Featuring a random
assortment of familiar faces, this Canadian production offers a pedestrian new
adaptation of a 1940 spy novel previously adapted for the screen in 1943 by
Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles. The 1975 version of Journey Into Fear is pleasant enough to watch, but because it’s
almost all plot, those who don’t lock into the storyline early are likely to
get bored during long exposition and/or suspense scenes featuring leading man
Sam Waterston. Although he does credible work, the only fun sequences in Journey Into Fear are those with costars
Donald Pleasence and Vincent Price. Pleasence combines his characteristic
fidgety energy with a campy Turkish accent, while Price, taking a welcome break
from playing cartoonish ghouls, lends sophistication to the role of a
cold-blooded pragmatist.
The murky plot involves geologist Graham (Waterston)
visiting Turkey to explore oil resources, even as nefarious characters
repeatedly try to kill him. Local cop Col. Haki (Joseph Wiseman) tells Graham
he can’t leave Turkey until a criminal investigation related to one of the
attempted murders is resolved, so before long Graham gets enmeshed with sketchy
characters including the nervous Kuvelti (Pleasence) and the obsequious
Kupelkin (Zero Mostel). Graham also begins a romance with French singer Josette
(Yvette Mimieux) before finally meeting his main adversary, the suave Dervos
(Price). That this brief synopsis excludes significant characters played by Ian
McShane and Shelley Winters indicates both how overstuffed the storyline is and
how many different types of acting are on display. Cohesion is not the order of
the day.
Appearing fairly early in his long screen career, Waterston performs
with considerable authority, but because his role is so underwritten, Waterston
often blends into the scenery. (One wishes Mimieux, chirping in a bad French
accent, did the same.) While McShane is suitably menacing in a mostly wordless
role, only Pleasence and Price bring real flair—the very quality that made the
Welles/Cotten version enjoyable. It’s especially pleasurable to watch Price
play someone closer to the sophisticate he was offscreen, though the villainous
nature of his character keeps the role on-brand.
Journey Into Fear: FUNKY
Another crap-fest shot here in Vancouver. Some things never change.
ReplyDeleteIf I ever get a chance to see this, it'll be done so with my eyes on screen when Yvette Mimieux is, and with the volume off, sounds like...
ReplyDelete