Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts

Conclusion: What Good Are Crime Films?

Friday, 27 March 2009


Now that this survey of crime subgenres has ended, it is time to
return to the question that haunted its opening chapter: What
is illuminated by considering a given film like The Godfather
(1972) or Murder on the Orient Express (1974) or Fargo (1996) as a
crime film rather than a gangster film or a detective story or a black
comedy? More generally, what is gained by defining the crime film as
a strong genre that not only incorporates but logically underpins such
better-known genres as the gangster film, the private-eye film, the film
noir, and the police film? Discussing crime comedies like Fargo as
crime films that happen to be humorous rather than comedies that
happen to involve crime seeks to expand the range and resonance of
the crime genre at the risk of choosing examples many viewers might
dismiss – and indeed of diluting the genre as a whole. Many viewers,
perhaps most, do experience The Thin Man (1934) or Charade (1963)
or Fargo as crime films with comic relief, but how many viewers, after
all, would categorize Arsenicand Old Lace (1944) or The Trouble with
Harry (1955) or Some Like It Hot (1959) as crime films rather than comedies?
The point of discussing such films as crime films is not to inflate the
importance of one genre at the expense of another but to indicate the
ways in which previous definitions of crime films may have been unwisely
parochial. No extant definition of crime films prescribes solemnity
as a criterion of the genre, yet historians of crime films regularly
ignore crime comedies, presumably on the grounds that they are not
really crime films.1 Such distinctions between more and less real members
of a given genre, however, are as futile as they are inevitable, not
because genre films cannot be consensually categorized, but because
these distinctions ignore the nature and purpose of generic classification
in the first place.

Whatever grounds they take as their basis, all attempts to distinguish
real crime films fromthe less real, like all attempts to distinguish
crime films categorically from members of other genres, assume that
genres are essential and logical, parallel and mutually exclusive, like
Platonic norms. But because generic categories are as culturally constructed
as the works they are intended to categorize, they are always
historically situated, ad hoc, subjective, and inflected by (indeed rooted
in) a particular agenda. This is the real point of Rick Altman’s distinction
between semantic and syntactic genre markers, as he notes
in proposing that “the relationship between the semantic and the syntactic
constitutes the very site of negotiation between Hollywood and
its audience, and thus between ritual and ideological uses of genre.”2
Although Steve Neale aptly notes that many accounts of Hollywood
genres “have been driven by critical and theoretical agendas rather
than by a commitment to detailed empirical analysis and thorough industrial
and historical research,”3 the whole project of genre theory,
from the construction of films as members of a genre to the attempt
to synthesize genres or their rationales in the service of a more general
theory of communications, remains by its very nature agendadriven.
It seems clear, then, that the question of what good is the conceptual
category of crime films is really another, and more illuminating,
way of posing an apparently simpler question: What good are crime
films? The business of this final chapter is to indicate briefly what sort
of cultural work crime films as a genre do for the corporations that
produce them, the viewers that consume them, and the society that
authorizes their currency, and how the answers to those questions are
connected to the questions of what counts as a crime film and why –
why the category might be useful in revealing some of the films’ leading
family connections and motives, which depend on what Altman
has called “the uses to which members of the family are put.”4
The most obvious features crime films of different subgenres share
are a grammar of typological situations and a cast of stock characters.
Whatever their subgenre, most crime films present events, twists, and
revelations that are so formulaic not only in themselves but in their
interrelations that they can truly be called a grammar (or, in Altman’s
terms, a syntax). Part of this consistency, of course, stems from Holly-
wood’s injunction that crime does not pay. Thus gangsters rise only
to fall; an ambitious, well-planned robbery involving a gang of thieves
working closely together will invariably go wrong sooner or later; the
most mysterious crime, whether or not it is presented as a mystery
to the audience, will always be resolved by a close examination of the
evidence, even when that evidence is inconclusive, as in the Claus von
Bülow case; and crooked policemen are inevitably brought down by
the institutional power of the police force, even though that same
force, once it is corrupted, is no match for a single crusading officer.
Crime films are equally consistent in the opportunities they offer criminals:
Unstealable jewels like the Pink Panther, protected by state-ofthe-
art security systems, are nothing more than a trope, an invitation
to theft; informers and undercover police officers are sure to have
their lives threatened, even if they elude these threats; and nervous,
secretive characters who beg for official protection are marked for
death whatever their subgenre.

None of this is surprising or especially illuminating; it is merely an
indication of the extent to which the subject of crime, bracketed by
Hollywood’s official morality and its imperative to sensationalism,
generates a formula that transcends specific subgenres. What is more
revealing is the changing role the stock characters of crime films play
in different subgenres. The no-nonsense cop who plays by the book,
for example, is a staple of the crime film; but he (or, very occasionally,
she) has radically different roles in different subgenres. In private-eye
films like Lady in the Lake (1947) and Chinatown (1974) he is the hero’s
antagonist; in victim films like Fury (1936) and Suspicion (1941) he is
either a menace or a failed protector to the beleaguered hero. In some
police films, like Touch of Evil (1958) and The Untouchables (1987), he
is the hero; in erotic thrillers whose heroes happen to be police officers,
like BasicInstinc t (1992), he is the loose-cannon hero’s conscience
or his nemesis. Lawyers are the heroes as well as the villains
of lawyer films, but in police films and private-eye films their penchant
for legalism always makes them untrustworthy. A Perfect World (1993)
even manages to create an evil victim who is much more dangerous
than the good-hearted fellow-convict who kills him [Fig. 75]. To a remarkable
extent, the subgenres of the crime film are distinguished
from each other not by the stories they tell but by the attitudes they
adopt toward those stories.

A stock question gangster films raise, for example, is why people become
criminals. These films suggest that the reasons are specifically
Conclusion: What Good Are Crime Films? 291
sociopathic: an alienation from a remote or uncaring society combined
with an overreaching vanity or megalomania. But just as different
westerns adopt very different attitudes to the conflict they all
share between the frontier and the coming of civilization (so that, for
instance, the civilizing rancher heroes of Red River [1948], become the
anticivilizing outlaws of Shane [1953]), police films and lawyer films
tend to peg criminal behavior much more narrowly to greed, films
noirs to sexual victimization by a predatory woman, erotic thrillers
to masculine hysteria. Hence police heroes pursue criminals who deserve
to be caught or killed because they have chosen to be criminals,
but films noirs and erotic thrillers present criminals who cannot help
but kill. Caper films like The Asphalt Jungle (1950) and nihilist neonoirs
like The Grifters (1990) bring the question full circle by suggesting
that the question is beside the point, since there is no reason to
look for an explanation for any particular criminal behavior when society
itself is necessarily criminal.5

Criminal behavior, then, is the fault of a cruelly alienating society,
or of ethnic self-identification, or vaulting personal ambition, conscious
avarice, sexual beguilement, male hysteria, the fatal need for
the company of others – not just a warped society, but the social impulse
as such. In every case, the subject of criminality is used to focus
the problematic relationship between individual and social power and
justice, but each adopts a different point of view that restricts it to telling
only part of the story. To tell the full story, even if it were possible,
would far exceed Hollywood’s recipe for mass entertainment.
The full story, however, continues to haunt the partial story each
subgenre presents, for every film in every crime subgenre is marked
by numberless traces of the alternative crime story it could have
been. A crime comedy like Arsenicand Old Lace, which sets its batty
maiden aunts against their dangerously sociopathic nephew, is filled
with intimations of the serious crime film it could have been, and may
still (but probably will not) turn into. Fargo, going still further, is a
crime comedy whose every sequence toys with the possibility of consequential
terror, even at its most disturbingly amusing. The kidnappers’
trip to Brainerd is filled with jokes that break the tension but
do not prevent them from kidnapping and eventually killing Jean Lundegaard.
What’s more, if every crime comedy is potentially a crime
melodrama, the reverse is equally true. The Godfather, for all its tragic
pretensions, could have been a comedy – a possibility explored intermittently
by GoodFellas (1990) and released full throttle by Jane
Austen’s Mafia! (1998). Indeed, if parodies in general, from Dead Men
Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) to the three Naked Gun films (1988–94) are
considered to release the comedy repressed by their progenitor texts’
self-seriousness, then it is no wonder that crime films have so often
been parodied, since cultural repression is as central to their agenda
as cultural analysis.

In the same way, crime films are haunted by the visual traces and
tones of other crime subgenres. Just as the gold lighting used to invoke
the nostalgic past in The Godfather and The Godfather, Part II
(1974) is invoked by the ubiquitous wood-paneled train interiors in
Murder on the Orient Express, the low-key lighting characteristic of
films noirs haunts private-eye films and police films as well, sometimes
by its presence (Experiment in Terror, 1962), sometimes by its
absence (Chinatown), and the expressionistically cluttered spaces of
Fritz Lang are echoed by Double Indemnity (1944), modulated by Kiss
Me Deadly (1955), or resolutely refused by Fargo. Moreover, Fargo’s
vertiginous comedy serves as a reminder that every crime film is
shadowed by the farce it might have been if the criminals’ petty obses-
Conclusion: What Good Are Crime Films? 293
75. A Perfect World: Escaped convict Butch Haynes (Kevin Costner), a killer
whose rapport with lonely Phillip Perry (T. J. Lowther) brings out his gentler
side.
sions had been considered from a different angle. Every crime film is
informed by an enriching awareness of the alternative subgenres it
invokes, if only by contrast. The crucial importance of the crime-film
genre is that it foregrounds the ambivalence that makes these alternative
ways of seeing bad cops or the past or petty obsession essential
to each subgenre’s and each individual film’s presentation of its stock
elements.

