SECRET BEYOND THE DOOR: Blu-ray re-issue (Walter Wanger/Diana Productions/Universal, 1947) Kino Lorber
By the time Secret
Beyond the Door (1947) hit theaters, it offered little in the way of an
artistic reprieve for the careers of either its director, Fritz Lang, or star,
Joan Bennett – the wife of the film’s producer, Walter Wanger. Bennett was
top-billed against Brit, Michael Redgrave, although in hindsight, it was
Redgrave who still had some longevity to etch out on the silver screen. Bennett,
conversely, was already involved in a torrid liaison with her agent, Jennings
Lang, into whom Wanger would ultimately plug a bullet in a delicate area where he
could no longer consummate their affair. All this was still a few years away. But
in hindsight, it marked Bennett as a wanton, and, effectively closed out her
reign as a forties’ noir fav. Bennett, whose stage career began while she was
still a teenager, swiftly ascended into film roles thereafter, mostly playing
good girls with an attitude, as Amy Marsh in 1933’s George Cukor-directed
version of Little Women. It was on the set of this movie that Bennett
met Wanger for the first time; he convincing her to dye her tresses from platinum
to brunette (in Hollywood then, usually the other way around) – a decision,
ultimately to launch an entirely new screen persona. Bennett wed Wanger in 1940
only to divorce him in September 1965. Between these bookends, the couple were
hardly happy. Yet, even as the marriage waffled, then waned, Wanger sought to
do everything to ensure his wife’s career remained on track.
Secret Beyond
the Door ought to have resurrected Bennett’s sagging appeal. She had, in fact
appeared for Fritz Lang thrice before in Man Hunt (1941), The Woman
in the Window (1944) and Scarlet Street (1945). But by the end of
the decade, Bennett was no longer the fresh new face in town. Nor, by 1947,
could she convince as the naïve Celia, who marries a dashing young architect,
Mark Lamphere (Redgrave) on the fly, only to suspect him of harboring a
diabolical past in the ultra-modern basement of their fashionable home. And
hence, the insurmountable hurdle of the piece – the predictable ‘revelation’: all
Celia’s needless consternation is for not. Mark is not a killer. Merely, a red
herring. As scripted by Silvia Richards (on a story by Rufus King), Secret
Beyond the Door makes virtually no sense – not practical, nor even in the
clever-clever realm of suspended disbelief the movies are supposedly good at
selling as an alternate reality. So, the plot stumbles on its weak-kneed
premise, that Mark has murdered his first wife, or was somehow involved in the
crime. This leaves Bennett to leer in fear while Redgrave’s frozen-pussed pug
skulks about, adding needlessly to her suspicions. The denouement is not a
shocker, but merely an affirmation all is right in the couple’s ‘happily ever
after’…well, sort of, if only they can rid themselves of the sword of
Damocles dangling over their heads.
Plot wise: we
are introduced to Celia – predictably, from Manhattan’s upper crust, preparing
to wed architect, Mark Lamphere, whom she first met while on holiday with her
dotty friend, Edith Potter (Natalie Schaffer) in Mexico. It ought to have been
a happy honeymoon. Except, that when Celia plays a game, locking her husband
out of their hotel room, he suddenly turns heartless and retreats to his New
England estate, claiming he is being called back on business. With nothing to
do, Celia follows her husband, discovering he is from affluence, has a large,
imposing manor house, and is, in fact, a widower with a young son, David (Mark
Dennis) desperately in need of a mother’s love. David is presently under the
care and tutelage of Mark’s bitter sister, Caroline (Anne Revere) and trusted
secretary, Miss Robey (Barbara O’Neil), whose face bears a terrible scar when
she saved the boy from a hellish inferno. Celia and David bond. But the
alliance between Celia and Mark is far sketchier and more unstable. Caroline suggests
Mark is responsible for his first wife, Eleanor’s death. Caroline also informs
Celia that, as a child, Mark often had to be locked in his room, suffering from
uncontrollable tantrums. Celia’s dread mounts after Mark shows off a suite of
six ‘special rooms’ he has built in a gated corridor of their mansion – each, morbidly
to house a replica of a famous murder. But the seventh room remains locked. As
Mark refuses to share what is beyond the seventh door, Celia makes a wax
impression of the key, intent to unearth the secret beyond its door.
Inadvertently, she also finds Miss Robey without her scar-concealing scarf,
revealing she has had reconstructive surgery and suffers not from the lingering
aftereffects of her heroic rescue. Exposed in her lie, Miss Robey confides in
Celia, she had hoped to marry Mark instead. That dream ended, the best Miss
Robey can hope for now is to keep her job by making Mark feel guilty about her
disfigurement. An empathetic Celia promises not to divulge Miss Robey’s secret.
