Jacques Tourneur is the director of "Out of the Past" (originally released in the UK as "Build My Gallows High"). A French emigre whose first films were early talkies made in Paris, he's another director who shows the influence of European Cinema on Film Noir. The quiet petrol pump attendant with the past could just as easily have been Jean Gabin as Robert Mitchum. Prior to these movies he made very superior low-budget horror - Cat People
The Cat People/The Curse of the Cat People [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC], I Walked with a Zombie
I Walked With a Zombie/The Body Snatcher [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC], and The Leopard Man. From "Cat People" he brought the great cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca (who also worked on "The Spiral Staircase") and there is something of the horror genre about the filming of this convoluted tale, where you never know what you will find behind the door when you open it.
The plot is extraordinarily complicated, and at the core of it are two questions - who do you really love? Who do you really trust? Mitchum's tragedy is that these are not the same person, but he goes with the love, and it is the death of him.
This was the making of Mitchum, but it has to be said that this is more than anything else Jane Greer's film. I don't think there is another film noir where we feel the hero's love, pain and confusion about the "heroine" so much as in "Out of the Past". She makes us believe what she says, we want to believe her, because we believe her back story. There's a bar in Acapulco where they play American music "I go there sometimes" she says, wearily, and we immediately imagine her there, lonely, alluring. We wonder what else she does - she hints at much, much worse. The face is extraordinary: black, black eyes, a full mouth that has done its share of dirty doing. She is above all Knowing, and in the movie it is her business to know things and find them out. Good girl - bad girl, the eternal dilemma. And Greer is way, WAY bad. She was only 23 when she made this movie, but she knows how to indicate that she's been round the block and back.
Mitchum inhabits this, his first real major starring vehicle, with the world-weary charm which became his trademark, which I think he found for this role for the first time. We know from the start, when the past returns, that he will be trapped and there is no way out for him. The one moment when he has second thoughts, when he pretends he can't start the car to escape, Greer overrides him and starts it herself. She is literally a femme fatale, and she WILL take him down with her. Because love is always dangerous and doomed.
There are so many good lines here: "A woman with a gun is like a man with a knitting needle". (To Greer, in a bad moment) "Get out of this room, I have to sleep here". "I don't want to die - Neither do I, but if I have to, I'll die last."
If Greer and Mitchum are perfect, Kirk Douglas in his first role as the villain Whit Sterling is less so. He smiles and smiles, but he seems to lack the ferocity necessary to the part. Besides Greer he is pale and uninteresting in his villainy, and tax evasion has never been the most glamorous of crimes.
Greer and Mitchum were teamed again in "The Big Steal", in which she shines and he doesn't. She was a unique talent and a feisty girl (defying Howard Hughes to marry a man 20 years her senior), and she deserved better from subsequent films. But this is a wonderful memorial.