Complementing outright
throwbacks such as Chinatown (1974),
several ’70s thrillers updated classic film-noir style with modern characters,
settings, and themes. Arthur Penn’s Night
Moves is among the best of these current-day noirs, featuring a small-time
detective who has seen too much misery to muster any real hope for the human
species. Nonetheless, like all the best noir heroes, he strives to do something
good as a way of compensating for all the bad in the world, and thus ironically
dooms not only himself but also the very people he’s trying to protect. Penn,
whose erratic feature career peaked with a run of counterculture-themed
pictures spanning from Bonnie and Clyde
(1967) to this film, was at his best orchestrating subtle interactions between
complicated characters, and he does a terrific job in Night Moves of meshing bitter tonalities.
A seething Gene Hackman
stars as low-rent L.A. investigator Harry Moseby. An amiable idealist whose
principles alienate him from the compromisers who surround him, Harry is
married to Ellen (Susan Clark), who wants him to shutter his one-man agency and
work for a big firm. Preferring to steer his own course, Harry focuses on his
next case, which involves tracking down teen runaway Delly (Melanie Griffith),
the daughter of a blowsy widow (Janet Ward) who, a lifetime ago, was a
promiscuous Hollywood starlet. During downtime between investigative chores,
Harry discovers that Ellen is cheating on him, so he’s only too happy to follow
a lead on Delly’s whereabouts to Florida, a continent away from his troubled
marriage. In the sweaty Florida Keys, Harry finds Delly living with her
lecherous stepfather, Tom (John Crawford), and his sexy companion, Paula
(Jennifer Warren). Also part of the mix is Quentin (James Woods), a squirrelly
friend of Delly’s who works as a mechanic for film-industry stuntmen.
Alan
Sharp’s provocative script features murky plotting but crisp character work, so
even when the story is hard to follow, moment-to-moment engagement between people
is interesting. And since the film is driven by Harry’s zigzag journey from
naïveté to despair and then to a misguided sort of optimism, each time he
encounters some tricky new piece of information, his relationship with someone
changes. Though Hackman was never one to play for cheap sympathy, it’s
heartbreaking to watch Harry cast about for someone who deserves his trust,
only to be disappointed again and again.
Every performance in the movie exists
in the shadow of Hackman’s great work, but all of the actors hit the right
notes, with Griffith’s adolescent petulance resonating strongly. Composer
Michael Small and cinematographer Bruce Surtees contribute tremendously to the
film’s shadowy mood, and Penn achieves one of his finest cinematic moments with
the picture’s desolate finale. Night
Moves gets a bit pretentious at times, but when the movie is really flying,
it becomes a potent meditation on the challenge of finding sold moral footing
during a confusing period in the evolution of the American identity.
Night Moves: GROOVY
3 comments:
NIGHT MOVES is one of my favorite movies of the '70s, and one I only discovered a few years ago. Instantly I fell in love with it.
My review from a couple years ago if you're interested:
http://panicon4july.blogspot.com/2010/04/winner-lose-all-gene-hackman-in-night.html
Hackman was fresh on the heels of his outstanding performance in The Conversation when he did this one. It pales in comparison but is still classic Gene Hackmam. I might add the locations are really great in this film.
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