Although each crime subgenre is haunted by implicit possibilities
explicitly realized by other subgenres, these possibilities, helpful as
they are for ad hoc classification, cannot be used to distinguish different
crime subgenres categorically from each other. Even within a
given subgenre, typological figures will assume ambiguities based on
their affinities to other subgenres. In L.A. Confidential (1997) it is obvious
that Ed Exley (Guy Pearce) is the loner cop familiar from hundreds
of earlier movies; but will he turn out to be a vigilante cop like Frank
Bullitt, a crooked cop like Capt. McCluskey in The Godfather, or a suspicious
cop like Det.Williams in Blue Velvet? For most of the film’s running
time, the answer is ambiguous. Even after L.A. Confidential has
run its course, its police hero remains indelibly marked, as each of
his progenitor heroes is marked, by the possibilities of what he might
have been.

Grouping well-established crime genres like the gangster film and
the film noir together under the more comprehensive, albeit synthetic,
genre of the crime film illuminates many of their formulaic family
resemblances; but reversing the procedure and defining these genres
as subsets of a more global crime genre goes further to explain the
abiding source of their power. It is only the crime genre itself, and not
any single subgenre, that accounts for the enabling ambiguity at the
heart of all crime subgenres and every film within them: the easy recognition
of the genre’s formulas coupled with a lingering uncertainty
about their import.

Even films that are not normally considered crime films can benefit
from this enrichment if they are considered hypothetically as crime
films. It is clear from the beginning of Unforgiven (1992) that the retired
gunslinger William Munny (Clint Eastwood) will overcome his reservations
about returning to violent ways and ride out to Big Whiskey
to claim the bounty the local whores have offered for killing the two
cowboys who disfigured one of their number and were let off by Sheriff
Little Bill Daggett (Gene Hackman) with a fine payable to the saloonkeeper
whose place was disturbed. It is equally obvious that the film
will end with a confrontation between Munny and Little Bill that Little
Bill can hardly survive. What remains in doubt until the film’s unsettling
ending, and perhaps beyond, is how viewers will feel about the
climax they have been awaiting for two hours, when an eerily selfcontained
ex-killer who insists that all that is behind him goes up
against a genially crooked sheriff who represents, along with Munny’s
dead wife and the whores’ thirst for vengeance, the closest thing to
moral authority in the film. Unforgiven has rightly been considered
a meditation on the Hollywood western; but like Rancho Notorious
(1952) and The Naked Spur (1953), it is also haunted by its affinities
with contract-killer films like Murder, Inc. (1960), avenger films like
D.O.A. (1950), and vigilante police films like those featuring Clint Eastwood’s
most recognizable hero, Dirty Harry Callahan.

Such exercises reveal not only the elastic boundaries of the crime
film but the ways in which the genre’s cultural work is linked to the
recognition of individual gangster films and police films and crime
comedies as first and foremost crime films; and they help to explain
the rise and fall of the different subgenres within the constant popularity
of the crime genre. Crime films are always likely to be popular in
liberal democracies because such cultures place the debate between
individual liberty and institutional power at the heart of their constitutional
agenda. Indeed, the very idea of a constitution is already a
privileged site for such a debate. Unlike utopian cultures, which would
have no need of crime films, or repressive regimes, which would not
tolerate the antisocial fantasies they license, liberal democracies renegotiate
the relations between individual liberty and institutional
power ceaselessly, in every new political campaign and election, every
law and trial and arrest. Most of these actions, of course, involve competing
institutions – corporations, aspiring beneficiaries of government
funding, ethnic and racial groups, governments – rather than
individuals; but crime films, like elections, personalize this process by
focusing it on a small number of individuals, even (or especially) if
they are set against faceless groups like the police, the law, or the
Mob. The constant ferment liberal democracies prescribe over private
rights and the public weal explains the success of crime stories in
such cultures as England, whose abiding fascination with crime-story
heroes from Richard III to Magwitch, from Sherlock Holmes to Jack the
Ripper, far outpaces the occurrence of actual crimes.
Within this context, however, different crime subgenres flourish or
recede depending on a multitude of factors: studios’ economic imper-
atives; institutional censorship; the power of their nonfictional forbears
(the decline of the Hollywood gangster is mandated by a moratorium
that corresponds to both the enforcement of the Production
Code and the repeal of Prohibition); viewers’ changing attitudes toward
the government and their own majoritarian culture (as the social
conformism of The Desperate Hours [1955] gives way to the antiauthoritarianism
of Bonnie and Clyde [1967] and the brooding nostalgia of
the Godfather films); the shifting attraction to or revulsion from the
power of the law (from the righteous social engineering of To Kill a
Mockingbird [1962] to the cynical distrust of lawyers and all their
works in films based on John Grisham novels); the will to social belonging
or estrangement (from the yearning for trust and acceptance
by the hero of “G” Men [1935] to the impatience with the system in
The French Connection [1971] and the disillusionment with the system
in Serpico [1973]); and disruptions in the social order too deep for government
to cure (the wartime threat of working women in films noirs,
the backlash against women’s broader claims to empowerment in
erotic thrillers). It is no mystery why so many of the staple crime subgenres
often flourish at the same time, as they have during the 1990s,
since their partial, apparently inconsistent views of the conflict are as
logically compatible as the assumption in individual films like Reversal
of Fortune (1990) and A Few Good Men (1992) that lawyers are both
crusading heroes and the scum of the earth.

Still, the crime genre, like all popular genres, is not simply parasitic
on political or social history; it has a history of its own that acts as
another engine of change. Each genre has a logic of its own that is constantly
subject to retrospective change by three closely related kinds
of development. The arrival of a new work, if it is accepted as part of
the genre, encourages viewers to reconsider previous members of the
genre in its light, as The Godfather and Chinatown not only extended
the gangster and private-eye genres but spearheaded a critical reassessment
of them, and Psycho (1960) inaugurated a revival of the
horror film by setting a new standard for onscreen violence that was
in turn rapidly outmoded. New developments in contemporary social
history may awaken viewers to a new sense of the parallels or contrasts
between their time and that represented in earlier films, as Bonnie
and Clyde’s use of the Depression as a mirror to the social and institutional
estrangement of America’s youth in the sixties provoked
debates about both the sixties and the thirties, even to a new interest
in the heroes’ Depression chic fashions. In addition, contemporary

arguments by film theorists and analysts can function, as effectively
as new additions to a film genre, as intertexts that cast new light on
old genres, often in unintended ways. Laura Mulvey’s influential “Visual
Pleasure and Narrative Cinema,” for example, ends its argument
about the exclusion of female viewers from the movies by expressing
the wish that demystifying this exclusion will lead to a decline in such
sexist commercial cinema that female viewers will greet with no more
than “sentimental regret.”6 In the twenty-five years since Mulvey
wrote, commercial cinema has certainly not changed in the directions
she hoped; but critics seeking to theorize a place for female viewers
and to liberate the repressed female voices of older films have revolutionized
the ways contemporary viewers watch films noirs, reordering
the genre and making it central to an understanding of American
film.

One result of this constant change from different sources is that although
genres like the crime film look stable both from a distance and
at any given moment, they are constantly subject to revisionist debate,
and one viewer’s revisionist update (e.g., Reservoir Dogs, 1992;
Pulp Fiction, 1994) is another viewer’s rejected offense against the
genre, and a third viewer’s classic against which to measure even
more contemporary updates like 2 Days in the Valley (1996) and Suicide
Kings (1998). So it might seem that the crime-film genre is nothing
but a mirage that dissolves on close examination. What all this historical
jostling really indicates, however, is simply that the crime genre,
though as real as each viewer’s opinion and as predictable as viewers’
broad consensus, cannot be defined categorically or ahistorically. It
is whatever studios, filmmakers, and viewers think it is, and over the
years they have felt free to think it was many different things – usually
several things at once.

Such a broad critical categorymight well be further expanded to include
all movies in which crime plays however minor a role. On the
other hand, if crime films are those that use crimes to figure problems
of social justice or institutional power or moral guilt in specifically
legal terms, the crime genre might become more illuminating, as it
would certainly become more powerful, if it were reconfigured as the
injustice genre, the social-disorder genre, the power genre, even the
action genre. Although to do so would risk stretching it to its breaking
point, there would be gains as well as losses in such a procedure.
Alternatively, the crime film could well be organized around different
subgenres this book has neglected. The most obvious of these, the
man-on-the-run story, has been analyzed at length not only by Charles
Derry and Martin Rubin7 but by forty years’ work of commentary on
Alfred Hitchcock. To emphasize the importance of such films fromThe
39 Steps (1935) to The Fugitive (1993) to the crime genre would foreground
questions not only about the fugitive’s and the pursuing system’s
moral complicity but about the range of tactics fugitives employ
to keep one step ahead of the law. To emphasize films about white-
collar criminals, which invert the world of The Asphalt Jungle, would
raise questions about the relation between normal business practices
and criminal practices, and ultimately about the fetishizing of workspace
and the work ethic, whether the heroes are innocents caught in
unethical situations that skirt illegality to a greater or lesser extent (All
My Sons, 1948; Executive Suite, 1954; Patterns, 1956; The Apartment,
1960;Wall Street, 1987 [Fig. 76]; The Hudsucker Proxy, 1993; Disclosure,
1994) or businesspeople whose turn toward literal criminality indicts
their professional milieu metaphorically (The Lavender Hill Mob, 1951;
The Bad Sleep Well, 1960; A Shock to the System, 1990; Glengarry Glen
Ross, 1992; American Psycho, 2000). Films about outlaws – sympathetic
lawbreakers like Robin Hood, Jesse James, and the protagonists of
Thelma & Louise (1991) – provoke debates about the morality of the
established order. Films about prisons like those in The Big House
(1930), 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), and Brute Force (1947) present
them as social microcosms from which escape, the convicts’ one obsession,
is no more possible than from life itself; even when Tom Connors
(Spencer Tracy) does escape from Sing Sing, he is obviously fated
to return. The doomed capers in The Asphalt Jungle and The Killing
(1956), whose gangs are assembled, like pickup ball teams, for the purpose
of pulling off one big job, exchange the romantic fatalism of the
gangster film’s promethean, system-defying individual hero for a cynical
fatalism about social organizations themselves.

