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The Big Combo

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = The Big Combo

| image = The Big Combo poster.jpg

| alt =

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Joseph H. Lewis

| screenplay = Philip Yordan

| starring = Cornel Wilde
Richard Conte
Brian Donlevy
Jean Wallace

| producer = Sidney Harmon

| music = David Raksin

| cinematography = John Alton

| editing = Robert S. Eisen

| color_process = Black and white

| studio = Security Pictures
Theodora Productions

| distributor = Allied Artists Pictures

| released =

| runtime = 88 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = $500,000

| gross =

}}

'The Big Combo' is a 1955 American film noir crime film directed by Joseph H. Lewis and photographed by cinematographer John Alton, with music by David Raksin..

The film stars Cornel Wilde, Richard Conte and Brian Donlevy, as well as Jean Wallace, who was Wilde's wife at the time. It also included the final screen appearance of actress Helen Walker.

Plot



Police Lt. Leonard Diamond is on a personal crusade to bring down the sadistic gangster Mr. Brown. He is also dangerously obsessed with Brown's girlfriend, the suicidal Susan Lowell. His main objective as a detective is to uncover what happened to a woman called "Alicia" from the crime boss's past.

Mr. Brown, his second-in-command McClure, and thugs Fante and Mingo kidnap and torture the lieutenant, then pour a bottle of alcohol-based hair tonic down his throat before letting him go. Diamond eventually learns through one of Brown's past accomplices, Bettini, that Alicia was actually Brown's wife. Bettini suspects that Alicia was sent away to Sicily with former mob boss Grazzi, then murdered, tied to the boat's anchor, and permanently submerged. Diamond questions a Swede named Dreyer, who was the skipper of that boat but now operates an antiques store as a front, bankrolled by Brown. Dreyer denies involvement and does not want to disclose anything to Diamond, but is nonetheless murdered by McClure shortly after leaving his shop later that day.

Diamond tries to persuade Susan to leave Brown and admits he might be in love with her. He shows her a photo of Brown, Alicia and Grazzi together on the boat. Susan finally confronts Brown about his wife and is told she is still alive in Sicily, living with Grazzi.

Brown orders a hit on Diamond. However, when his gunmen Fante and Mingo go to Diamond's apartment, they mistakenly shoot and kill Diamond's burlesque dancer girlfriend Rita instead. Diamond sees an up-to-date photo of Alicia but realizes it wasn't taken in Sicily (since there's snow on the ground). This leads Diamond to suspect Brown did not kill Alicia but his boss Grazzi instead. Diamond is able to track Alicia to a sanitarium, where she is staying under another name. He asks for her help.

Meanwhile, Brown's right-hand man, McClure, wants to take over. He plots with Fante and Mingo to ambush Mr. Brown, but they betray and murder him.

At police headquarters, Brown shows up with a writ of 'habeas corpus', effectively preventing Alicia testifying against her husband. Brown also takes a big stash of "money" to Fante and Mingo while they are hiding out from the police, but the box turns out to contain a bomb that apparently kills both of them.

Brown shoots Diamond's partner, Sam, and kidnaps Susan, planning to fly away to safety. However, Mingo survived the assassination attempt by Brown, and he confesses to Diamond that Brown was behind all the murders while sobbing over the body of his cohort. Alicia is able to help Diamond figure out that Brown took Susan to a private airport where he intends to board his getaway plane.

However, Brown's plane does not show up and the film climaxes in a foggy hangar shootout. Susan shines the fog lamp from Brown's car in his eyes, effectively blinding him, allowing Diamond to arrest him. The last scene shows the silhouetted figures of Diamond and Susan in the fog, considered to be one of the iconic images of film noir.

