Like farce, the mystery
genre is a space where convoluted plotting is not necessarily a detriment.
Consider The Midnight Man, a twisty
thriller starring, cowritten, coproduced, and codirected by the venerable Burt
Lancaster, who adapted the picture from a novel by David Anthony. Set on a
college campus, the movie features an offbeat leading man—a former cop turned
ex-con who becomes a night watchman on the campus of a small college because
his old police buddy runs the school’s security detail. Shortly after beginning
his new job, Jim Slade (Lancaster) responds to the discovery of a dead coed.
Thereafter, Jim battles with an obnoxious small-town sheriff, Casey (Harris
Yulin), who determines that a creepy campus janitor was the culprit. Unsatisfied
with Casey’s hasty resolution, Jim investigates further and discovers a complex
web of conspiracies, lies, and secrets involving a United States Senator and
several people connected with the college. Before long, Jim becomes a target,
even as he begins a romance with his parole officer, Linda (Susan Clark), who
may or may not be connected to various prime murder suspects.
Although The Midnight Man is unquestionably too
complicated for its own good—since it’s occasionally difficult to keep track of
who’s doing what to whom and why—the movie is enjoyably melancholy and seedy on
a moment-to-moment basis. Lancaster underplays, always a relief given his usual
tendency toward grandiosity, and he generates an easygoing vibe with veteran
supporting player Cameron Mitchell, who plays Slade’s boss/friend. Each of the
significant performers in the cast delivers exactly what’s needed for his or
her character, lending the whole piece depth and tonal variations. Clark is
tough but vulnerable as the seen-it-all parole officer who fights to protect
ex-cons from being needlessly hassled; Yulin is formidable and oily as the
shoot-first/ask-questions-later sheriff; Catherine Bach, later of Dukes of Hazard fame, is intriguing as
the sexy but troubled coed whose tragic fate drives the story; Charles Tyner is
believably squirrely as the Bible-thumping, porn-reading janitor; and Morgan
Woodward oozes smug confidence as the senator with one too many dirty secrets.
Furthermore, Dave Grusin’s moody score, which is dominated by buttery
electric-piano melodies, is as comfortingly smooth, warm, and unmistakably ’70s
as a V-neck pullover.
So, even if the story gets stuck in the mud of
double-crosses and reversals and surprises, the vibe of the piece and the
seriousness with which actors play their roles carry the day. The Midnight Man isn’t a superlative
’70s noir on the order of The Long Goodbye
(1973) or Night Moves (1975), but
it’s an interesting distraction with plenty of pessimism and a smattering of
sleaze.
The Midnight Man: GROOVY
I thoroughly enjoyed this little film. I had to watch it on YouTube,because it is not available on any home video format,not even on vhs. What a shame. This is a very entertaining film.
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