White Heat (1949) | |
Background
White Heat (1949) is one of the top classic crime-heist dramas of the post-war period, and one of the last of Warner Bros' gritty crime films in its era. White Heat is an entertaining, fascinating and hypnotic portrait of a flamboyant, mother-dominated and fixated, epileptic and psychotic killer, who often spouts crude bits of humor. The dynamic film, with both film noir and documentary-style elements, is characterized by an increased level of violence and brutality along with classical Greek elements. The film's screenplay by Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts was suggested by a story of the same name by Virginia Kellogg. She received an Academy Award nomination for Best Story - the film's only nomination. [Kellogg's next film was the brutal prison drama Caged (1950) set in a women's institution.] The crooked, cold-blooded, and warped gangster has many personality and psychological flaws, but is tragically and ultimately betrayed by the stupidity of his closest accomplices (a right-hand man gang member and even his criminal mother when she purchases strawberries), and by his trusted cell-mate/friend who is actually an undercover cop. [Note: The film was inspired by the real-life gangster Arthur "Doc" and his mother Ma Barker, from a suggestion by star Cagney himself to the writers.] The melodramatic, Freudian-based crime film is enhanced by the musical score of Max Steiner and the frantic pacing brilliantly served up by the director. The three most memorable scenes include:
The fast-paced, powerful Warner Bros. film revived the gangster film in the last year of the decade - and it was 50 year-old James Cagney's comeback-return to his popular, 'tough-guy' gangster image at the studio with a dynamite, all-stops-out performance. His last film with Warner Bros. was seven years earlier - Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942). This was Cagney's first gangster film role in ten years - his previous role was in The Roaring Twenties (1939) with the same director - Raoul Walsh. (Walsh had also directed Cagney in two other films: Strawberry Blonde (1941) and A Lion is in the Streets (1953). He also helmed one of the best films in the gangster genre - High Sierra (1941) starring Humphrey Bogart.) And before that, Cagney had appeared in one of the earliest, most definitive gangster films for Warners - Public Enemy (1931), as well as an appearance in Angels With Dirty Faces (1938). After this pivotal 1949 film in Cagney's career as an archetypal, pugnacious gangster, he never achieved the same apotheosis, starring in such films as Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1950), the musical bio Love Me or Leave Me (1955), the comedy-drama Mister Roberts (1955), the Cold War comedy One Two Three (1961), and after a long 20 year hiatus, Ragtime (1981). This classic film anticipated the heist films of the early 50s (John Huston's The Asphalt Jungle (1950), and Stanley Kubrick's The Killing (1956)), accentuated the semi-documentary style of films of the period (Naked City (1948)), and contained film-noirish elements, including the shady black and white cinematography, the femme fatale character, and the twisted psyche of the criminal gangster. The StoryThe film opens with a train robbery in mountainous terrain near the California State Line. A black vehicle hurtles and screeches around winding mountain curves chasing after a train locomotive blowing its noisy whistle. The leader of the gang of train robbers, including Zuckie Hommell (Ford Rainey), Het Kohler (Mickey Knox) and Giovanni Cotton Valetti (Wally Cassell), is cold-blooded, maniacal, crime boss mastermind Cody Jarrett (James Cagney). The first view of Cody is in the front seat of the car, close-lipped, impatient, and flanked on either side by his thugs in the back seat. After his two henchmen "Big Ed" Somers (Steve Cochran) and Ryley (Robert Osterloh) board the train and kill two of the train's conductors for not stopping the train, they pull the emergency cord to stop the train as it emerges from a tunnel. Cody dramatically (but unnecessarily) leaps from the ledge of the tunnel's mouth onto the moving, slowing-down target and makes his way toward the front of the train:
After halting the train, his men smash the windows of the US Post Office Mail car and then dynamite it.
