover up this latest blunder. Artie reasons there is no
possible way the police can trace over 4000 pairs of glasses back to him;
overlooking the fact Judd’s pair is a new model, unique designed with spring
mechanisms in their handles. Only three such pair has been currently sold.
Learning of
Judd’s ‘date’ with Ruth, Artie orders him to rape her; again, as an experiment
in domination and control. Mercifully, Judd still possesses an ounce of
self-restraint. For although he does take Ruth into the woods near the lake
where Paulie Kessler was murdered, on the ruse of bird-watching, and then makes
a momentary advance to force himself on her, Judd cannot bring himself to
complete this act; instead, tearfully backing away as a bewildered, but
otherwise unmolested Ruth looks on. Meanwhile, Artie delights in repeatedly
deflecting Police Lt. Johnson’s (Robert Simon) investigation with alternative
theories of the crime; suggesting any one of Paulie Kessler’s ‘odd’ teachers
might be responsible for his death; then, staging an anonymous phone call about
evidence hidden in a sewer (forcing the police to tear apart the street near
his home with jackhammers), and finally, playing devil’s advocate with Sid and
his editor, Tom Daly (Edward Binns). Mrs. Straus (Louise Lorimer) is obtusely
unaware her son has had anything to do with the gruesome murder. Indeed, she dotes
on Artie as a mildly possessive matriarch. By now, Detectives Brown (Simon
Scott) and Davis (Harry Carter) have managed to trace at least one pair of
glasses back to Judd. Unable to locate his pair in time to dispel their
curiosity, Judd is brought before District Attorney Harold Horn (E.G. Marshall)
for an ‘off the record’ interrogation at the local hotel. Judd coolly refuses
to buy into Horn’s alternative theories as to how Judd may have lost his
glasses near the same lake where Paulie Kessler’s body was discovered.
Judd attempts
to fabricate a story about him and Artie picking up ‘a couple of chippies’
(prostitutes) on the afternoon the crime was committed; a lie retold by Artie.
But their cover-up turns to vinegar when the Steiner’s chauffeur, Albert (Peter
Brocco) inadvertently reveals that on this particular afternoon Judd’s car did
not leave the garage; thus, causing investigators to inquire why he should
‘rent’ a car to entertain some hookers. It’s one too many lies and coincidences.
The police have their man, Horn using Artie to play off Judd’s insecurities and
vice versa. The pair reluctantly and independently confesses to Paulie’s murder,
though each suggests the other delivered the fatal blow. While Horn prepares
for the trial, the Straus’ retain renowned attorney, Jonathan Wilk for Artie
and Judd’s defense. Wilk pleads the pair as ‘not guilty’, but is stirred to
reconsider this decision when a delegation from the Ku Klux Klan burns a cross
in front of his hotel room. The plea is
changed to ‘guilty’ by reason of mental defect; Wilk engaging psychiatrists to back
his strategy. The ‘guilty’ plea absolves a jury from ever hearing the
particulars of the case. Now, Wilk further muddies the clarity of the facts by
putting the law on trial, suggesting capital punishment is murder sanctioned
under the law, though murder nonetheless. Unable to disentangle himself from Wilk’s
sound logic, Judge Matthews (Voltaire Perkins) nevertheless reaches a verdict
of life behind bars with no chance of parole. As Artie and Judd are led away,
Artie scoffs at the careworn and exhausted Wilk, who suggests God has had his
day in court; a higher authority than his own sealing the boys’ fate by
providing the circumstances by which Judd’s glasses fell from the pocket to
incriminate their rightful owner in Paulie Kessler’s murder.
