Odd Man Out

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Plot

Carol Reed's taut character study (disguised as a suspense melodrama) was adapted from the novel by F.L. Green and stars James Mason in his star-making role as I.R.A. operative Johnny McQueen. Breaking out of jail, Johnny takes it on the lam, but idealism forces him out of hiding in order to raise money for the I.R.A. cause he believes in so strongly. He decides to rob a bank, but the hold-up goes bad and Johnny is seriously wounded by the police. Staggering through the streets of Belfast, Johnny meets a succession of people who either want to help him or turn him over to the authorities. Johnny finally stumbles into a pub, where he is taken in by a homosexual artist (Robert Newton) who wants Johnny to pose for him in order to capture the desperation in his eyes. Johnny breaks free from the artist and tries to make his way to the waterfront in a final effort to escape ... but the police are slowly closing in. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

Review

Odd Man Out is an entertaining chase movie that has been criticized for an unrealistic representation of Northern Ireland. Directed by London-born Carol Reed, the film works for the universality of its story, and James Mason's fine performance compensates considerably for the film's sometimes blurry focus. The supporting performances are first-rate -- Cyril Cusack's in particular -- and the attention to character detail is unusual for films of the 1940s. Mason's intricate, psychological performance is among the best of his career, while Reed's use of visual symbolism (such as the crucifixion motif in the film's conclusion) provides additional richness. Odd Man Out was remade in 1969 as The Lost Man, with a U.S. setting and Sidney Poitier in Mason's role. ~ Richard Gilliam, Rovi

Cast

Arthur Hambling - Alfie; William Hartnell - Fencie; Kitty Kirwan - Granny; Beryl Measor - Maudie; Denis O'Dea - Head Constable; Dan O'Herlihy - Nolan; Joseph Tomelty - Driver; Elwyn Brook-Jones - Tober; Dora Bryan; Eddie Byrne; Roy Irving - Murphy; Geoffrey Keen; Pat McGrath; Guy Rolfe; Maureen Cusack

Credit

Ralph W. Brinton - Art Director, Phil C. Samuel - Associate Producer, Mark Evans - First Assistant Director, Carol Reed - Director, Fergus McDonell - Editor, William Alwyn - Composer (Music Score), Muir Mathieson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Roger Furse - Production Designer, Robert Krasker - Cinematographer, Carol Reed - Producer, Stanley Grant - Special Effects, Bill Warrington - Special Effects, Harry Miller - Sound/Sound Designer, Desmond Dew - Sound/Sound Designer, R.C. Sherriff - Screenwriter, F.L. Green - Screenwriter, F.L. Green - Book Author

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Odd Man Out

Odd Man Out movie poster
Directed by Carol Reed
Produced by Carol Reed
Written by F. L. Green
R. C. Sherriff
Starring James Mason
Robert Newton
Cyril Cusack
Kathleen Ryan
F. J. McCormick
Music by William Alwyn
Cinematography Robert Krasker
Editing by Fergus McDonell
Studio Two Cities
Distributed by Rank Organisation
Release date(s) 1 February 1947 (1947-02-01)
Running time 116 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Odd Man Out is a 1947 Anglo-Irish film noir directed by Carol Reed, starring James Mason, and is based on a novel of the same name by F. L. Green.

Contents

Plot

The film's opening intertitle reads:

"This story is told against a background of political unrest in a city of Northern Ireland. It is not concerned with the struggle between the law and an illegal organisation, but only with the conflict in the hearts of the people when they become unexpectedly involved."

The city and the organisation are never explicitly named, but the protagonist, Johnny McQueen (James Mason), is the IRA-like group's leader in the city. Johnny has been hiding the past six months since his escape from prison in a house occupied by Kathleen Sullivan (Kathleen Ryan), who loves him, and her grannie.

Johnny has been ordered to rob a mill to obtain funds. His men, however, are a bit uneasy about his fitness for the task, having noticed a change in him since his escape; he has expressed his new belief that negotiation might achieve their goals more effectively than violence. Dennis (Robert Beatty) offers to take his place, but Johnny turns him down.

Johnny, Nolan (Dan O'Herlihy) and Murphy get the money, but Johnny is shot in the left arm before he can shoot (and kill) an armed cashier. Pat (Cyril Cusack) drives off at high speed before Johnny is fully inside the getaway car. Johnny falls off. While his confederates argue about what to do, Johnny gets up and dashes away.

Dennis orders the others to report to headquarters. Along the way, however, the trio arouse the suspicion of the police, out in force on a manhunt for the robbers. They are pursued, but get away. Pat and Nolan stop off at Theresa O'Brien's place; Murphy does not trust her and goes elsewhere. She betrays the pair to the authorities. As they leave, they are gunned down after they start shooting.

Dennis finds Johnny, but the police show up nearby. Dennis is captured after drawing them away.

Johnny makes his way toward Kathleen's place, but collapses in the street. Maureen and Maudie take him home, thinking he has been struck by a passing lorry. When they discover who he is, Johnny departs and gets into a parked hansom cab. "Gin" Jimmy (Joseph Tomelty), the cabdriver, comes out and starts looking for a fare, unaware he already has a wanted man for a passenger. When he finds out, he drops Johnny off as quickly as he can.

