JOURNEY INTO FEAR: Blu-ray (RKO, 1943) Warner Archive
Orson Welles
once claimed, “A film is never really any good unless the camera is an eye
in the head of a poet.” Alas, what Welles’ genius failed to grasp is that,
in Hollywood, profit trumps poetry every time. And thus, Welles, whose career
began so promisingly at the outset of his arrival in the film mecca, was, a
scant three years later, considered practically persona non grata. Not that the
movie merchants were ready to oust Welles from their kingdoms entirely; not
before they could glean all the knowledge, ambition and skills Welles had to
contribute, with lesser and lesser degrees of creative control allotted him over
the films in which he would ultimately appear.
Arguably, Welles’s
career is best summarized by its maniac impetus, amputated by outwardly willful
conspiracy and a streak of self-destructiveness. No other aspiring filmmaker
arriving at the golden foothills of Hollywood was ever as widely embraced. And
no other was as pilloried as an absolute failure just a few scant years later. Yet,
as diverse as Welles talents were (actor, director, producer, star) his was a
legacy systematically and deliberately dismantled behind the scenes almost from
the moment he had crossed that threshold into the land of make-believe. To what
extent Welles contributed to his own downfall remains a topic open for
discussion. He was, perhaps, ill-prepared to deal with the pecking order of the
moguls.
And his
privileged birth, having opened many doors with ease in his youth, possibly had
tainted his perceptions of the latitude he would be afforded to make mistakes
thereafter; also, his ego and his level of expectations, especially at RKO – a studio,
desperate for re-establishing their eminence among the Hollywood majors. Welles
was barely 25, when the keys to the studio were pretty much handed over to him,
and dubbed the “would-be genius” by gossip columnist (and William
Randolph Hearst mouthpiece) Louella Parsons. But with Citizen Kane,
Welles had bitten the hand that had fed so many. Henceforth, the ensuing blood-feud
between Hearst and Welles would taint the former’s reputation, but stammer the
latter’s abilities to get better films made under such uncompromised circumstances.
Welles’ genius would not be allowed to
flourish. It would, however, be tolerated, and mined for its ‘name above the
title’ marketability.
Director, Norman
Foster’s Journey into Fear (1943) picks at the tatters of Welles’
reputation after the back-to-back fiscal fiascos, Citizen Kane (1940,
but prematurely pulled from distribution by RKO, under threats from William
Randolph Hearst, before the true merit of its box office could be properly
assessed) and The Magnificent Ambersons (1942, crushingly taken away
from Welles before he could fashion its somber finale and hacked into by Robert
Wise, from a 2 ½ hour epic into barely 88-minutes of thoroughly disjointed
storytelling), did all but dismantle Welles’ credibility in the industry as a
bell-ringer.
Journey into
Fear is a thriller – sometimes. A melodrama – mostly. And, predictably
tinged with Welles’ unusual contributions, concentrated on material far lesser
than his talents. RKO bought the film rights to Eric Ambler’s novel of the same
name back in 1941 as a vehicle for Michèle Morgan after the American debut of Joan
of Paris was postponed. Then, Ben Hecht was signed to write it, and, Robert
Stevenson to direct. At intervals thereafter, Fred Astaire and Dennis O'Keefe were
marginally discussed for the lead. However, after Joseph Cotten’s incredible
debut in Citizen Kane, producers elected to cast him in Journey into
Fear. Stevenson left the project and Morgan was greenlit for Joan of
Paris. Welles was in the throes of shooting ‘Kane’ so ‘Fear’
went into turn-around at the studio. On the initial success of Kane (it
was a mammoth hit with critics and audiences), RKO leaked a story to the trades,
Welles would do Journey into Fear just as soon as he wrapped shooting on
The Magnificent Ambersons. But then, tragedy. Hearst threatened a lawsuit,
RKO balked and pulled Citizen Kane from distribution (effectively to
bury it for the next several decades), and ‘Ambersons’ became
embroiled in endless rewrites and reshoots, costing the studio thousands per
day.
In a last-ditch
effort to regain his standing, Welles scrapped Hecht’s screenplay, wrote a new
one himself with Cotten, and hired Paramount expat, Jack Moss to produce.