Cast



* Cornel Wilde as Police Lt. Leonard Diamond

* Richard Conte as Mr. Brown

* Brian Donlevy as Joe McClure

* Jean Wallace as Susan Lowell

* Robert Middleton as Police Capt. Peterson

* Lee Van Cleef as Fante

* Earl Holliman as Mingo

* Helen Walker as Alicia Brown

* Jay Adler as Sam Hill

* John Hoyt as Nils Dreyer

* Ted de Corsia as Ralph Bettini

* Helene Stanton as Rita

* Roy Gordon as Audubon

* Whit Bissell as Doctor (scenes deleted) (as Whit Bissel)

* Steve Michaell as Bennie Smith Boxer

* Baynes Barron as Young Detective

* James McCallion as Frank Technician

* Tony Michaels as Photo Technician

* Brian O'Hara as Attorney Malloy

* Bruce Sharpe Detective

* Michael Mark as Fred Hotel Clerk

* Philip Van Zandt as Mr. Jones (scenes deleted)

* Donna Drew as Miss Hartleby

Production



The film was initially called 'The Hoodlum' based on a story by Philip Yordan. It was originally going to be directed by Hugo Frugonese for producer Milton Sperling. Sperling tried to cast Spencer Tracy for the lead. The script was reportedly in great demand with Yordan apparently turning down offers of $75,000.

Eventually the film was a co production between Theodora, the production company of Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace, and Security, a company of Phil Yordan and Sidney Harmon. Wilde changed the title to "The Big Combination" and Jean Wallace suggested it be shortened to "The Big Combo".

Jack Palance was originally cast opposite Wilde. Filming was brought forward to start September 7, because of studio space availability. Palance dropped out of the film, claiming he wanted a week off after finishing 'The Silver Chalice' (1954). Another source says he was unhappy his wife was not cast in the second female lead. He was replaced by Richard Conte. Conte's casting meant the start date for another film 'Cry Vengeance' had to be pushed back.

The film was shot in 26 days.

Reception



Critical response



The staff at 'Variety' magazine liked the film's direction, music and photography, despite "a rambling, not-too-credible plot." They wrote, "Performances are in keeping with the bare-knuckle direction by Joseph Lewis and, on that score, are good. Low-key photography by John Alton, one of his best,[http://www.celtoslavica.de/chiaroscuro/dop/alton.html Kemp, Philip]. 'International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. Vol 4: Writers and Production Artists', New York-London, 2000. and a jazz-derived score by David Raksin with solo piano by Jacob Gimpel are in keeping with the film's tough mood."[https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117789226.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&p=0 'Variety']. Staff film review, 1955 (no specific date given). Last accessed: June 5, 2012.

Reviews of the movie today are mostly positive. Chris Dashiell on the website 'CineScene' finds the dialogue "run of the mill" but praises the film's director, writing that "Lewis had a remarkable ability to infuse poetry into the most banal material, and 'The Big Combo' is one of his best efforts... it's not as startlingly inventive as Lewis's best film, 'Gun Crazy' (1949), but it's a quality B-film, satisfying and dark."[http://www.cinescene.com/flicks/flicks072004.htm#big 'CineScene'] film review, 2004.

Film critic Ed Gonzalez lauded the film in his review, writing, "Shadows and lies are the stars of 'The Big Combo', a spellbinding black-and-white chiaroscuro with the segmented texture of a spider's web ... John Alton's lush camera work is so dominant here you wouldn't know Joseph H. Lewis was also behind the camera. The story doesn't have any of the he-she psychosexual politicking that juices the director's 'Gun Crazy', but that's no loss given this film's richer returns. The set-pieces are fierce, as is the 'Casablanca' tweak of the last shot, and Wallace's performancea sad spectacle of a hurting creature caught between light and dark, good and evilis one of noir's great unheralded triumphs."[https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/features/bnoir.asp Gonzalez, Ed]. 'Slant Magazine', film review, May 5, 2006. Last accessed: February 23, 2008.

Critics have compared the quality of 'The Big Combo' to Fritz Lang's 'The Big Heat' as one of the great film noir detective classics in terms of style.Silver, Alain, and Elizabeth Ward, eds. 'Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style', film noir analysis by Carl Macek, page 29. Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press, 3rd edition, 1992. .

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 92% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 13 reviews, with a weighted average of 7.04/10.[https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/big_combo/ 'The Big Combo'] at Rotten Tomatoes. Last accessed: July 8, 2019.

Home media



The film was released on Blu-ray in a new HD restoration in 2019 by Arrow Films in the UK and Eire.

Soundtrack



Most film noir movies feature scores that are orchestral, with strings. In contrast, 'The Big Combo' is one of the few that have a score with brass and trumpets and with woodwinds and saxophones.

See also



*Public domain film

*List of American films of 1955

* List of films in the public domain in the United States

References




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