All these subgenres focus on contradictions within the social order
the heroes are constrained to serve, imitate, or flee. Linking M (1931),
Gun Crazy (1949), Psycho, Cape Fear (1962/1991) [Fig. 77], Repulsion
300 Crime Films
77. Cape Fear (1991): Robert De Niro’s downscale sociopathology. (De Niro,
Nick Nolte)
(1965), Badlands (1973), The Killer Inside Me (1976), The Shining
(1980), Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1990), The Silence of the Lambs
(1991), Single White Female (1992), Natural Born Killers (1994), Speed
(1994), and To Die For (1995) [Fig. 78] – customarily parceled out
among diverse subgenres – as films about sociopathic or psychopathic
criminals would raise questions about the psychopathology of
crime, its status as a mark of social alienation or of internalized conflicts
typical of an alienating society itself. Finally, giving pride of place
to the subgenre of superheroes and supercriminals from Dr. Mabuse
to Superman, Batman, and Darkman would recast what have most often
been considered action fantasies as allegories that examine the
relations between institutional and physical laws and the limits of the
humanity constructed by earthly powers.
One could go still further by exploring the complementary genres
of espionage and international intrigue, which are clearly related to
crime films.8 Most of the early James Bond films, for instance, involve
some form of international blackmail by terrorists who have stolen
something dangerous or irreplaceably valuable, and much of Bond’s
time in Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), and Diamonds Are Forever
(1971) is spent in detective work as he tries to figure out just
what SPECTRE or its allies are up to this time. These affinities become
even more pronounced in films like The Parallax View (1974) and Betrayed
(1988), which meld domestic terrorism with undercover detective
work.

Alternative theories of the crime film, then, could readily be constructed
by postulating the primacy of any of these genres. Any film
in which a crime occurs can fairly be considered a crime film; the test
of the classification, as of the resulting definition of the genre, depends
on its usefulness in illuminating individual examples and the relations
among them. More generally, crime films could certainly, as noted earlier,
be redefined as injustice films or social-disorder films or power
films or action films. The best reason to resist any of these labels is
suggested by the last one: Action films all involve the attempt to right
some perceived wrong through physical action, and therefore have a
great deal in common with crime films; but assimilating one category
to the other would achieve only a single purpose – underlining these
similarities, in order, for example, to explore the morality of power exchanges
in mass culture – at the cost of putting one of two enormously
popular genre labels out of business. Studies of the relations between
the two genres, perhaps overlaying one of them hypothetically on the
other, are therefore far more likely, because more useful, than a consensual
redefinition of either one in terms of the other.

In the same way, redefining the crime genre as the injustice genre,
the social-disorder genre, or the power genre would make it virtually
coextensive with what David Bordwell, Janet Staiger, and Kristin
Thompson have called “classical Hollywood cinema” – fictional narratives
in which an individual or group of people struggle to overcome
obstacles toward a clearly defined goal whose decisive success or failure
marks the end of the story. Hence Bordwell, Staiger, and Thompson
argue that the narrative and stylistic deviance of film noir, which
“no more subverts the classical film than crime fiction undercuts the
orthodox novel,” can readily be recuperated within the Hollywood
paradigm.9 Several years earlier, Steve Neale had already argued that
the leading Hollywood genres are all “modes of . . . [a] narrative system”
that “mainstream cinema produces as its commodity.”10 Broadening
the crime genre to the extent of identifying it with this entire
narrative system would indicate the degree to which Hollywood narrative
is rooted in social problems that have specifically illegal manifestations,
but at the cost of erasing the crime film’s distinctiveness
from other Hollywood narratives.

What is the point in maintaining this distinctiveness if the crime
film’s frontiers are so ragged? The answer is that the genre is not defined
by its borders but by its center, its core appeal to different viewers.
Not everyone laughs at the same things, but nearly everyone recognizes
the importance of laughter in defining comedy.11 In the same
way, though not everyone will agree what counts as a crime film, this
volume’s survey of crime subgenres suggests that most viewers for
any popular genre are responding to an appeal most economically encapsulated
by Poe’s representation of the criminal and the detective
as mirror images of each other: to turn cultural anxiety into mass entertainment.
Although this imperative may sound peculiar, it is behind
all the great Hollywood genres, which gain their power not by ignoring
or escaping from viewers’ problems but by exploring, and usually
attempting to resolve, social and psychological problems that are far
more intransigent outside the movies. The western and the war movie
romanticize problems of masculinity, violence, and national identity
by transplanting them to a mythic past or projecting them onto a geopolitical
canvas that makes them necessary for survival. The domestic
melodrama, like its television cousin, the soap opera, heroically inflates
the problems of family life and the domestic sphere in order to
make the corresponding problems of its homebound target audience
more palatable, even glamorous. Romantic comedies mine the uncertainties
of courtship for laughs; musical comedies show the triumph
of self-created performers over their doubts and inhibitions.
In each case the basic recipe for manufacturing entertainment is the
same. First, anxieties about violence or personal identity or the dignity
of home life are projected onto a typological, and thus reassuringly
familiar, generic canvas, preferably one whose mise-en-scène is comfortably
remote from the audience’s own – as in the western, which
takes place long ago and (for many) far away; or the animated cartoon,
in which unendingly homicidal conflicts are played out against
a drawn background whose two-dimensional unreality and promise of
magical transformations render it doubly reassuring; or the film noir,
which follows the mean streets of a stylishly seedy modern city.
Next, the anxieties that give the genre its cultural currency are simplified
from multifaceted dilemmas into conflictual dualities. Having
transported Dorothy Gale from the intractable problems of the Depression
to the magical land of Oz, her film transforms the sorts of
questions that bedeviled her at home (How can she keep Miss Gulch
from taking Toto away? How can she get the adults in her world to take
her seriously? Where can she find her heart’s desire?) into simpler
choices she can use to define her direction and her goal under the
guidance of the good witch Glinda and the yellow brick road that leads
her to adult surrogates who do take her seriously because she has rescued
them of her own accord. More generally, popular genres reduce
the anxieties they engage by redefining them in terms of dualities that
can be more simply resolved. The passengers in Stagecoach (1939)
cannot defeat the Indians, but the cavalry can; the problems of how
to domesticate romance without killing it are resolved in Hollywood
romantic comedies either by treating marriage as a conclusion that resolves
all problems, preferably by rescuing one of the lovers from an
unsuitable alternative match (It Happened One Night, 1934) or by giving
married couples a chance at a second courtship (The Awful Truth,
1937; The Palm Beach Story, 1942). Musicals from Top Hat (1935) to
The Band Wagon (1953) allow their singing and dancing principals to
overcome their inhibitions and express the emotions that would otherwise
leave them painfully vulnerable through performance. Action
films reduce the complexities of geopolitics to a series of showdowns
between Us and Them.

The genius of these dualities is that they not only give viewers a
strong rooting interest in a radically simplified moral conflict but also
can easily vindicate either party to the conflict by demonizing the other,
and present an unqualified triumph through decisive action. The
hero’s triumph or heroic defeat is a vindication not only of the social
order but also of the audience’s psychic health, a wish-fulfillment fantasy
that manages to celebrate both individualism and social action
even as it valorizes the movies’ tendency to convert social or psychological
stalemates, like Frank Bullitt’s conflicts with politician Walter
Chalmers, into Bullitt’smore thrilling, visually arresting, and easily resolved
car chase through the streets of San Francisco.
All the genres of popular entertainment are celebrations of individual
heroic action as a way of cutting through the complexities of moral
dilemmas; but all genres also acknowledge the limits of this heroic
stance by somehow criticizing or undermining their enabling dualities
as simplistic and individual heroism as an all-purpose recipe for problem
solving. Since, as American classics from The Gold Rush (1925) to
Citizen Kane (1941) to Do the Right Thing (1989) show, the dialectic between
the celebration and the critique of heroism is Hollywood’smost
enduring subject, it is hardly surprising that this dialectic animates
so many Hollywood genres and provides the impetus behind their historical
evolution.

