I spent Sunday evening taking in a screening of I Walk Alone
at Noir City Chicago at the Music Box Theatre, 3733 N. Southport Ave. ,
Chicago . I hadn’t seen this film
before so it was a real treat. Another treat was the restored digital transfer,
which was virtually flawless.
Introduced by Eddie Muller, Film Noir Foundation Founder and
President, and host of Noir Alley on Turner Classic Movies, Muller said that
this Hal Wallis independent production (released through Paramount) was a way
to showcase the stars—Burt Lancaster, Lizabeth Scott, Wendell Corey, and Kirk
Douglas—he had under contract.
The plot is a simple one: Lancaster and Douglas were
partners selling booze during prohibition. During a run, the two were followed
by the police so they decide to split up, thinking one of them would be able to
make it to safety, but vowing that they would help the other if caught and profits would be split 50/50.
Well, 14 years later, Lancaster
is out of prison and anxious to get his share of the profits from the business.
Douglas who now runs a successful, but shady, nightclub, dissolved their old
partnership and claims that Lancaster ’s
share amounts to less than $3000. This news sends Lancaster into a rage threatening to kill
Wendell Corey, who set up the new corporation and does the books for the club.
In the middle of all this is Lizabeth Scott, a singer at the
nightclub. Douglas has been stringing her
along, all the while romancing a rich socialite. He plans on marrying her
because he thinks she can help bring a higher class clientele to the club. Once
this is revealed to Scott, her sympathies end up with Lancaster . She wants to help him, but doesn’t
want him to resort to anything that would send him back to jail.
Like all classic films noir, the dialogue is sharp and
snappy and delivered by a cast of pros. As the club singer, Scott wears a
variety of fashions designed by the legendary Edith Head, and she wears them very
well, I might add. Additionally, I don’t think one hair on Scott’s head was out
of place through the entire movie, which is remarkable since she gets pushed
around a bit.
It was fun to see Lancaster, Scott, and Douglas (Douglas is the only one still with us at 101!) so young.
Muller said it looked like there was a bit of a competition between Lancaster
and Douglas as to who could chew more scenery! And chew they do, and that’s what
makes the movie so enjoyable.
I Walk Alone is now available on DVD in a restored version
produced by the Paramount Pictures Archive.
The Chicago
Noir City
film festival continues through Thursday, August 23. For the remaining films
scheduled, click here.
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