Welles recast the project. Morgan was replaced with Dolores del Rio. Remaining roles
went to his Mercury Players: Ruth Warrick, Agnes Moorehead and Everett Sloane. Welles’
creative gridlock on ‘Ambersons’ forced him to drop out of the
running to direct Journey into Fear. So, Norman Foster, who had impressed Welles
with his screenwriting for It's All True, became Welles’ hand-picked
replacement. In later years, Welles would minimize Foster’s contributions on Journey
into Fear, claiming, virtually ‘anyone nearest the camera’ was involved in
shaping the final product. For certain, co-writing/co-starring and producing
credits are owed Welles. But during post-production,
Welles was fired by RKO and his Mercury unit ordered to vacate the premises.
So, the final movie was edited without Welles’ input or complicity.
Unusual for its
time, Journey into Fear begins with a pre-title prologue. We witness the
assassin, Banat (Jack Moss) loading his gun in preparation for a fresh kill. What
follows after the titles is the tale of Howard Graham (Joseph Cotten), an
American armaments engineer, conveyed in flashback, via a letter Graham has
written to his wife, Stephanie (Ruth Warrick). While on route from Europe back
to the U.S., Graham and Stephanie are introduced to Kopeikin (Everett Sloane),
a Turkish employee from Graham’s company. Under the pretense of discussing
business, Kopeikin takes Graham to a nightclub where he meets dancer, Josette
Maretl (Dolores del Rio) and her partner, Gogo (Jack Durant). Banat’s attempt
to kill Graham is foiled. Nevertheless, Graham is brought before the Turkish
secret police for questioning. Colonel Haki (Orson Welles) accuses German
agents of the murder plot and shows Graham a photograph of Banat, presumably hired
by a Nazi named Muller (Eustace Wyatt). Haki orders Graham
to travel secretly to Batumi while he secures safe passage for Stephanie back
to America.
On this trip,
Graham is accompanied by Josette and Gogo, a Turkish tobacconist named, Kuvetli
(Edgar Barrier), archeology professor, Haller (who is actually Muller), a
henpecked husband, Matthews (Frank Readick) and his French wife (Agnes
Moorehead). Unknowing of his marital status, Josette draws nearer to Graham. Haller
warns Kuvetli is not as he appears. At dinner, Graham recognizes Banat as the
man who tried to kill him and pleads with the ship's captain (Richard Bennett)
and purser (Stefan Schnabel) to put him ashore. Regrettably, neither is
convinced Graham’s life is in danger. Request ignored. Request denied. Now, Graham
turns to Josette for help. She has Gogo engage the assassin in a poker game
while Graham unsuccessfully searches Banat's cabin for evidence of his plotted
crime.
Returning to his
own cabin, Graham is confronted at gunpoint by Haller, whom he now realizes is
Muller. But Muller again suggests it is Kuvetli who is the real threat, and
offers to spare Graham’s life by having him committed to a local hospital,
supposedly with a bad case of typhus. Overhearing this conversation, Kuvetli suggests
to Graham in private, Muller’s plan is to get Graham off the ship to kill him.
Kuvetli’s alternate plan is for Graham to superficially agree to Muller’s plan,
then conceal himself in an empty cabin while Kuvetli arranges for Turkish
agents to arrest the Germans. This, seems the better alternative. However, when
Graham retreats to the empty cabin to hide, he finds Kuvetli dead. With nowhere
to turn, Graham confides in Mathews to deliver a message to Haki at the Turkish
consulate. Mathews gives Graham his
pocketknife. Now, Muller and Banat strongarm Graham into a waiting car. However,
when the car develops a flat, Graham uses the pocketknife to jam its horn,
before driving the car into a nearby shop window to create a scene.
Graham escapes
into the night, reunited with Stephanie at a nearby hotel. Now, Banat
intimidates Graham from checking out. Muller also encourages Stephanie to join
Haki in the lounge, leaving Graham to be murdered by Banat. Instead, an
impromptu visit from Gogo results in his being killed by Banat. Escaping to the
window’s ledge, but cornered by Banat and Muller, Graham is spared when Haki
takes dead aim and kills Muller. Banat and Graham struggle. But the rain has
made the ledge slippery and Banat falls to his death. Sometime later, Graham
and Haki reunite – their journey into fear, at an end.