In the case of the crime film, this complication is joined by another
one constitutive of the genre. Although all crime films focus on a heroic
individual, they vary widely not only in their attitudes toward that
individual (as in the criminal heroes of gangster films or the antiheroes
of film noir) but in the character positions they choose to anoint as
heroes. It is rare to see self-professed enemies of love as the heroes
of romantic comedies, or Native Americans cast as the heroes of westerns
like Cheyenne Autumn (1964) or Dances with Wolves (1990) that
question the heroism of ethnic European settlers; yet criminals are as
likely to be the heroes of crime films as detectives or avengers, and
far more likely than victims. The active heroic role is more important
than the nature of the character who fills that role.
This point is driven home with particular emphasis by Traffic
(2000), Steven Soderbergh’s film about the Mexican–American drug
trade, which dramatizes the costs of heroin addiction by following
three separate stories whose characters, though unaware of each other,
repeatedly act out the slippery relationship among the roles of
criminal, victim, and avenger. The Mexican cop (Benicio del Toro) who
goes undercover in the attempt to exploit the rivalry between two
drug cartels relies on his criminal-looking behavior to preserve his life,
and sees his best friend killed when his criminal mask slips; the California
druglord’s wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones) whose husband is arrested
turns into a criminal herself in order to survive [Fig. 79]; and
the American judge (Michael Douglas) who is named to head the Drug
Enforcement Agency has to confront his own daughter’s drug use,
which ends up turning the nation’s top drug cop into a victim and a
would-be avenger himself. Once it has established the importance of
each of these leading characters, the film is able to maintain considerable
sympathy for them through several truly distorting transformations.
In both its synoptic view of the drug trade and its awareness of the
ways the trade changes the behavior and even the moral role of everyone
it touches, Traffic might be nominated as the complete crime film.
But although its view of the heroin trade is more comprehensive than
that of most crime films – though considerably less nuanced than that
of Traffik (1989), Alistair Reid’s BBC miniseries on which it is based –
it is no more complete than that of Scarface (1932) or Fury or The Godfather.
Crime films of every stripe present what might seem to be pat
social conflicts, moral questions sharpened by their parties’ alliance
with legal right and wrong; but their attitude toward that conflict is
sharply ambivalent, if only because they function on behalf of both the
socially repressive agendas of their capitalist distributors and the escapist
fantasies of the mass audience whose patronage they seek. In
their quest to make entertainment out of taboo behavior, they treat
crime as both realistic and ritualistic, a shocking aberration and business
as usual, a vehicle of social idealism and of social critique. But
although the nature of the character who embodies the heroic role the
genre prescribes can vary from one crime film to the next even in the
same multiplex, the genre itself is best defined in terms of a single constitutive
theme: the romance of criminal behavior. This behavior is
most often incarnated in a criminal, of course, whether that criminal
is an outsized gangster like Tony Camonte in Scarface, an unwilling
killer like Al Roberts (Tom Neal) in Detour (1945), or a tragically ailing
paterfamilias like Michael Corleone in The Godfather, Part III (1990).
Even when the crime film focuses on a victim or detective or avenger,
however, those heroes become interesting, admirable, and heroic
precisely to the extent that they begin to act like criminals – unlike
the criminals themselves, who may well end up acting like victims or
moral avengers but who need only act like criminals to hold viewers’
interest. Hence the criminal, more than the victim or the avenger, illustrates
the central function of the crime film: to allow viewers to experience
the vicarious thrills of criminal behavior while leaving them
free to condemn this behavior, whoever is practicing it, as immoral.
The continued fascination of the genre is not that it tirelessly inculcates
either or both of these positions for viewers that already understand
them to a fault, but that it encourages them to experience the
contradictions among these positions and their corollaries in a way
no analysis can capture.

The crime film is therefore well named, because of its three leading
figures – the victim, the criminal, and the avenger – it is the criminal
and the kind of behavior he or she represents that are primary, and
it is only to the extent that other characters are tempted by the criminal’s
example that their films become crime films: films whose specific
cultural task is to examine the price of social repression as imposed
by the institutions of the justice system. Joe Wilson struggles
with himself over whether he should emulate the mob that tried to kill
him in Fury. Double Indemnity’s Walter Neff and BasicInstinc t’s Det.
Nick Curran are drawn into criminal behavior through their involvement
in forbidden romance. J. J. Gittes confronts his own pettiness
and greed in Chinatown, and Jeffrey Beaumont his outlaw sexuality in
Blue Velvet, through their battles with monstrous antagonists; Det. Lt.
Frank Bullitt and Alan Dershowitz confront endless criticisms of their
work; Marge Gunderson restores law and order to Fargo by her failure
to understand the dark humor her story embodies; even Hercule
Poirot, in Murder on the Orient Express, ends by covering up a crime
committed by a group of vigilantes whose cause he feels is just. Each
of these films, like the subgenres they represent, appeals to the audience’s
own antisocial tendencies by cloaking them in the glamour and
mystery of the criminal, reassuring the audience that this fantasy is
only a waking dream, and leaving behind a lingering suggestion that
the duality of right and wrong that supported it may be due for a closer
look next week.

Crime Films/Thomas Leitch/ http://www.cambridge.org

Murder on the Orient Express and the Unofficial-Detective Film


It is commonplace to observe that films noirs, whose criminals are
amateurs, differ in crucial ways from gangster films, whose criminals
are professionals. It is equally true that the different kinds
of character who are called on to solve crimes – officials of the justice
system like lawyers or the police, licensed private detectives who
make their living investigating crimes, unofficial detectives who work
neither for the justice system nor as salaried independent contractors
– emphasize problems so different that they generate distinctive
subgenres within the crime film. Films featuring officers of the justice
system are organized around problems of institutional justice (What
should society do with suspected or convicted criminals?), films featuring
private investigators around problems of professionalism and
masculinity (What sort of man makes the best detective?), and films
featuring amateur detectives around problems of knowledge (What is
the solution to the mystery?).

Throughout the century since the vogue of Sherlock Holmes, unofficial
detectives have played a leading role in the history of the detective
story. Although Edgar Allan Poe had produced the first detective
story, “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” as early as 1841, it was
the Holmes stories – A Study in Scarlet (1887), The Sign of the Four
(1890), and especially the series of short stories Arthur Conan Doyle
published in the Strand, beginning with “A Scandal in Bohemia” in
1891 – that provoked a torrent of imitators in England and America
who first made the detective story an established literary genre. The
Holmes formula pitted a heroically eccentric detective not so much
against a criminal (Holmes’s best-known criminal quarry, Professor
Moriarty, appears directly in only one of his sixty cases) as against a
baffling mystery. The detective, by dint of close observation and a
sharp analytical mind, makes a series of logical inferences that lead
him or her ahead of the official police to the criminal. To the figure of
the idiosyncratic unofficial detective, the so-called Golden Age of the
British detective story – represented between the two world wars by
the likes of Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers – added a stylized,
enclosed setting (typically an English village or country house) and a
strong emphasis on baroque, ingenious mysteries. In the work of the
Anglo-American mystery writer John Dickson Carr, these mysteries
often took the form of puzzles so intricately clued that their explanations
required footnotes referring back to earlier passages. How could
a man have been strangled in the middle of a wet tennis court by a
murderer who walked away from the scene without leaving footprints?
How could a murderer make a loaded gun leap from its wall mount
and kill someone else? How could a man threatened by his long-dead
brother be shot to death alone in a guarded room, and a third brother
be fatally shot at close range in the middle of a deserted street? In novels
like The Problem of the Wire Cage (1939), The Man Who Could Not
Shudder (1941), and The Three Coffins (1935), Carr posed one impossible
crime after another for readers alert enough to follow the chain
of evidence to solve. In America, the pseudonymous Ellery Queen
(Frederic Dannay and Manfred Lee) made the invitation to readers interested
in following the evidence explicit in a series of novels beginning
with The Roman Hat Mystery (1929), each featuring a “Challenge
to the Reader” before the closing chapters that asked readers to solve
the crime on the basis of logic and the evidence before the detective
announced his or her own solution. These novels, like those of Carr
and the American S. S. Van Dine, were often illustrated with floor plans
of the murder chamber or line drawings showing how a room could
be locked from outside by an enterprising criminal. In a series of
“Crime Dossiers” published in the 1930s, Dennis Wheatley went even
further, including such bits of physical evidence as spent matches,
locks of hair, and scraps of bloodstained draperies for readers to
comb for clues. Even after fads like footnotes, Queen’s “Challenge to
the Reader,” and the “Crime Dossiers” passed, the unofficial-detective
story remained for many years primarily a logical conundrum, like a
crossword puzzle for detectives and their brainier readers to solve.1
Throughout this period, many fictional detectives were brought to
the screen. Sherlock Holmes led the field in 1903 in the American Mu-
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 171
toscope short Sherlock Holmes Baffled. The American actor-playwright
William Gillette’s stage play Sherlock Holmes was filmed with Gillette
(1916) and again with John Barrymore (1922), and by 1923 the hawknosed
detective had appeared in some fifty brief British adaptations
of Conan Doyle’s stories. With the coming of synchronized sound,
Holmes was joined in short order by S. S. Van Dine’s Manhattan aristocrat
Philo Vance (The Canary Murder Case, 1929), Agatha Christie’s
self-important Belgian Hercule Poirot (Alibi, 1931), Stuart Palmer’s vinegary
schoolteacher Hildegarde Withers (The Penguin Pool Murder,
1932), Ellery Queen’s logician Ellery Queen (The Spanish Cape Mystery,
1935), Rex Stout’s gargantuan Nero Wolfe (Meet Nero Wolfe, 1936),
and even the teenaged detective Nancy Drew, ghostwritten under the
name Carolyn Keene (Nancy Drew, Detective, 1938).2 Most of these detectives
starred in a whole series of films during the 1930s and early
1940s; yet the formal detective story, the mystery organized as a puzzle
for the audience to compete with the detective in solving, never
achieved the eminence in Hollywood that it did on the printed page.
At the height of their popularity in bookstores, Philo Vance and Ellery
Queen were still largely restricted in their sleuthing to second features.
Even Sherlock Holmes, given new life by Basil Rathbone in Sidney
Lanfield’s elaborate 1939 production of The Hound of the Baskervilles,
soon declined to a series of wartime “programmers” directed by
Roy William Neill for Universal (e.g., Sherlock Holmes and the Secret
Weapon, 1942) before Rathbone was driven from the role by his accurate,
if overdue, fears of typecasting in 1946.

Although unofficial detectives have long been a staple of Hollywood
crime films, then, they have seldom been its most distinguished avatars.
No less an authority than Alfred Hitchcock averred to François
Truffaut that he had no appetite for detective stories “because as a
rule all the interest is concentrated in the ending.” The Master of Suspense
added, “I don’t really approve of whodunits because they’re
rather like a jigsaw or crossword puzzle. No emotion. You simply wait
to find out who committed the murder.”3 Even though many Hitchcock
films incorporate elements of the whodunit, and no filmmaker is identified
more closely, however misleadingly, with the mystery film, Hitchcock
only made one true detective story: the British talkie Murder!
(1930).