Compulsion is an uneven entertainment at best, heralded as
Hollywood’s first legitimate stab at the ‘thrill kill’ movie. Perhaps in part
due to the prison release of Leopold, the picture garnered morbid curiosity
from amateur sleuths more fascinated by crime than confounded by the warped
machinations of the criminal mind. Unhappily, Compulsion is a fairly turgid and straight-forward account of a
crime made more abominable and legendary on the stage; in which co-star, Dean
Stockwell already assumed the part of Judd Steiner. Stockwell’s cohort on stage
had been Roddy McDowell; once considered a child star par excellence at Fox,
but whose reputation had somewhat slipped since puberty, to the point where
McDowell basically lost a decade in films, concentrating his formidable talents
in live theater until the movies once again came to call. Bradford Dillman was
initially not welcomed by Stockwell as McDowell’s replacement for the movie; an
animosity set aside after the first day’s shoot, when Stockwell apologized for
his behavior. Dillman accepted the apology and the actors went forth with a
mutual respect for each other. Alas, Richard Fleischer’s direction here is
rather flat; the arrogance that Dillman brings to the part, compounding his
lack of empathy for either of these two antagonists (perhaps, Fleischer’s point
to the story – neither deserving of as much). Dillman’s bravura is offset by
Stockwell’s tortured submissiveness; but the heinousness of the crime itself is
unbalanced by both Dillman and Stockwell’s discrepancies in age; much older
than the real Leopold and Loeb (still in their late teens at the time the real
murder was committed. In the end, nothing about the first two acts of Compulsion compels the viewer onward to witness its finale; Orson Welles’ magnificent
oration of the facts (or rather, the case as he re-conceives it) as an
impassioned stance against capital punishment is a tour de force. Welles is a
firestorm of attenuated emotions; toggling between bombastic outbursts and
hushed reverence. It’s quite a good show.
Yet Compulsion ought to have been a far
more gripping drama. Diane Varsi, who renounced her Hollywood career, forcing
her off the screen for seven long years, is thoroughly wasted in the bit part
of Ruth that any of the studio’s lesser contract players could have played with
their eyes closed; hardly a successor to the powerful and star-making
performance she delivered as Alison MacKenzie in Mark Robson’s blockbuster, Peyton Place just two years before.
Fleischer has populated the backdrop of his movie with some stellar support,
but none are given very much to do; Richard Murphy’s screenplay waffling in and
out of the particulars of the case and becoming mired in the repeatedly
diverting police procedural back story. It might have worked, except that Fleischer
never manages to go beyond the mechanics of the plot, drawing a relatively
straight line from points ‘A’ to ‘B’. William C. Mellor’s cinematography is
brightly lit, straight out of a TV serial; albeit, tricked out in the elongated
framing of Cinemascope. In the final
analysis, Compulsion is a movie with
little fresh or exhilarating to say about the crime that virtually shook 1924’s
socially affluent jazz babies to their core and sent shudders down the spines
of all who followed its daily revelations in the tabloids. As a movie, Compulsion is a blip on the radar. It
lacks the girth, greatness and gingerly massaged guidance to be anything more
than diverting melodrama.
Kino Lorber’s
Blu-ray is a revelation; sourced from a restored 4K master, the image is immaculate
and mostly razor sharp, revealing superb tonality in the B&W grayscale, and
startling amounts of fine detail in hair, makeup, clothing and background info.
There is virtually nothing to complain about with this release. If only Fox
would pay a little more attention to some of its more prominent classics still
MIA in hi-def or those already released in decidedly lackluster Blu-ray
renditions, then we might expect some very fine work in the future. We’ll see!
Personally, I think it is high time Fox made some of their vintage musicals
like Down Argentine Way, Week-end in Havana, The Dolly Sisters, Star!, Doctor Doolittle
and so on available in 1080p. We could also stand for complete restorations of
1954’s Demetrius and the Gladiators,
1956’s Anastasia, and a remaster to
fix the notorious teal color issues on Desk
Set, The Inn of the Sixth Happiness,
Wild River, The Blue Max (very blue, indeed) and, The Black Swan. But I digress. Nothing about Fox’s efforts on Compulsion will disappoint. In fact,
prepare to be as astonished by the bombastic 5.1 DTS audio, surprising robust
and subtly nuanced. Extras are limited to a sporadic audio commentary from Tim
Lucas and a few theatrical trailers to promote other Fox catalog being released
by Kino Lorber. Bottom line: a winner in hi-def for sure. Just not a great film
to warrant as careful preservation, it is nevertheless a welcomed surprise to
see from Fox; a studio notoriously neglectful of its back catalog.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
2.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
5
EXTRAS
1
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