Watched: February 9 2017
Director: Jacques Tourneur
Starring: Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, Virginia Huston, Paul Valentine
Year: 1947
Runtime: 1h 37min
Jacques Tourneur goes down a different route than in Cat People and I Walked with a Zombie with this film noir, but it still works.
Jeff Bailey (Mitchum) runs a gas station in a small California town, is moderately successful at it (he has at least one employee) and is dating a sweet girl, Ann (Huston). However, he has a past and there are those who won’t let him forget it. One day, Joe (Valentine) saunters into town to drag Jeff back into the world he left behind – a world of criminals and Private Dicks. And, of course, Dames.

Jeff spills the beans to his girlfriend and tells her all about a romance he had back in his private detective days with a certified Dame, Kathie Moffat (Greer). He was hired by her ex boyfriend/stalker/victim Whit Sterling (Douglas) to track her down after she had shot him and run away with $40 000 of his hard earned and totally legitimate money. Jeff follows Kathie’s trail to Acapulco and strikes up a conversation with her, which turns into a whirlwind romance. He lies to Whit and takes Kathie with him to San Francisco to start a new life. Which doesn’t exactly go as planned.

This could have been the end of the story, but Joe’s appearance means Jeff’s past is about to catch up with him. Kathie has gone back to Whit and Jeff has no choice but to do one last job for him. A job which includes murder, frame-ups, tax evasion and even more double-crossing dames.

As we mentioned, this is quite the departure from the previous Tourneurs on the list, but there’s still something distinctly Tourneur about it. We’re just not film scholarly enough to point out exactly what that is… Suffice to say, we enjoyed Out of the Past (almost) as much as his earlier ventures into horror (“almost” because horror is our lifeblood). It is exciting and fun with the most duplicitous of Dames, but there’s also love and romance, heartbreak and sorrow. Extremely enjoyable!
What we learned: Drinks in Acapulco are too cheap. They keep leaving half empty (half full?) glasses in bars!
Next time: Bicycle Thieves (1948)
Bahaha! I like your observation re: half full/empty glasses left in Acapulco bars.
I love Kirk Douglas’ performance in this one. His smarmy cheerfulness is menacing.
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Agreed! He’s very very creepy in this one.
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