Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1950)
James Cagney leads an escape from a prison farm with his mate. His mate gets shot, but his mate’s sister and her friend are on hand to take Cagney to safety. JC gets roughed up by corrupt police, but uses the situation to his advantage, blackmailing them, and getting info on local hoodlum businesses to take over. Meanwhile, he falls for the daughter of some powerful toff.
Well, it had to happen. Narratively, this is a mess, unless I’m reading into it in the wrong way. It seems to be a film about some getting deeper into and out by making questionable choices. But my God, it’s hamfisted and jilted.
By way of subtext, I picked up on various criticisms of things like HUAC. The satirical look at spiritual conmen was quite amusing. But these moments just added to the lack of focus presented by a messy narrative.
At face value, this film didn’t work for me in several respects. Firstly: the romances. Something about the relationship with the rich woman felt absurd and wasn’t grounded. I thought it was Cagney manipulating people, but nope. Then we have the 50s S&M undertones of Cagney’s relationship with the sister of his killed mate. Which was just plain weird.
Then the story beats themselves. The story flitted between absorbing and WTF? The getaway was great. The opening court monologue was engaging. The blackmailing bit was great. The rest felt like a load of scenes thrown together where Cagney’s character seemed to change attitude and motives constantly. There was no consistency in him. Maybe that was the point, I don’t know? However, for a pleb like me, it didn’t work. You need a character to be real, even if they’re abhorrent. In The Roaring Twenties he was a nice lad who turned to crime but didn’t become swallowed by evil. In White Heat he was pure psychotic evil. Consistency. In this, he seemed to jump around in terms of character motive and approach. I really thought the romance plot and him refusing a payoff was a grand criminal mastermind plan, but it didn’t seem to be. It made very little sense.
Cagney is engaging to watch as usual. He’s at his best when his character makes sense. In this, he’s good, even though his character doesn’t make sense at all. It shows that he’s better than this material. Best in Show here though goes to corrupt lawyer Luther Adler, whose character IS consistent - all calm and focused, with a hint of menace.
Still plenty to enjoy, but a disappointment.
5/10