Hitchcock’s aversion to the formal detective story is best explained
by noting the ways in which the presence of a powerfully charismatic
detective hero like Sherlock Holmes and the emphasis on physical
evidence, logical inferences, and a puzzling mystery focused on the
single question “Whodunit?” give such detective stories a most un-
Hitchcockian spin. All crime films deal with violent disruptions in the
social order and threats to the safety of ordinary characters like Fury’s
Joe Wilson, whose dilemmas dramatize the audience’s own nightmares
of social and epistemological breakdown; but the dominance of
a heroic detective like Holmes goes far to counterbalance those threatening
elements by presenting a benevolent restorer of order, apparently
omniscient and omnipotent, who leaves an impression even
more powerful than the mysteries he solves. The opposition between
the mysterious crime and the heroic detective reveals a deeper polarity
at the heart of the whodunit between the entertainingly threatening
elements associated with the mystery and the reassuringly domestic
elements associated with the detective. The pleasure many readers
take in Sherlock Holmes, for example, has less to do with the tales’
incidental mysteries, which come and go from story to story, than
with the constant presence of Holmes and Dr. Watson, whose enduring
solidity provides a counterweight to the threat of mystery and violent
death.

The details of Holmes and Watson’s domestic life provide a pattern
for many unofficial detectives who follow. Holmes, who thinks of himself
as an ascetic scientist who has no interest in women, carries
traces of the aesthete as well: He plays the violin, uses cocaine, and
affects irregular hours and irregular companions. Watson, by contrast,
represents the most stolid strain of the good Englishman: loyal, courageous,
sentimental, and invincibly unimaginative. Their headquarters
at 221b Baker Street are so minutely described, from the fifteen steps
up to their landlady Mrs. Hudson’s second floor to the Persian slipper
for Holmes’s tobacco, that readers insisted the place must be real,
and sixty years after Doyle’s death, a Sherlock Holmes museum was
opened in what had heretofore been a fictional address.
All these domestic touches provide a countervailing weight to the
menace of criminal activity that predominates in most crime fiction.
The emphasis on the everyday rituals of the detective’s life allows the
stories to deal with the darkest threats imaginable – personal betrayal,
the theft of irreplaceable objects, unexplained violence, mysterious
death, the ultimate breakdown of logic and reason – within a formula
as sanitized as that of the comic strip or the weekly sitcom, the only
other surviving fictional modes that routinely depend on recycling the
same heroes from story to story. The ritual of reassurance begins with
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 173
the very presence of stock detectives protected from death or destruction
by the guarantee that they will return in the next installment,
and continues in each fetishized detail of the detectives’ domestic
lives that anchors the series against the vicissitudes of mystery, crime,
or history itself. So complete is the emphasis on the unchanging pole
of detectives’ cozy households, in fact, that even today mystery stories
solved by unofficial detectives are often labeled by their publishers
as “cozies,” often over the protests of their own authors.
The plots of these stories, whose emphasis on the class distinction
within a stable, enclosed society in which everyone knows everyone
else has made the formula a particular favorite among British authors,
are often as cozy as their heroes’ lives. The discovery of a beheaded
corpse that cannot be identified would be a grisly shock in real life;
yet the tone of Dorothy L. Sayers’s first novel, Whose Body? (1923), is
so facetiously literate that the headless corpse becomes an abstract,
cerebral puzzle, the opening move in a game of deception that will end
in the detective’s vanquishing the criminal by sheer force of intellect
and personality. The light, detached, often playful tone of Golden Age
British writers from E. C. Bentley to Georgette Heyer encourages readers
to follow the characters’ lead in treating even the most outré circumstances
as bloodless clues. Crime is no longer a danger to individuals
and an affront to society, but the pretext for an entertainingly
recondite mystery that can be solved by readers willing to suspend
their emotional commitments to the characters completely enough to
evaluate each of them clinically as possible suspects. Because the unofficial
detective has by definition no ties to the justice system,4 the
problems of legal justice can be waived, and criminals confronted with
the truth of their broken alibis and unsuccessful red herrings considerately
break down and confess, or even more obligingly commit suicide,
sparing the state the expense and the ethical questions a trial
might entail. This freedom from the more disturbing problems of menacing
violence and the more problematic issues of institutional justice
allows unofficial detective stories from The Thin Man (book and film,
1934) to Young Sherlock Holmes (film and novelization, 1985) to adopt
an optimistic, triumphalist, often broadly comic tone, with the detective’s
star power guaranteeing a happy ending.

Nowhere is the whodunit’s tendency to smooth the rough edges of the
crime story more obvious than in Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film version of
Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express. Christie’s novel, first
published in 1933 as Murder in the Calais Coach, had represented a
turning point in the career of her hero, Hercule Poirot, who, after his
retirement from the Belgian police, had enjoyed a career as a private
detective in novels from The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920) to Thirteen
at Dinner (first published in Britain as Lord Edgware Dies, 1933).
Accompanied by his endearingly dense Watson figure, Capt. Arthur
Hastings, Poirot had repeatedly come out of retirement from his second
career to solve a wide variety of cases. Murder on the Orient Express,
however, finds him returning from a trip to the Mideast without
Hastings and turning his back on a paying client by refusing the American
businessman Samuel Ratchett’s commission to find out who has
been sending him threatening letters. When Ratchett is stabbed to
death in his berth on the exclusive trans-European train, Poirot is
urged to take charge of the investigation until the authorities arrive.
Lumet came to the film from a background of dramas that explored
the weight of the past and of social pressures on individual behavior.
His first film, the one-set drama 12 Angry Men (1957), plumbed the dynamics
of a jury whose members could not agree on a verdict in an
apparently routine case. Long Day’s Journey into Night (1962) and The
Pawnbroker (1965) presented characters mired in long-standing family
struggles or Holocaust memories they could not escape. The caper
film The Anderson Tapes (1971) took a deterministic view of a newly
formed gang’s attempt to loot a posh Manhattan apartment building
even as its members were under surveillance by various government
agencies. The police hero of Serpico (1973) was an honest New York
cop battling corruption in his department as he was transferred from
one hostile precinct to the next. Lumet, however, seemed to approach
Murder on the Orient Express as a holiday from the agonizing ethical
dilemmas of his earlier films, an excursion preceding the close analysis
of morally flawed pillars of the justice system that would become
his hallmark in such later films as Prince of the City (1981), The Verdict
(1982), Q & A (1990), Guilty as Sin (1993), and Night Falls on Manhattan
(1997). Beginning with its art-deco credits, Murder on the Orient Express
announces itself as a vacation from the strenuous moral analysis
of other crime films – a respite marked by the persistent emphasis of
the reassuring pole of domesticity over the threatening pole of mystery
and violent death.5

The film might be taken as a textbook example of Hitchcock’s strictures
against the screen whodunit. Hitchcock had complained that
everything that happens in a whodunit is reducible to a mere prologue
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 175
to its climactic revelation of guilt. This revelation in Christie’s novel is
a high point of mystery’s Golden Age. Realizing that the presence of
so many characters connected with the unsolved kidnapping of little
Daisy Armstrong five years earlier cannot possibly be coincidental,
Poirot declares that the twelve suspects who have shared the fatal
coach with him and Ratchett are all guilty (or, more precisely, that
only one of the thirteen possible suspects is innocent): They have
constituted themselves a jury to punish a crime the justice system
could not. The novel is therefore powerfully inventive in a peculiarly
limited way. It is not notable for an extraordinarily unified or resonant
plot like Oedipus the King, or for any special inventiveness in the way
of incident, or even for ingenuity on the part of its criminal plotters.
The cleverness is Christie’s success in devising a rationale for her
mystery that, as G. K. Chesterton had urged, could be explained in a
few sentences and grasped in a moment. Forty years before Hollywood
would become notorious as the town where movies were outlined
on luncheon napkins, Christie had perfected the high-concept
mystery. Novel after novel that she published between 1920 and 1940
turned out to be organized around a single brilliant device for concealing,
then revealing, the criminal pattern; but with the exception of The
Murder of Roger Ackroyd (1926), whose narrator was unmasked as the
murderer, none of her concepts was more simple or successful than
the secret of Murder on the Orient Express.
The film follows Christie’s strategy of reducing the murder of Ratchett
(Richard Widmark) to the status of an intellectual game by revealing
early on that he was actually Cassetti, the criminal mastermind
behind Daisy Armstrong’s kidnapping and murder, marking him as a
victim not worth mourning – and incidentally gesturing slyly at the
checkered persona of Widmark, who had made his reputation by playing
a series of stylishly brutal hoodlums in films from Kiss of Death
(1947), his spectacular debut, to Pickup on South Street (1953). It departs
from Christie, however, in reframing her intellectual puzzle in
more overtly visual, and ultimately sociocultural, terms.
The very nature of Christie’s novel involves the containment of potentially
disturbing threats in an enclosed space. Whereas a filmmaker
like Elia Kazan might have opened the story’s setting beyond the single
railway coach, and a noir stylist like Robert Siodmak or Jules Dassin
might have emphasized the claustrophobic confines of the space,
Lumet’s approach is consistently decorative. He begins with a gauzy
prologue, a montage showing the 1930 kidnapping of little Daisy Arm-
strong (an event to which Christie’s novel only alludes), and proceeds
to a sumptuously designed opening of the present-day story five years
later, set mostly in the spacious, atmospheric train station at Istanbul
[Fig. 38]. The moments leading up to the Orient Express’s departure
for Europe are crammed especially full of exotic detail, as Lumet provides
passersby in turbans, burnouses, fezzes, yarmulkes, and Chinese
dress to mingle briefly with the stars. From the moment the train
pulls out of the station, however, the film becomes an exercise in oneset
cinema. Except for the exterior shots showing the train stuck in a
picturesque snowbank that makes it impossible for the investigating
authorities to reach it, every scene is structurally the same scene –
Poirot interrogating the suspects in Ratchett’s murder in a series of
midshots and close-ups – set against the same paneled interiors.
Lumet and his Oscar-nominated collaborators, production designer
and costumer Tony Walton and cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth,
deal with their opulent but static set by reframing the story in crucial
new ways. Lumet is much less interested in visual space as such than,
say, Orson Welles; instead he focuses on two centers of visual interest:
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 177
38. Murder on the Orient Express: The evocative sequence leading up to the
train’s departure. (Martin Balsam, Albert Finney)
the stars’ meticulously detailed costumes and their famous faces.
From starchy tweeds to flashy furs, the screen is filled with a parade
of extravagant period costumes; but it is the stars themselves who
consistently command attention [Fig. 39]. Following the lead of John
Huston’s The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), which had dressed up
its mystery by putting well-known stars into impenetrably heavy disguise
for a teasing finale, Murder on the Orient Express assaults its audience
from almost the beginning with A-list star power. Many of its
stars – Vanessa Redgrave as unassuming Mary Debenham, Sean Connery
as bluff Colonel Arbuthnot, Wendy Hiller as ugly old Princess Dragomiroff,
Lauren Bacall as fur-draped American tourist Harriet Hubbard,
Michael York and Jacqueline Bisset as the Count and Countess
Andrenyi – are given showy entrance tableaux. Ingrid Bergman as missionary
Greta Ohlsson and John Gielgud as Ratchett’s butler, Beddoes,
are allowed star turns that won them British Film Academy awards
for their performances. Many of the roles are reshaped for, or by, their
performers. In an Oscar-winning turn, Bergman makes Christie’s colorless
Ohlsson a missionary who, since being “born backwards,” has
spent her life “teaching little brown babies more backwards than myself.”
Mrs. Hubbard is remade from a quietly rambling American dowager
to an obnoxious loudmouth to suit the aggressive talents of Bacall.
Anthony Perkins as Hector MacQueen, Ratchett’s secretary, is playing
a thinly disguised version of his indelible screen persona, Norman
Bates.

