Those not familiar with, and
appreciative of, Golden Age movies might dismiss "Night Must Fall" as
beneath them. It is black and white, with the pre-wide-screen aspect ratio.
That is, the image you see is more of a square than a rectangle. The images
don't extend far out to the right and left.
"Night Must Fall" was filmed
on a soundstage that stands in for an English cottage surrounded by woods. The
viewer knows that this really isn't a cottage, and those aren't really woods.
The trees aren't trees and the rivers aren't rivers. It's all MGM magic. When
watching a soundstage movie, you must willingly suspend that disbelief.
Star Robert Montgomery, who was born in
New York, attempts a weak Irish accent. Connecticut-born Rosalind Russell makes
no attempt to sound English at all. Dame May Whitty, making her Hollywood debut
at age 72, is clearly English and sounds it. Merle Tottenham, Kathleen
Harrison, in minor roles, were both English. Alan Marshall was from Australia
but sounded English to me.
"Night Must Fall" is a murder
mystery with sexual and perverse undertones, but, given the Production Code,
there is no gore and no violence at all. There's very little action. The film
consists mostly of talk and significant eye movement. There are hammy moments.
The musical score emphasizes points, and actors gasp and stare into space in
melodramatic ways.
In spite of all the aesthetic
differences between 1937 and 2022, "Night Must Fall" was, for me,
very worth watching. I was fascinated to see what the screenplay by John Van
Druten would do with the set-up: a woman has been murdered in an English
village. The residents of the cottage discuss this murder and go about their
quiet lives.
Elderly, wheelchair-bound invalid Mrs.
Bramson lives with two domestic serving women and her niece, Olivia. A man name
Danny arrives and charms Mrs. Bramson so thoroughly that she invites him to
live with her and attend to her needs. The police stop by and ask if the
cottage residents have seen anything unusual. There's been a murder and a
headless corpse has been found.
I can't really say much more than that so as not to spoil the plot. I can say that Robert Montgomery's character, Danny, as written, is fascinating. It's interesting to know that a screenwriter in 1937 would even conceive of such a character. Montgomery's performance is amazing. I never thought to see such a performance in a B movie made in 1937. In spite of the gore-and-violence-free production, "Night Must Fall" really did give me the creeps and frightened me, especially in its closing scenes. "A critical success, Night Must Fall was named the best film of the year by the National Board of Review. Robert Montgomery also received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role," reports Wikipedia. The film was not a huge commercial success, though. I think it was ahead of its time.
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