Shell (F. J. McCormick) spots him dumping the now nearly unconscious fugitive. A poor man, he goes to Catholic priest Father Tom (W. G. Fay), hoping for a financial reward. By chance, Kathleen arrives shortly afterward, looking for help. Father Tom persuades Shell to fetch Johnny. Shell, while dropping off his pet bird at home, has to fend off another resident, painter Lukey (Robert Newton), who wants him to pose some more for him. Meanwhile, Johnny revives and stumbles into a private booth in a crowded bar. Proprietor Fencie (William Hartnell) recognises him; wanting no trouble, he closes his establishment a bit early. He then recruits Shell and the persistent Lukey, who have separately converged on the bar, to take Johnny away in a cab. Over Shell's protests, Lukey takes Johnny back to his studio to paint his portrait. Failed medical student Tober (Elwyn Brook-Jones) tends to Johnny's wound as best he can. Johnny hallucinates, thinking Father Tom is talking to him. Johnny then speaks aloud parts of 1 Corinthians 13, first verse 13 ("When I was a child ..."), then 1-2 ("Though I speak ... and have not charity, I am nothing.").

When a sympathetic police inspector (Denis O'Dea), who had earlier led a search of Katleen's home and warned her against getting involved, shows up to try to get information from Father Tom, Kathleen slips away. She arranges passage on a ship for Johnny and goes searching for him. Shell starts Johnny toward Father Tom's, then goes ahead and encounters Kathleen. She takes Johnny to the ship, but finds the police closing in. Johnny is too far gone to see them. When he asks, "Is it far?", Kathleen replies, "It's a long way, Johnny, but I'm coming with you." She then draws a gun and starts firing, forcing the policemen to shoot back, killing them both.

Production

Kathleen Ryan

Aside from Mason, the supporting cast was drawn largely from Dublin's Abbey Theatre. Among the other members of the Organisation are Cyril Cusack, Robert Beatty, and Dan O'Herlihy. On his travels, Johnny meets an opportunistic bird-fancier played by F. J. McCormick, a drunken artist played by Robert Newton, a barman (William Hartnell) and a failed surgeon (Elwyn Brook-Jones). Denis O'Dea is the Inspector on Johnny's trail, and Kathleen Ryan, in her first feature film, plays the woman who loves Johnny. Also of note are W. G. Fay -- a founder of the Abbey Theatre—as the kindly Father Tom, Fay Compton, Joseph Tomelty, and Eddie Byrne. A number of non-speaking parts were filled by actors who later went on to achieve a modicum of fame, including Wilfrid Brambell, Dora Bryan, Geoffrey Keen, Noel Purcell, and Guy Rolfe. Few of the main actors in the film actually manage an authentic Ulster accent.

The cinematographer was Robert Krasker, in his first film for director Reed, lighting sets designed by Ralph Brinton and Roger Furse.

This was the first screen appearance of Steptoe and Son actor Wilfrid Brambell who began his 35 year career as a standing passenger in the tram scene of this film.

The main set was based on the Crown Bar in Belfast; contrary to some sources, it was a studio set built at D&P Studios in Denham, Buckinghamshire, and was not filmed in the real Crown.[1] However, much of the film was shot on location: exterior scenes were shot in West Belfast,[1] although some were shot at Broadway Market, Hackney in London.[2]

Composer William Alwyn was involved writing the leitmotif-based score from the very beginning of the production. It was performed by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Muir Mathieson.

Reception

The film's violent ending attracted advance criticism from the censors, and had to be toned down in the finished film.[3] The film received the BAFTA Award for Best British Film in 1948. It was nominated for the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival in 1947, and nominated for a Best Film Editing Oscar in 1948.

Filmmaker Roman Polanski has repeatedly cited Odd Man Out as his favourite film.[4] Polanski feels that Odd Man Out is superior to The Third Man, generally considered to be Reed's masterpiece:

I still consider it as one of the best movies I've ever seen and a film which made me want to pursue this career more than anything else... I always dreamt of doing things of this sort or that style. To a certain extent I must say that I somehow perpetuate the ideas of that movie in what I do.[4]

In Popular Culture

In the 2011 computer game L.A. Noire, Odd Man Out can be seen billed on the RKO Theatre located on the corner of 8th and Hill Streets in downtown Los Angeles.

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b 'BBC seeks stars of Belfast film noir', BBC News 23 February 2007
  2. ^ 'Filming locations for Odd Man Out The Internet Movie Database
  3. ^ Rogers, Steve. Soldier in the Snow: A Look at the Making of Odd Man Out, its Key Players and Critical Recognition. (Network, 2006).
  4. ^ a b Roman Polanski: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi, 2005. ISBN 978-1-57806-800-5. Pages 159, 189.

Bibliography

  • The Great British Films, pp 106–109, Jerry Vermilye, 1978, Citadel Press, ISBN 0-8065-0661-X

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