This emphasis on star power goes far beyond visually showcasing
the film’s cast. By shifting attention from the characters to the stars
who play them, the film displaces the whodunit’s dualistic approach
to character (everyone seems smilingly innocent, but since one person
must be a dissembling murderer, everyone is suspect) onto a
more reassuring dichotomy between actor and role. The film’s advertising
posters exploited this dichotomy even before the audience arrived
in the theater by asking the question, “Can Ingrid Bergman commit
murder?” When Colonel Arbuthnot, stung by Poirot’s suspicions
of such a “woman” as Mary Debenham, retorts witheringly, “Miss Debenham
is not a woman – she’s a lady,” the implied question that arises
is not whether Miss Debenham is really a lady, but whether a lady can
really commit murder. By confounding its characters with the actors
and actresses who play them, the film consistently shifts questions of
innocence and guilt from personal, psychological terms to the more
broadly cultural, visually accessible terms of social class, public persona,
and celebrity framed by its status as star vehicle.6
This reframing of the story’s mystery by the terms of the film’s production
is echoed by its use of its period setting. Christie’s novel – obviously
inspired by the 1932 kidnapping of the baby of Charles Lindbergh,
the aviator whose 1927 solo flight over the Atlantic had made
him a hero – is set, like the film, in the early 1930s. Whereas Christie
treats her setting as unobtrusively contemporary, however, the film
emphasizes what has now become its remote historical period in a
thousand ways, through costumes, hairdos, interior decor, and quaint
vanished customs. The very presence of the anachronistic butler
played by the iconic Shakespearean Gielgud frames the film’s era
as reassuringly as the repeated shots of the locomotive’s belching
smokestack. To the novel’s original exoticism of place and class reassuringly
remote from those of its middle-class target audience, the
film thus adds the nostalgic framing of a remote historical period.
Even the film’s indirect allusions to the fatal Lindbergh kidnapping,
separated from its audience by forty years and a murder conviction,
become nostalgic in this context. This consistently archaeological
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 179
39. Murder on the Orient Express: Stars as scenery. (Jean-Pierre Cassel, Anthony
Perkins, Vanessa Redgrave, Sean Connery, Ingrid Bergman, George Coulouris,
Albert Finney, Rachel Roberts, Wendy Hiller, Colin Blakely, Michael
York, Jacqueline Bisset, Lauren Bacall, Martin Balsam)
handling of the material broadens what might have seemed the limited
narrative interest of Christie’s whodunit, in which Poirot’s round
of interviews with the suspects is merely a prelude to his revelation
of who killed Ratchett, by making every knickknack, every cigarette
butt, every motive and gesture, every telltale scrap of evidence potentially
important not only as a clue to Ratchett’s murder but as a
window on a painstakingly re-created world.

The result of this exotic, visually decorative reframing of the mystery
is that the story’s denouement, which Christie had compressed
into a few revelatory sentences, now sprawls to nearly half an hour
in a sequence that dissipates the elegant central concept that makes
Christie’s novel a classic whodunit in favor of Poirot’s comprehensive
review of the often confusing visual evidence, dozens of brief flashbacks
showing clues the audience may have missed, and a longer
flashback of Ratchett’s murder presumably intended to satisfy 1970s
viewers’ greater appetite for violence. Despite its box-office success,
the film did not revive the formula of the classic whodunit; instead,
it inaugurated a new cycle of star-studded period whodunits, often
based on Christie’s novels (Death on the Nile, 1978; The Mirror Crack’d,
1980; Evil Under the Sun, 1982; Appointment with Death, 1988), in which
cadres of stars competed for the chance to upstage Christie’s highconcept
plots. In a final triumph of cultural embalming over the brainteasing
pleasures of the great whodunit series, these films, all of
whose settings were originally contemporary to their author and their
initial reading audiences, were invariably set in an upper-class past,
a Never-Never Land that might as well have been called the Agatha
Christie period [Fig. 40].
Though these films might seem to bear out Hitchcock’s criticism of
the puzzle mystery – they typically displace the intellectual concepts
(the narrator is the killer, all the suspects are in it together) with which
Golden Age writers domesticate their murderous plots in favor of a
continuous flow of eye-catching details (period trappings, exotic settings,
noteworthy casting choices) that domesticate the story’s threatening
elements still further – many of Hitchcock’s own films suggest
another approach to the mystery plot. Mystery films like Blackmail
(1929), Rebecca (1940), Spellbound (1945), and Rear Window (1954) redefine
the balance between the normal life of the detective hero and
the crimes that interrupt it by the simple expedient of making the hero
an unwilling, personally involved detective. The difference is not be-
tween unofficial and official detectives but between habitual unofficial
detectives like Hercule Poirot and Nancy Drew and one-time detectives
like Richard Hannay (Robert Donat), the reluctant hero of The 39
Steps (1935).
If the presence and power of a continuing unofficial detective push
the mystery in the direction of the television sitcom, substituting
a one-time unofficial detective reverses that pattern, pushing the
mystery away from a domestic routine and toward melodrama and
suspense. Because there is no guarantee that the hero or heroine will
survive the film, the potential consequences of investigation become
much more deadly. Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten) is betrayed by his
oldest friend in The Third Man (1949). Audio technician Jack Terri
(John Travolta) hears the woman he loves being killed in Blow Out
(1981). The investigator heroes of Mr. Arkadin (aka Confidential Report,
1955), Don’t Look Now (1973), and The Parallax View (1974) are killed,
along with virtually the entire cast of And Then ThereWere None (1945;
remade twice as Ten Little Indians, 1966, 1975). In the most nihilistic
twist of all, the two assassins of Don Siegel’s The Killers (1964), who
also serve as investigators into the past of the man they have just
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 181
40. Death on the Nile: Different stars, but the same shot – a return to the
Agatha Christie period. (Simon MacCorkindale, Mia Farrow, Jack Warden, Maggie
Smith, Bette Davis, Jon Finch, Olivia Hussey, George Kennedy, I. S. Johar)
murdered, are gunned down at the end of the film, leaving most of
the main characters dead. Even when such films have happy endings,
their resolutions are inevitably more tentative than the endings that
Holmes and Poirot promised from the beginning. When the protagonists
of Klute (1971), Body Double (1984), and The Vanishing (1993) survive
the threatening criminals in their films, their survival is hard-won,
because they could just as easily have been killed.7

Whether or not one-time detectives are killed or suffer lasting harm,
the constant threat of danger gives their adventures a far less comic
and optimistic tone than the adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Because
the hero is often forced to investigate the case by his or her own connection
to it, the investigation is marked by intimate emotional involvement
rather than aloof intellectual detachment. The mystery is
not a puzzle to be solved or a game to be played but a menace to the
detective and his or her loved ones, and the casting of suspicion on
one suspect after another calls into question the detective’s previous,
often long-standing relations with them all. Suspicion thus functions
not as an intellectual tease for a detective who has no personal stake
in which of a number of interchangeable suspects is guilty, but as an
expression of paranoia about which apparent friend is really a liar, a
betrayer, or a killer.

Instead of balancing the remote menace of crime against the detective’s
cozy domestic life, these films undermine any possibility of
domestic stability by tainting the domestic sphere with criminal elements.
Because the key witness in Klute is a threatened prostitute
whose household is a savage parody of the missing suburban husband’s
idyllic domestic circle, the investigation of her sordid life-style
turns into a searching critique of the suburban verities to which her
world was first opposed. Unlike whodunits like Sayers’s Gaudy Night
(book 1935; TV film 1987), which valorize the social and intellectual
snobbery of a closed collegiate circle by showing the calamitous results
of its tainting by a malicious interloper, mystery stories shorn
of larger-than-life continuing detectives and the domestic values they
represent accommodate a much more critical view of the social establishment.
Hence the unmarried, housebound photographer in Rear
Window, becoming obsessed with a neighbor who may have killed his
wife, may be rationalizing his own fears of marriage; and the rival
newspaper reporters chasing down leads to the serial killer in While
the City Sleeps (1956) are jackals willing to sacrifice anything, including
the women they love, for a crack at a corner office and another few
dollars a week.

Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt (1943) turns the conventions of the
unofficial detective story to typically subversive ends. The story revolves
around the visit of Charles Spencer Oakley (Joseph Cotten) to
his sister’s family in cozy Santa Rosa, California. Both his sister, Emma
Newton (Patricia Collinge), and his niece and namesake, Charlotte,
called “Charlie” (Teresa Wright), adore him, but the film begins to
drop increasingly emphatic hints that there is something wrong with
Uncle Charlie, until his niece’s trip to the newspaper file in the local
library reveals the truth about him: He has made his money as the
“‘Merry-Widow’ murderer,” a man who has romanced, robbed, and
murdered a series of wealthy widows.

Although Charlie functions as the unofficial detective of Shadow of
a Doubt, piecing together clues to her uncle’s criminal past, Charlie’s
lack of Poirot’s semiofficial status produces two vital differences from
whodunits like Murder on the Orient Express. Even though the police
are uncertain whether the Merry Widow murderer is Uncle Charlie or
another man they are pursuing in New England, Charlie’s story is not
really a whodunit, since she has access to damningly conclusive evidence
against her uncle that the police do not. Even before the film
makes it clear that Uncle Charlie is the killer they seek, the question
it poses is not “Whodunit?” but “What happened?” or “What’s the
matter with him?” The only character in the film to fall under suspicion
of wrongdoing is Uncle Charlie; the question is simply whether
those suspicions are justified, and what he has done to justify them.
The other difference is even more crucial. It is only the first half of
Shadow of a Doubt that is a mystery story. Once Charlie confirms her
suspicions about her uncle, the story shifts gears from puzzle to suspense
story, as Charlie’s panicky attempts to get her uncle to leave
Santa Rosa reveal her struggles in coming to terms with the man the
film has gone to extraordinary lengths to set up as her double. How
can Charlie turn on her uncle without denying part of herself? Is her
attempt to shield her mother from unpleasant publicity really an attempt
to disavow her own closeness to the uncle she cannot accept
any longer? How can she ever return to the sheltering safety of Santa
Rosa now that Uncle Charlie has invited her to see the world as “a foul
sty” and forced on her a nightmarish complicity with his guilt? Have
the unwholesome secrets she has shared with him poisoned her life
forever, as they would presumably poison those of the victims of incest
whom her nightmarish domestic dilemma (“don’t tell Mom”) constantly
evokes? These uncomfortable questions about the relation between
the detective and the criminal, which are at the heart of Shadow
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 183
of a Doubt, are all beside the point for Sherlock Holmes, who never
needs to confront the nature of his often surprisingly intimate relations
with criminals.

Forty years after Hitchcock’s microscope revealed small-town America’s
fascination with the charismatic criminal hero it could survive
only by destroying, David Lynch returned to the dark side of the suburbs
with Blue Velvet (1986), in which Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle Mac-
Lachlan), called home from college by his father’s heart attack, discovers
the evil beneath the smiling surface of idyllic Lumberton, North
Carolina, where, according to a WOOD radio announcer, “people really
know how much wood a woodchuck chucks.” Writer-director Lynch
was already well-known for two cult favorites, the surrealistic shocker
Eraserhead (1977) and the scattershot science-fiction epic Dune
(1984), as well as for The Elephant Man (1980), which used its pitiably
deformed hero as a lightning-rod for Victorian hypocrisy.

If Murder on the Orient Express marks its director’s attempt to frame
a murder mystery in the most comfortably domestic terms possible
by embalming its characters in exotic period detail, in the faces of
well-known stars, and in a reassuringly remote historical past, Blue
Velvet marks its director’s most sustained attempt to emphasize the
polarity between the domestic and threatening terms in which such
stories can be framed. The film’s rigorous stylistic duality established
Lynch’s territory once and for all as the crossroads between the hyperreal
and the surreal, the intensely ordinary world and the realm
of nightmare. He would return to this familiar territory in the demented
road film Wild at Heart (1990), the Chinese boxes Lost Highway
(1997) and Mulholland Drive (2001), and especially the groundbreaking
television series Twin Peaks (1990–1). All these projects confirmed
Lynch’s most recognizable trademarks as an extreme visual and auditory
stylization that weighted every moment of his stories with potential
meaning and menace, a motivic counterpoint between florid
melodrama and the apparently normal quirks of ordinary people, and
the repetition of banal images or dialogue tags to a frighteningly incantatory
point (as in Blue Velvet’s harrowing use of the Roy Orbison song
“In Dreams” and its repeated, prophetic line of dialogue, “It’s a strange
world”). To Murder on the Orient Express’s use of violent death as an
extraordinary event that temporarily disrupts the calm order of the
everyday world and provokes a teasing mystery the detective must
solve, Blue Velvet adds the sense of mortality as a condition that links
aggressor, victim, and detective in an unholy and disturbing economy
of desire. Death is everywhere in Lynch’s film, not because so many
people die, but because so many of them are blasted by the mortal
flaws that reduce them to a kind of death-in-life.
The film begins a world away from this dark vision, with cinematographer
Frederick Elmes’s montage of overexposed, deeply saturated
color shots designed to showcase the picture-postcard beauties
of Lumberton. As Bobby Vinton’s rendition of “Blue Velvet” substitutes
for the diegetic sound proper to the images, Lynch cuts from a
brilliant blue sky against which red roses are glowing to a fire engine
passing down the street, one firefighter waving in dreamlike slow motion,
to a second close-up of flowers and then to a crossing guard before
settling on a neat white frame house whose owner, Tom Beaumont
(Jack Harvey), is watering in the backyard with a garden hose.
Everything is perfect – until an unnoticed kink in the hose keeps Mr.
Beaumont from pulling it closer, and he claps his hand to his neck with
a silent cry and falls to the ground. As his nerveless hand continues
to clutch the hose, Lynch adds two macabre touches: a dog runs up
and drinks from the fountain of water, and an impossibly close trackin
to the grass reveals, courtesy of Elmes and sound designer Alan
Splet, the suddenly overwhelming sights and sounds of myriad insects
bustling and chomping in the alarmingly active world beneath
Mr. Beaumont.

Having already undermined perfect Lumberton as an idealized
world that maintains its pristine suburban image by denying the unpleasant
realities that coexist within its orbit, Lynch is ready to immerse
Mr. Beaumont’s son, Jeffrey, in the other world that opens before
him when he finds a severed ear crawling with ants in a vacant
lot near his home. Taking his gruesome discovery to his neighbor, Det.
John Williams (George Dickerson), he finds that although Williams
refuses to discuss the ear with him, his less circumspect daughter,
Sandy (Laura Dern), is happy to link it to a case involving Dorothy Vallens
(Isabella Rossellini), a nightclub singer who lives on the other
side of the tracks on Lumberton’s notorious Lincoln Street. When Jeffrey,
hungry for “knowledge and experience,” hatches a plan to break
into Dorothy’s apartment, Sandy demurs, but Jeffrey argues that they
will be protected by their spotless reputations. Dorothy’s languidly
erotic rendition of “Blue Velvet” in the Slow Club, where she performs
as “the Blue Lady,” does indeed seem to mark her as poles apart from
Jeffrey and Sandy, who have gone to watch her before carrying out
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 185
their plan; yet the heart of Blue Velvet is the relationship that develops
between Jeffrey and Dorothy, a relationship that begins even as Jeffrey
is watching her perform in the Slow Club. “I don’t know if you’re a detective
or a pervert,” Sandy says to Jeffrey as she drops him outside
Dorothy’s place at the Deep River Apartments. Jeffrey smirks: “That’s
for me to know and you to find out.” The choices between these two
alternatives are hopelessly muddled once Dorothy discovers Jeffrey
in her closet [Fig. 41] – where he has overheard a phone call she took
from Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper) and Don, later revealed as her kidnapped
husband – forces him at knifepoint to strip, then quickly returns
him to her closet when Frank arrives to torment her in ways that
go far to explain her own alternately seductive and masochistic behavior
toward Jeffrey. Even after Frank has left, Jeffrey’s terror continues
when Dorothy rejects his tenderness – and his solicitous concern for
the husband and son who are shown in a photograph she keeps hidden
under her sofa – and begs him to hit her.
Jeffrey’s shockingly perverse sexual initiation destroys his peace of
mind because it prevents him from thinking of himself as simply one
of the good guys. The more completely Angelo Badalamenti’s disturbing
musical arrangements undermine the normal associations of the
visuals (as Jeffrey is mounting the dark stairs to Dorothy’s apartment
for a later rendezvous, a lighthearted Bobby Vinton is reprising “Blue
Velvet”) or ironically intensify them (as in the heavenly choirs that repeatedly
accompany Jeffrey’s romantic scenes with Sandy), the more
completely Jeffrey loses his sense of his own innocent identity. He cannot
go to Det. Williams with his suspicions that Frank has kidnapped
Dorothy’s husband and son in order to make her his sex slave because
he does not want to get Sandy (or himself) in trouble; he tells Sandy
that his world is shattered by the very existence of people like Frank;
and at the same time, though he is ever more closely to drawn to
Sandy, he cannot help returning to the fascinating and pitiable Dorothy.
Swearing that he wants only to help her, Jeffrey is soon seduced
anyway.