Journey into
Fear’s last act is more than a tad contrived. The espionage gets sandbagged
by the delirious struggle between Banat and Graham in the pouring rain. It’s expertly
staged and photographed superbly by cinematographer, Karl Struss who could lay
claim to having a career in pictures from the early silents to the fifties’ dawn
of 3D. Alas, the plot here is rather lopsided, beginning with the casting of
Joe Cotten as the lead. In a movie campaign featuring Welles’ name in lettering
as big as the star, one expected more from Welles than a mere cameo. But that’s
all we really get from Welles in Journey into Fear, leaving Cotten to
carry the load. Does he? Sort of. If not always. The Virginia native was always more adept at
playing congenial every-men to men of action. Herein, Cotten is given the
opportunity, though hardly the impetus, to play the latter. But it’s decidedly
at odds with his pre-ascribed screen persona.
Cotten is solid. But he just is not all that convincing, neither in the
faux romantic scenes with Dolores del Rio, or in this final showdown against
the meatier, Jack Moss.
A word about
Moss here, who, prior to his association with Welles, had been a magician,
agent and film producer. Welles’ own fascination with illusionists brought them
together. But then, Welles hired Moss as something of his ‘wrangler’, overseeing,
not only his productions, but also manage certain aspects of his private life.
This did not bode well with Arnold Weissberger, the man handling Welles’ legal
affairs, nor Welles’ personal physician, Maurice Bernstein – both believing
Moss did not have Welles’ best interests at heart. Welles, heavily in debt, was
given sound advice by Weissberger, all but ignored by Moss, who chose not to
burden Welles with particulars. This put Welles in a precarious position with
the IRS. And when the dust finally settled on Welles’ failed tenure at RKO, Moss’
apathy over the dire reality of Welles’ financial situation seems, at least in
hindsight, to have been realized to Welles’ own detriment. It is unclear when
Moss and Welles stopped being friends. However, shortly after Journey into
Fear, Moss was no longer a part of Welles’ inner entourage. Though he would
remain active in the picture-making biz, Moss’ contributions were easily forgotten
with the passage of time, and, considered second-rate at best in their own time.
Welles, mercifully, went on – arguably, to ‘better things’ and, regrettably,
even more folly, eventually to devastate his greater aspirations on a comeback
for good.
“I’ve wasted the
greater part of my life looking for money and trying to get money,” Welles later reminisced,
“…trying to make my work on this terribly expensive bait box which is a
movie. And I’ve spent too much energy on things that have nothing to do with
making a movie. It’s about 2% movie making and 98% hustling. It’s no way to
spend a life.”
Journey into
Fear ended Welles ‘first act’ as Hollywood’s irrefutable enfant terrible. In
the pending decades, Welles would morph from genius a much sought after actor
for hire. Plying his craft in front of the camera throughout the late 1940’s
and early fifties, Welles’ passion for the work lapsed into artistic purgatory,
later salvaged by the resurrection of his body of work on home video. Journey
into Fear isn’t top-tier Welles. Indeed, the picture belongs to Cotten and
the rest of the cast, foreshadowing the future trajectory of Welles in
Hollywood. The picture showed a loss of $193,000
on RKO’s ledgers, further proof for the industry’s big wigs and pop culture
mandarins of their time that Welles could not be entrusted with anything beyond
movies made by others – more commercially sound, and made primarily for others
who considered the movies, merely as something to pass the time while they snack on their popcorn and potato chips.
Viewed today, Journey into Fear is an interesting failure, rather
than an artistic one. It falters, not because of Welles’ telescopic devotion to
make a good movie, but rather, because of the intervention of too many non-creative
forces, tugging in opposing directions to ensure a financial – rather than an
artistic – misfire.
Journey into
Fear arrives on Blu-ray in a handsome 1080p transfer from the Warner Archive
(WAC). Black levels are exceptionally nuanced, giving full breadth to Karl
Struss’ cinematography. Overall image clarity could scarcely be improved. Film
grain is naturally realized and contrast is uniformly excellent. There are no
age-related artifacts. The DTS 2.0 mono is vintage Westrex with all of its
inherent shortcomings, but beautifully remastered with zero extemporaneous
distractions. Extras are limited to 3 Mercury radio broadcasts of Dracula,
Treasure Island, and, A Tale of Two Cities. Aside: it would have
been prudent of WAC to provide us with an audio commentary. Alas, no. Bottom
line: Journey into Fear is more than passable as an entertainment. But
it lacks the spark one imagines Welles might have delivered, if given the full
scope of his film-maker’s faculties. WAC’s Blu is pristine. Judge and buy
accordingly.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
3
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
1
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