The Stuff Of Dreams, Part Two-Humphrey
Bogart’s Across The Pacific
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Across The Pacific, starring
Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Sydney
Greenstreet, directed by John Huston, 1942
What’s all this stuff, part two no
less, about dreams in the title of this review of Humphrey Bogart’s Across The Pacific. Well, haven’t we
seen this crew before, I mean, Bogart, Mary Astor, and Sydney Greenstreet in
the film adaptation of Dashiell Hammett’s The
Maltese Falcon (and John Huston directing). A film where Bogie as classic hard-boiled private detective Sam
Spade has to ruffle a few of Ms. Astor’s
feathers after figuring out that she had left a long trail of men who helped her behind. Had to
break her of that habit of leaving those men face down in some gulley all shot
to hell while she was looking for the stuff of dreams, that damn jeweled falcon
that had everybody wiggy.
Last I heard once the full body
count was in they were getting ready to put her pretty little face in a noose
out in California. Yeah, Sam had plenty of sleepless winter nights over that
one, including some second-guessing his decision to lower the hammer on her, but
he figured better that than looking over his shoulder every time he left a room
waiting for an off-hand slug. Oh and Mr. Greenstreet as the Fat Man ( he was
built for these nefarious high-end con
man/spy roles by build and by voice) looking for that same pot of gold and not
fussy about how he got it, or over whose dead body he had to get it. There was
treachery enough for a lifetime in that one in order to get to that stuff of
dreams.
That was then and now we have in
this film a different version of the stuff of dreams, here the dream of empire,
of world domination by the Japanese with the aid of one Anglo partisan, Doctor
Lorenz (the role Greenstreet played I told you he was built for such parts) who
is working hard to put together a plan to weaken American defenses in the
Panama Canal Zone for what would appear to the inevitable future Japanese
invasion (according to some notes the site of this bombing in the film was
originally Pearl Harbor but note the date of the film and you will see why that
was quickly changed). Naturally on the American side, the Bogie side, all
efforts must be made to stop this in its tracks. Here is how it was done:
Captain Rick Leland (Bogie’s role)
was cashiered out of the American Army on corruption charges. He had been a
career officer and strangely cannot find a job, a military job, in a world
either at war or about to be and so he heads west, west to the Pacific
(although the Pacific never actually comes into play in the plot), and maybe
unknown there can find work he is fitted for. So he takes a Japanese freighter
heading that way from Halifax after being rejected by the Canadians due to his reputation
(Jesus, the Canadians rejected him, what the hell was going on they needed whoever
they could get). On the tub he meets the fetching Alberta (Ms. Astor’s role)
and they play the cat and mouse romance game, innocent romance by today’s
standards. He also meets the good Doctor who moves might and main to enlist
Rick who has convinced the good Doctor that he is basically a soldier of fortune,
in his plans, plans that are unspecified but mean nothing but trouble.
Of course Rick’s whole story is
phooey as he is working as an American agent trying to block any Japanese moves
that may be afoot. And there are plenty. It seems in a film where everybody is
knee deep in treachery and intrigue that most of the crew and others on the freighter
are part of this big plan to blow up the Panama Canal Locks which were a big
deal then, maybe now too. What the good Doctor and his agents had been doing
was sending machinery to an outlying planation in Panama where they were
painfully and on a tedious but tenacious long-term basis constructing an
airplane to deliver a torpedo to do the nasty deed. This action had the
approval of the emperor so much so that one of his princely sons was to do the
act, was to pilot that jerry-bilt plane. The prince when the deal went sour turned
out to have been on the freighter all
the time as a servant to Lorenz. Here is the kicker though Alberta turned out
to be, beside flirtatious, the daughter of the plantation owner whose land had been
used to do the construction. Naturally in a patriotic film like this no
Japanese are going to be successful against Rick’s determination to stop the
nefarious act. So much for that little exercise in the stuff of dreams, empire
size. And of course he does and, off-handedly, wins Alberta as well.
As Rick and Alberta go off into the
sunset I have this nagging feeling that I liked it much better when Bogie and
Ms. Astor were adversaries, when Sam Spade had to decide whether he wanted to live
with newspaper around his bed at all times just in case Bridget got fidgety,
rooty-toot-toot fidgety, or turn her over to the coppers. Liked it better too,
much better, when Mr. Greenstreet was in the stuff of dreams business strictly
for himself.
No comments:
Post a Comment