Act of Violence

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 1949 / Dir. Fred Zinnemann

82 min. / B&W / 1.37:1 / SDH
Blu-ray: Warner Archives $21.99
*
Available from Movie Zyng

Good guy war hero Van Heflin is the idol of Anytown U.S.A. except that one of his old platoon mates, Robert Ryan, is stalking him in the dark: seems that Van betrayed some of his buddies to the Nazis during a stint as a POW and the lone survivor is gunning for him, and how. Three women get involved on one side or the other: Heflin's pretty wife Janet Leigh, Ryan's pretty girlfriend Phyllis Thaxter, and a shockingly aged Mary Astor as a street lady who thinks she's seen it all but ain't seen nothin' as vengeful as all this.

Over the years, there has been such a rich release of numerous Film Noir sets, particularly from Warner Bros. (which has access to Warners, Monogram, MGM and RKO films) that some of the gems get overlooked due to the sheer volume. Act of Vengeance is a case in point: a good, solid thriller with an excellent cast, very good cinematography, and a tight, interesting script but it'll never be heralded as one of the great noirs: it more falls into the "if you happen to catch it, you'll be engrossed by it" basket. Heflin is a tough actor to really like; not good looking enough to be handsome leading man and not unusual enough to be a great character actor, and "typical Joe goin' about his average life" roles don't necessarily make for a large Fan Club for an actor. It's not easy to appreciate him here, then, as a popular vet who is hiding a dark, dark secret. Ryan, of course, is superb, per usual; we really enjoy him in his not-quite-crazy-but-close roles. Janet Leigh is terrific as the young wife who worships her husband until she learns the truth, and the big, big hit of the film is Miss Astor, turning in an Oscar-worthy performance as a tired, cynical barfly.

I'm not one who is usually smitten by MGM noirs, which tend to be more polished and less effective than favorites from RKO, Warners, or Columbia, but this is a very good one. Recommended, and it comes with commentary by Dr. Drew Casper and a short, 6-min. documentary on the making of the film, both carried over from the DVD, and a couple of new-to-blu classic cartoons, surprisingly from different studios: a Barney Bear from MGM and a wacky one-shot from Warner Bros. with a turtle egg on the run. We enjoyed that one a lot.

"You can always find reasons. Even the Nazis had reasons!"