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Frank Sinatra earned an Oscar® for From Here to Eternity
but his acting is even better in Otto Preminger's landmark drama
The Man with the Golden Arm. Nelson Algren's novel had
once been considered as a vehicle for John Garfield, until it
became clear that any story about drug addiction would never be
granted a Production Code Seal. Independent producer Preminger
was willing to take risks that the studios were not. Always keen
to break the power of the Code, Preminger intuited that the free
publicity generated by a censorship battle would position
Arm as a must-see special event movie.
Synopsis: Poker dealer and heroin addict Frankie Machine (Frank
Sinatra) returns clean and sober from the prison hospital only to
find that the pressures of life on the street are too much for
him. He’s trapped in a guilty marriage to Zosch (Eleanor Parker)
because he crippled her in a car crash. Although Frankie’s
learned to play the drums and is eager to find work with a band,
his controlling wife only wants him to stay with her. Insecure
and unhappy, he strays in the direction of nightclub girl Molly
(Kim Novak) and is abused by two greedy and manipulative
associates. Schweifka (Robert Strauss) schemes to make him go
back to dealing for illegal poker games. Pusher Louie (Darren
McGavin) gets Frankie hooked on dope again, just as his big band
audition is coming up.
Otto Preminger had already won a censor battle with his 1953
romantic comedy The Moon is Blue, which defied the Code's
edict that the words 'virgin' and 'pregnant' could not be spoken
in a movie. Preminger also refused to cut dialogue in which
Maggie McNamara and William Holden debate the idea that a young
woman might have sex before marriage and still be a 'good girl'.
The resulting furor transformed a fairly innocuous comedy into a
solid hit. The Man with the Golden Arm challenged an even
stronger cinema taboo, drug addiction. With the enforcement of
the Production Code in 1934, the mere mention of drug use all but
disappeared from American screens. The Man with the Golden
Arm shows in detail the preparations for shooting up heroin,
holding back nothing save the actual image of a needle entering
an arm. Even more harrowing is Sinatra's portrayal of a violent
cold turkey withdrawal episode. Many audiences of 1955 had never
heard of substance withdrawal, let alone seen such a thing
represented on film.
The Man with the Golden Arm is less a Film Noir than a
Zola- like examination of a sordid environment. Frankie Machine
(his real name is Majcinek) is a clear victim of pernicious
social forces. The selfish, demanding Zosch weakens his sense of
self-esteem. Louie and Schweifka are similarly set on controlling
Machine for their own ends. Schwiefka has Frankie busted for
theft, and then bails him out with the proviso that he must repay
his debt by using his ‘golden arm’ to deal poker. The only law in
sight is Emil Meyer's cynical detective, and he considers junkies
to be beneath concern or sympathy. Drained of hope, Frankie is
headed for the bottom when Molly assumes the responsibility of
drying him out once more.
Otto Preminger was not the kind of director attracted to stories
set on Skid Row. His elaborate Division Street exterior set is
almost as antiseptic as Sam Goldwyn's cleaned-up slum in the 1937
Dead
End, and the glamorous Kim Novak looks decidedly out of
place. With its colorful array of lowlife denizens (Arnold Stang,
Doro Merande, Leonid Kinskey), the movie plays like a Damon
Runyon story suffering a severe case of depression. Preminger
also knew that the extremes of Nelson Algren's bleak novel would
need to be softened for general audiences. The book’s Frankie
commits murder and hangs himself. His crippled wife goes crazy
and Molly becomes a prostitute. Walter Newman and Lewis Meltzer's
screenplay overturns this fatal determinism in favor of a
melodramatic, hopeful finish. Preminger and his writers invent a
twist ending that conveniently resolves at least some of
Frankie’s worst problems.
We're told that the unusually insecure Kim Novak required many
takes for each of her scenes, something that doesn't show in the
final product. Eleanor Powell succeeds in a thankless role,
bringing to life the film's least believable character. The
supporting actors also do excellent work but it's ultimately
Sinatra's movie. His committed performance compensates for the
fake sets and the unusually lifeless B&W photography. In
less-than-optimal prints, The Man with the Golden Arm can
easily be confused with a contrast-starved Kinescope.
Preminger makes frequent use of long takes, following Frankie as
he thrashes in the torment of withdrawal, and using a crane to
track characters through the Division Street set. The film's main
titles attracted major attention for designer Saul Bass. His
stylized 'crooked arm' graphic condenses the entire movie into a
single dynamic image. Elmer Bernstein's innovative jazz score
also makes a strong first impression, and started a trend for
jazz in movies that lasted five or six years.
Thanks to Otto Preminger's brilliant use of publicity, United
Artists were able to book theaters to play The Man with the
Golden Arm despite its lack of a Production Code Seal. When
the censor boards of three cities demanded cuts Preminger took
Baltimore to court, and won his case. The director proudly
declared that he had "established freedom of expression for
motion pictures". Six years later, the film was granted the
Code's Seal of Approval. By that time, Preminger had also helped
break the infamous Hollywood blacklist.
Warner Home Video's disc of The Man with the Golden Arm is
the first really satisfactory presentation of this classic on
disc. Several editions have been released by various DVD labels,
all of them flat full frame and some of very poor quality. This
edition’s excellent transfer gives the movie back its film
texture although the pale lighting still reminds of old B&W TV
soap operas. The film has also been formatted in its correct
matted widescreen aspect ratio. The tighter framing enhances
Sinatra and Novak's performances.
The making-of featurette Shoot Up / Shoot Out covers the
film’s controversy in a suitably nervous, graphics-heavy style.
Biographer Foster Hirsch participates in the interviews, adding a
number of important observations to the film's fascinating
history. An original trailer is included as well.
For more information about The Man With the Golden Arm,
visit Warner Video. To
order The Man With the Golden Arm, go to
TCM Shopping
by Glenn Erickson
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