Sandy and Dorothy represent opposed and incompatible aspects of
Jeffrey’s sexual desire. Her blond hair, soft lighting, and pastel outfits
mark Sandy, who “both makes possible Jeffrey’s quasi-incestuous relationship
with Dorothy . . . and provides a safe alternative to it,”8 as
conventionally attractive, Jeffrey’s future suburban helpmeet, whose
appropriate musical accompaniment is teen ballads, the film’s subdued
theme music (which returns only during two scenes in which
she and Jeffrey are walking the streets of Lumberton together), or
weirdly uplifting liturgical music. When Sandy tells Jeffrey of a dream
in which a dark, loveless world was brightened by the arrival of thousands
of robins bearing “this blinding light of love,” her recitation
is accompanied by organ music from the church whose stainedglass
windows are framed in romantic soft focus behind her. Dorothy,
by contrast, is associated exclusively with forbidden sexuality. She
dresses entirely in black, red, or dark blue; her face, with its heavy
coating of rouge and lipstick, is as fetishized as her wardrobe, especially
in the extreme close-ups that repeatedly show her parted lips;
her deep, mournful voice bespeaks sex as a painful ritual to be suffered,
not consecrated in a church. No one would ever describe Dorothy,
as Jeffrey describes Sandy, as “a neat girl” with whom it would
be a pleasure to fall in love; she is rather the sex partner Jeffrey can
neither acknowledge nor resist.

The price of Jeffrey’s seduction becomes horrifyingly clear when
Frank catches him leaving Dorothy’s apartment and, in the film’s most
hallucinatory sequence, takes him for a joy ride with Dorothy and several
more willing friends, gloating to him, “You’re like me,” threatening
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 187
41. Blue Velvet: Jeffrey (Kyle MacLachlan) about to come out of the closet at
knifepoint.

to kill him if he tries to “be a good neighbor to her,” and concluding:
“If you get a love letter from me, you’re fucked forever!” Smearing lipstick
on his own face, Frank kisses Jeffrey, gags him with the strip of
blue velvet, and beats him unconscious. What makes this sequence
so frightening is not only Frank’s brutality but the way he persistently
breaks down the psychosexual distinctions on which Jeffrey’s sense
of himself and his world depends. Frank, during his earlier visit to Dorothy,
had bridled when she called him “Baby,” insisting on being called
“Daddy”; yet moments later he was telling “Mommy” that “Baby wants
to fuck,” conflating in himself the roles of father and son, child and
adult, offspring and sex partner. In treating Jeffrey like Dorothy, Frank
is attacking the even more fundamental distinction between men and
women and revealing the terrifyingly unlimited aggression that stirs
his sexual appetite. As he declares exultantly to his drug supplier, Ben
(a bravura turn by Dean Stockwell), “I’ll fuck anything that moves!”
Face to face with the identifications with both Frank and Dorothy that
have been forced on him, Jeffrey spirals down into chaos. The moral
side of Jeffrey’s confusion surfaces when he goes to report his evidence
of Frank’s drug murders to Det. Williams and recognizes the
officer’s partner, Det. Tom Gordon (Fred Pickler), as Frank’s accomplice.
Can Jeffrey trust Williams himself, who has always been studiously
noncommittal in his reactions, and who wears a holstered gun
even around his home? The complementary perceptual side of Jeffrey’s
confusion is illustrated at key points in the film by the recurrent
visual image of a flickering candle (associated with Frank’s tag line,
“Now it’s night”), and the roaring sound associated first with the insects
under Mr. Beaumont’s back and later with Don Vallens’s severed
ear.

The ultimate sign of this chaos, and the sequence in which all the
different aspects of Jeffrey’s life he has struggled to keep separate collapse
into one another, comes when Jeffrey and Sandy leave a party
at a friend’s house and realize they are being followed by another car.
The driver who has been sounding his horn and ramming Jeffrey’s
convertible is not, however, Frank but Mike (Ken Stovitz), Sandy’s aggrieved
boyfriend, who simply wants to beat Jeffrey up for stealing his
girl. The collision between Frank’s monstrous evil and Mike’s smalltown
intrigue becomes complete when Mike catches sight of Dorothy
stumbling nude from around the corner of Jeffrey’s house and says in
stupefaction, “Is that your mother?” Driving off in confusion, he leaves
Jeffrey and Sandy to deal with Dorothy, who throws herself into Jeffrey’s
arms and calls out to him in despair as “my secret love.” The
power of this sequence depends not only on its horrifyingly funny
sense of anticlimax – Jeffrey is in danger not of being unmanned and
killed by a dangerous psychotic, but only of being punched out by a
high-school rival, and the sequence ends with Sandy, stung by the revelation
of Jeffrey’s relationship with Dorothy, slapping Jeffrey’s face –
but on its vertiginous sense of reframing. It is reassuring to find that
Jeffrey is not in real danger, but it would have been reassuring in its
own way to have the car chase framed by Jeffrey’s knowledge of Frank
and the generic expectations that knowledge would arouse. What is
far more disturbing is the presence of blankly contradictory contextual
frames that forestall the audience’s wish to know how they are
to interpret each threat and revelation.

The film’s climactic scene, in which Jeffrey returns to Dorothy’s
apartment to find both her husband and Frank’s partner-in-crime, Det.
Gordon, dead moments before Frank arrives on the scene, forces Jeffrey
to kill Frank in self-defense, completing his descent from Lumberton’s
overidealized suburban utopia to the acceptance of his own
mortality, his ability to kill the man who was about to kill him. Having
accepted his own dark side by killing Frank and acknowledging to
Sandy his desire for Dorothy, Jeffrey is ready for the impossibly happy
ending the film provides. A brightly lit scene back at the Beaumonts’
house shows Tom Beaumont, miraculously recovered, barbecuing in
the backyard with Det. Williams as their wives chat in the living room
and Jeffrey and Sandy scrutinize a robin, presumably a fulfillment of
Sandy’s prophetic dream of light and love, perched on the kitchen
window. But the robin’s meal, a large insect still protruding from its
mouth, is a reminder that even the most dreamlike landscapes are still
stippled with ugliness and death. This reminder is complemented by
the closing montage that complements its opening framing sequence:
another slow-motion shot of the passing fire engine, another close-up
of red roses against a blue sky, and finally a slow-motion shot of Dorothy’s
freed son, Donny, never before seen in the film, running playfully
to his mother as her mournful voice is heard singing the closing
line to the title song: “And I still can see blue velvet through my tears.”
Just as Jeffrey’s attempt to keep his position as amateur sleuth distinct
from the part of him that responded to the other side of the tracks
leads inevitably to his acknowledgment of the dark desires he shared
Murder on the Orient Express, Blue Velvet, and Unofficial-Detective Film 189
with Frank Booth, the film ends by disclosing that the dark secret at
the heart of Dorothy’s Deep River apartment is a woman moved by
courage, nobility, and maternal love.

The different terms in which they frame their mysteries put Blue Velvet
worlds apart from Murder on the Orient Express. Lumet’s film maintains
a strict opposition between detective and criminals; Lynch’s
everywhere announces their interpenetration. Lumet emphasizes specific
details of mise-en-scène over Christie’s high concept; Lynch is so
interested in the thematic import of his dualities that he neglects the
most elementary plot points. He never explains, for example, why Jeffrey
feels drawn to return to the climactic scene in Dorothy’s absence,
why the criminals had brought her kidnapped husband back, how Don
Vallens and Gordon had gotten killed, how Dorothy was able to escape
to appear at the Beaumonts’ house, or why Frank returned in disguise
to the apartment. More generally, Lynch offers no explanation for
Frank’s sexual pathology, and none for Dorothy’s other than her corruption
by Frank’s demands, or the bug-eating robin’s implication that
Frank’s brand of sexual terrorism is as natural as Jeffrey’s tenderness.
Murder on the Orient Express is driven by the visual possibilities of
clues to the characters’ cultural status, Blue Velvet by a nightmare logic
uninterested in clues except as triggers of nightmare associations
[Fig. 42].
Still, these films are linked by more than their detective figures, because
the nature of detection inevitably reveals the intimacy between
transgressors and avengers. Since Blue Velvet gives Jeffrey, like Shadow
of a Doubt’s young Charlie Newton, an evil double he can neither
acknowledge nor deny but only destroy, the film raises the question
of whether Jeffrey’s psychosexual nightmare, like Charlie’s, has been
a phenomenally aberrant experience or simply a parable for the normal
rite of passage to sexual maturity. When Charlie is reassured by
Jack Graham (Macdonald Carey), the police-detective-turned-suitor
who is Charlie’s safe alternative to Uncle Charlie, in the film’s celebrated
last line – that the world is “not quite as bad as that, but sometimes
it needs a lot of watching. It seems to go crazy every now and then,
like your Uncle Charlie” – is he suggesting that Uncle Charlie is a freak
of nature, a historical aberration like the contemporaneous Adolf Hitler,
or as natural a part of the order of things as Charlie and Graham?
It is a deeply subversive question for both the adult Charlie and the
audience.

Even Murder on the Orient Express ends by revealing the links between
detectives and criminals. Ratchett, the threatened victim who
first solicits Poirot’s help, is really a criminal himself. The innocent
suspects from whom Poirot must pick the criminal are all guilty. Their
shared guilt impeaches that order as criminal throughout. The detective
deputized to identify the criminal for the absent authorities instead
agrees to let them go, since the friend who authorized his investigation
agrees with him that the victim, not the killers, is the true
criminal. Even the film’s concluding tableau, a ritual series of toasts
among the passengers who have succeeded in killing Ratchett, celebrates
homicide rather than detection as the therapeutic restorer of
the social order thrown into chaos by the kidnapping of Daisy Armstrong.
Whether as spectacularly as Blue Velvet or as unobtrusively as
Murder on the Orient Express, the unofficial detective film, however resolutely
it separates the detective from the criminal, cannot help showing
how each lives in the other.

Crime Films/Thomas Leitch/ http://www.cambridge.org