Now, Celia uses
the key made from her wax impression to investigate the seventh room, finding an
exact replica of their bedroom. Believing this to be proof Mark murdered
Eleanor, Celia is horrified when she acknowledges the candles on the dresser
are as uneven in the replica as they are presently in the bedroom she shares
with her husband. The room is therefore not an homage to Mark’s murder of
Eleanor, but a prelude to his planned murder of Celia. Terrified, Celia runs
away. Mark has a row with Miss Robey, whom he too has discovered has defrauded
him with her fake scar to elicit his sympathy. Robey is discharged. Mark also
has words with Caroline. He suffers a hallucination in which we are meant to
deduce he actually planned to kill Celia in Mexico, but fled before he could
act on this irrational impulse.
Believing in her
husband’s innocence, Celia plies a psychological theory to prove her faith in
Mark. She stages a past regression into Mark’s childhood. Under this spell, Mark
recalls how, as a boy he banged on his mother’s locked room, only to suffer
what he believes was her rejection of him. When Celia explains it was Caroline
who locked him in his room, Mark’s desire to avenge this maternal betrayal is
shattered. Alas, too late, the couple discovers they have been locked in the
bedroom by Miss Robey – also, responsible for Eleanor’s demise – and now,
intent on burning the newlyweds alive. Instead, Mark manages to free his bride
and carry her to safety. Miss Robey perishes in the flames. Sometime later,
Mark tells Celia she has liberated his subconscious. Celia confides she will
remain at his side to ease him through their future happiness together.
Secret Beyond
the Door belongs to Hollywood’s idiotic fascination with psycho-analytic
mumbo-jumbo first kick-started in Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbound (1945).
Yet, this is where any and all comparisons between Hitch’s intelligently
conceived psychological masterpiece and Lang’s psychosomatic claptrap should
end. Almost from its first frame to last, Secret Beyond the Door is stricken
with a stifling ennui and even more grand desperation to embellish Mark’s
psychological profile with misdirection untrue to the profiling of those
suffering from mental disturbances. The suspenseful elements in Richards’
screenplay are pure hokum. Does anyone believe any sane person would devote an
entire wing to a Madame Tussauds-esque recreation of great crimes from the
century? Secret Beyond the Door might have been on better footing had
its two stars actually believed in their performances. But Joan Bennett and
Michael Redgrave have no on-screen chemistry – not even, of the antagonistic/foreboding
kind. He skulks and sulks. She cringes and shrinks in terror. But suddenly, moments
before the finale, there is ‘an understanding’ between Mark and Celia. If so,
it is a far more perplexing mystery how the ill-fated have managed to bridge their
abject mistrust into a promise for tomorrow’s happiness. Lang’s direction is
pedestrian and faulty. Ditto for Silvia Richards’ screenplay. So, in the end,
we are left with a silly, sordid and rather stupid story of misguided marital misgivings
run amuck.
What little mood
is attained is exclusively owed cinematographer, Stanley Cortez’s spookily lit
finesse. There are a number of sequences to celebrate Cortez’s prowess in light
and shadow. So, the picture, while bizarrely out of whack and uninspiring in
virtually every other regard, always gives the audience something compelling to
view. The real problem here is Bennett’s Celia - too savvy to be believed as
the terrorized wife. She ought to have known better, and frequently, gives the
inference she does, though somehow resists these more honest impulses to engage
in some utterly contrived emotional naiveté pitted against her more well-formulated
and exercised intellectual stature. The finale to Secret Beyond the Door harks
back to another Hitchcock thriller, Rebecca (1940), of superior stock. As
in Hitch’s classic, we have the crazy lady, the fire and the lover’s reconciled
embrace. Unlike Rebecca, we forego the intricacies of the mentally deranged
love interest, transformed here in her thwarted desire into sexual sadism
satisfied by flames. And thus, Secret
Beyond the Door endures as a slickly manufactured dud. Do yourselves a
really big favor here, folks. Watch Rebecca and Spellbound again!
Secret Beyond
the Door gets a second outing on Blu-ray. The first was from Olive Films in 2018.
Kino Lorber’s reissue promises much, hailing from a supposed 4K scan done by
Paramount off an original camera negative. But does it actually deliver? Well,
for starters, there are subtler refinements to the 1080p image than previously
available in hi-def. So, everything gets a little tighter/brighter, fine
details ripen a tad, and, the gray scale is marked by pleasingly resolved
tonality. Age-related artifacts have been tempered, though not entirely
eradicated. There are still a handful of shots that look rougher than they
ought. Is this worth a re-purchase? I would argue, there is not even a good
reason to own Secret Beyond the Door – period. It’s just NOT a good
movie. The 2.0 DTS appears to be identical to Olive’s previous release and is
unremarkable in every way. Kino has shelled out for a new-to-Blu audio
commentary from author/historian, Alan K. Rode. It’s okay, but hardly
comprehensive, and, in some ways, as uninspiring as the movie itself. Bottom
line: at its most impressive, Secret Beyond the Door is a middling
effort at best, and, in some ways, falls well below par for the likes of Fritz
Lang’s storytelling stature. Pass, and be glad that you did.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
1
VIDEO/AUDIO
4
EXTRAS
1
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