The fog machine on the Warners Brother lot must have worked overtime for âOut of the Fog,â an enjoyable if not always successful 1941 drama set along the New York waterfront.Based upon an Irwin Shaw play âThe Gentle People,â the film centers on racketeer Harold Goff (John Garfield), who bullies the waterfront folks into pay $5 per week for protection for their boats. His latest victims are Jonah (Thomas Mitchell) and Olaf (John Qualen).Meanwhile, Jonahâs beautiful daughter Stella (Ida Lupino) is sick and tired of her predictable life, including both her job at the telephone company and her sweet yet dull boyfriend George (Eddie Albert). Sheâs attracted to the dangerous excitement that Goff projects and begins t! o secretly date him (both are pictured below), even after Jonah discovers the romance and tries to warn his daughter.This is where the movie stumbles. The screenplay is co-written by Robert Rossen, who would go on to make some hard-hitting dramas as âAll the Kingâs Men.â Itâs also directed by Anatole Litvak, so itâs surprising that the film goes awry. If Garfield succeeds in making Goff loud and obnoxious, he fails to allow the audience to see any charm that would attract and keep Stella. She seems like a smart girl, but itâs so obvious what this guy is about. The fact that heâs different from her perceived dull life may be enough for the initial attraction. But is she really that weak or dim-witted? I donât think so. She adores her father, and she has brains, so the fact that she insists upon this relationship with Goff and not someone else who can whisk her away doesnât fly except that the story needs this to be so. Without seeing Goffâs charm â" rega! rdless of whether itâs real or not â" itâs hard for the a! udience to identify with Stella, which is crucial for the film to work.So the focus really turns to Olaf and Jonah, the latter hatching a scheme after Goff tries to shake the duo down for their life savings. Yet while the local cop would love to take down Goff, Jonah remains oddly silent at times. This makes no sense, either, except that the story needs this to be so.What does work is the ensemble cast. Mitchell is best, with veteran character actors Qualen and George Tobias working well. The wonderful Aline MacMahon plays Stellaâs mom, but I get the feeling her part may be larger in the play, as the movie shows her overbearing nature in a few scenes and little more, which is a waste of MacMahonâs talent.Thereâs so much promise in! âOut of the Fog.â Considering Warner Brothersâ reputation for atmospheric, hard-edged stories, my expectations were probably set too high. I enjoyed many moments of the film, but as a whole âFogâ lacks conviction.
Great classic films, best all time movies
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