- For some reason, the religiosity of the movie never registered for me before. I think this is a because religion is shown to be just another con early in the film in the aftermath of the circus being rousted by the cops. The religious element that gets taken seriously late in the film is no good for anyone, least of all our hero, Stanton Carlisle. When he starts acting like he's a preacher rather than a con artist, that's when the fall comes. Also, I never really thought of the name "Lilith Ritter" in a religious context before, but she precipitates The Fall. It's probably a stretch to call Carlisle another Adam, a la the Frankenstein monster, though.
I did not know that William Lindsay Gresham, author of the novel, had a wife who left him for C. S. Lewis. It makes me wonder a bit about whether Stanton Carlisle is meant as a kind of stand in for Lewis. Given Lewis's dubious conversion to Christianity after professing atheism early in his life, I can't help but see Carlisle as the same brand of hypocrite--at least in Gresham's mind.(edit: this speculation turns out to be groundless, per my friend Lee Price. See the comments).- Nightmare Alley is a conflation of a bunch of different film noir idioms. It's specifically at the intersection of the psychiatric noir, the epistemological noir, and the alcoholic noir. This intersection makes it a perfect film for film series where slots are limited, because it can sub for, say, The Lost Weekend or Spellbound.
- Stanton Carlisle doesn't appear to like women very much. Oh, he uses them just as he uses everyone else in the movie, but there doesn't seem to be any sexual attraction to them. Both Edmund Goulding, the director, and Tyrone Power were bisexual, and I spent part of this viewing trying to spot whether or not Nightmare Alley is coded queer. I can't decide if it is or not, apart from Carlisle's curious indifference to women. He's a bit touchy feely with men, but not in any kind of sexual way. It's a curiously asexual movie, actually, a rare film noir not motivated by lust.
- The discussion after the film touched briefly on film restoration, so I thought I'd throw out a plug for the Film Noir Foundation, which restores film noir. They were the beneficiaries of this year's Film Preservation Blogathon, and you can still donate to the cause. Here's the link:
Anyway, this remains a corker: Dark, perverse, sordid, and nasty. Just the way I like it.
I was once asked to lead an adult Sunday School series on C.S. Lewis and that led to a research plunge into Lewis' biography and works. Ultimately, I declined to lead the class because I disliked his theology too intensely to even want to present it critically.
ReplyDeleteRegardless, I disagree with your use of the words sham and hypocrite in regards to Lewis. His conversion sure sounds authentic to me and his writings sincerely and coherently express his beliefs. From what I've read, his relationship and marriage to Joy was deeply meaningful for both of them.
P.S. Just checked. "Nightmare Alley" was written in 1946, six years before Joy met C.S. Lewis. Therefore, there'd be no tie between Lewis and a character in the book. (Note: The one thing that I really like about Lewis is that he broke from his social circle to marry a woman with incurable bone cancer--and then discovered that his love for her was passionately physical as well as intellectual. Good for him.)
ReplyDeleteHi, Lee.
ReplyDeleteServes me right for not fact-checking. Par for the course when I'm pouring thoughts onto the page right after seeing the movie. You may note, however, that I say "in Gresham's mind." But, well, so much for that. On further investigation, it seems that Gresham himself was pretty religious, too. Ah, well.
"epistemological noir"? I'm in! I admit you have me stumped, though. A few examples, please.
ReplyDeleteHi, Mykal. Blade Runner is the great epistemological noir, but most movies in which someone has amnesia and has to figure out who they are qualify (Somewhere in the Night is a good example). My favorite epistemological noir is The Scar, which is consumed with ideas about identity.
ReplyDelete