In cold blood, he brutally shoots both the engineer and Fireman (Leo Cleary) who have heard loud-mouthed Zuckie mention his name in the cab, to prevent them from identifying him. When the fireman collapses from his fatal bullet wounds, he falls upon the blowoff cock lever, jerking it open. It scalds and blinds Zuckie in the face with a blast of hot steam on the side of the train, causing him to writhe around on the ground. [A symbolic indication of the red hot "white heat" - the film's title, and his punishment for using Cody's real name.] The gang escapes with the loot from the hold-up after murdering four railway men. In a broadcast booth, a radio announcer (Terry O'Sullivan) reads a report of the heist into a microphone:
The film cuts to a mountain shed hide-away three hundred miles from the railroad tunnel where the gang listens to the report on their car's radio:
During a tracking shot toward the cabin, a burly, highly ambitious Big Ed, dressed in gangster attire (a black shirt, black hat and overcoat) and Cotton restlessly discuss overturning their boss' autocratic, homicidal leadership:
Two fisted, Cody is drinking very delicately out of a teacup. Rivaling Cody's authority, right-hand man Big Ed complains that they are huddled up in a mountain cabin against the cold - "holed up here like a bunch of gophers" with "a sackful of dough." Cody's old, hawkish mother (Margaret Wycherly, who also played a different kind of 'mother figure' in Sergeant York (1941)) is stirring stew on the stove, and Cody's voluptuous blonde wife Verna (Virginia Mayo) is asleep in an adjoining bedroom. In the first view of the brassy, dim-witted blonde, she is wearing a slip and laid out on the bed - snoring. She is aroused by Cody's kick on the door, swings her legs up and around toward the floor, and reluctantly gets up:
Lying on the sofa, Zuckie moans piteously with his face and hands bandaged without a doctor's aid. Cody suspiciously knows that Big Ed, his lieutenant who has acquired his nickname due to his "big ideas," is waiting for his chance to overthrow him (and also snatch his seductive wife):
As Cody sits and prepares to put bullets into the revolving chamber of his gun, he winces as he experiences a strange, painful headache (migraine?) or epileptic fit - his Achilles' heel. He groans, lurches, keels over and falls to the floor - his gun explodes as he hits the floor, helplessly incontinent. Showing concern, his mother steers him into the bedroom as he blindly stumbles about - she is the only one allowed to witness his headache attacks. Often looking at each other suggestively, Big Ed and Verna make derogatory comments about Cody's mental state:
Flung across the bed, Cody pounds the mattress with his fists. Bending over him, his mother kneads her fingers into the back of his neck and head to soften the 'buzz-saw' pain and white heat of the debilitating, blinding migraine and provide soothing solace and comfort for her son. Emotionally dependent upon her, he sits on his mother's lap, emphasizing the Oedipal complex of his relationship with her:
His Ma functions as his mentor and advisor, and encourages her son to forcefully regain his confidence and appear as normal again. Cody re-emerges into the outer room from the bedroom and barks: "What're ya all gapin' at?" Under the cover of an approaching storm, they start packin' to leave for Los Angeles after Happy announces that he has heard a weather report on the radio. He is slugged and threatened for disobeying Cody's orders: "I told you to keep away from that radio. If that battery is dead, it'll have company." A suitcase full of twenty-dollar bills is opened and checked on Cody's bed. Verna is tempted by the loot and puts her arms around Cody's neck:
While the cabin is stripped, Zuckie fears that he will be left behind: "Ya won't leave me here? You'll take me with ya?" After they clear out and leave him on the sofa, Cody orders Cotton to go back and function as the doctor or "specialist" for Zuckie. He hands him a revolver: "A specialist, you. Here, you're such a pal of his. Go back and make it easy for him." Inside, Cotton fires the gun at the ceiling to fake a killing and then promises his buddy: "Don't make a sound, Zuckie...Look, I'll try to come back." The gang separates into two vehicles to avoid detection. A nameplate reads: "TAHOE COUNTY MORGUE." In the morgue, a sheet obscures the body of Zuckie - who was found frozen to death in the mountain cabin. A flashbulb pops as the Chief of Police (Marshall Bradford) speaks to Phillip Evans (John Archer, father of film star Anne Archer), a US Treasury Department agent, about the man's ultimate fate:
The police surgeon (George Taylor) reports that "despite the third-degree burn, the eyebrows and hairline weren't even singed. That means either boiling water or steam." It is hypothesized that the dead man may have been scalded by the steam engine of the train involved in the holdup. In his Los Angeles Division office, Evans still struggles to find the identities of the train thieves. Willie Rolph (Milton Parsons), a slimy informant stoolie, explains his lack of success over the last month: "...not a buck from the tunnel job showed up." Modern (actually crude), sophisticated, technological police methods are employed: spectograph scans of dust deposits from the dead man's clothes and from dirt at the tunnel are brought into the office by Ernie Trent (Ray Montgomery) and place Zuckie "right smack at the scene of the crime." Fingerprints on the cellophane of the cigarette package given to Zuckie belong to Cotton Valetti - a "known member Jarrett gang." A Los Angeles auto court sign reads: "MILBANKE MOTELS - 'All Over Los Angeles' - Reasonable Rates by Week or Month" - it is the gang's new hideout. When Cody finds Verna narcissistically admiring herself in her new mink coat (worn directly over her slip) in front of a mirror while standing on a chair, he is frantic that his mother has left to go to the market to buy strawberries "for her boy." He has learned that they have somehow been identified by "Zuckie in a morgue upstate. The T-men have tied him in with us on the tunnel job...I dunno how they did it. Somebody must have tipped 'em." Brassy Verna replies with a sarcastic remark when Cody worries that his Ma may be vulnerable to arrest:
For her smart retort, he kicks out the chair from under her, sending her sprawling backwards onto the sofa. In the fruit-stand market in downtown Los Angeles while Ma Jarrett buys strawberries, a government agent recognizes her and marks her parked car with a small strip of a rag/handkerchief on the rear bumper: "Where Ma goes, Cody goes." After being notified, Evans and two other agents in cars, with more complicated, 'scientific' tracking maneuvers in three squad cars (using "the ABC method") follow Ma Jarrett at a safe distance through the busy streets. Although they lose her, they luckily stumble upon her car in the driveway of the auto court. Based upon the intuitive hunch that Ma was being tailed, the tense gang hurriedly packs again. Verna complains: "What's the use of havin' money if you gotta start runnin' every time somebody sees a shadow?" But Cody assures his doubtful mother: "Your hunches are never wrong, Ma. We leave the sedan. That's the car they'll be lookin' for." As Cody slips into the front seat of his own parked coupe, Evans points his revolver at Cody - Cody reacts quickly, reaches for his own gun, and fires a shot into Evans' right shoulder. The gang's car screeches away into the darkness of the night. Pursued by a police car with its siren wailing, Cody swings into the San-Val Drive-In Theatre to escape. As he hands the cashier admission money, she laments: "Happens every night. Ruins the movie." [On the screen is a Warner Bros.' picture, Task Force (1949), a film starring Gary Cooper that the studio released a few weeks later.] In character with his homicidal nature, Cody commands Verna to turn off - kill - the sound on the drive-in's portable loudspeaker hooked in the car:
Cleverly, Cody plans a way to clear himself of the train robbery. He will outwit the law by pleading guilty to a lesser crime of a hotel payroll theft in Springfield, Illinois committed by an at-large criminal named Scratch Morton - on the same night that they were at the tunnel, thereby receiving a lesser sentence and avoiding facing the electric chair on more serious charges for the train robbery and murder. He explains how he will fake a charge to avoid conviction:
Ma Jarrett smiles proudly at her boy, while Verna is suspected of unfaithfulness:
After leaving them, Ma and Verna are interrogated in Evans' office. Cody's mother, behaving like a little old lady, answers all the questions (as Verna sniffles into her handkerchief) and even recommends the drive-in movie they all watched:
During the questioning, Ma insists: "Cody hasn't been in California for months." Evans wryly replies: "If Cody's been out of California for months, I suppose he couldn't possibly have engineered that train robbery six weeks ago." Evans has no other witnesses that Jarrett shot him in Los Angeles. |