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COHEN

MOVIE INFO

Director:
David Miller
Cast:
Joan Crawford, Jack Palance, Gloria Grahame
Writing Credits:
Lenore Coffee, Robert Smith

Synopsis:
After an ambitious actor insinuates himself into the life of a wealthy middle-aged playwright and marries her, he plots with his mistress to murder her.

MPAA:
Rated NR

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.37:1
Audio:
English Dolby Monaural
Subtitles:
English
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
None

Runtime: 110 min.
Price: $19.95
Release Date: 1/12/2021

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Film Historian Jeremy Arnold
• Trailer


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RELATED REVIEWS


Sudden Fear (1952)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (December 21, 2020)

With 1952’s Sudden Fear, we find a film noir that stars Joan Crawford. Actor Lester Blaine (Jack Palance) gets the lead in a new play by famous writer Myra Hudson (Crawford). However, she eventually fires him because she feels he doesn’t look “romantic enough” for the part.

This leaves Lester spurned and angry, but emotions appear to change not too long after his dismissal. On a train ride across country, Lester woos Myra and before long, he convinces her to marry him.

All seems well – until Lester’s lover Irene Neves (Gloria Grahame) winds up in town. She reconnects with Lester and the pair plot Myra’s demise so he can inherit her fortune. Myra discovers this scheme and contends with its ramifications.

Like most of my generation, my primary acquaintance with Crawford comes via her terrible parental reputation as told in the campy biopic Mommie Dearest. Via this site, I’ve seen a few of Crawford’s films over the years, but I admit I still don’t have great feel for her screen work.

Sudden Fear adds to that education, and it does so in a way that contrasts with my last Crawford experience: 1954’s Johnny Guitar, a Blu-ray I viewed a couple months before I got Fear. Of the two, Guitar presents a superior effort, especially in terms of Crawford’s acting.

In Guitar, Crawford plays the tough as nails proprietor of a Western saloon who battles off opponents. That’s a far cry from Myra, a role who turns awfully clingy and needy.

Those traits don’t seem to fit Crawford, as she fares better when she portrays a more take-charge character. Too much of Fear forces Crawford to seem passive and like a victim, and the actor doesn’t really match those traits. When asked to look lovestruck, Crawford seems more psychotic than anything else.

Palance seems better suited for his role, as he connects well with the slippery Lester. He manages to convince us that Lester cares for Myra but he also adds shifts to the character when those become appropriate. Palance pulls off the part’s dimensions well.

In terms of story, Fear struggles to fill its 110 minutes and might work better at a shorter length. In particular, we find ourselves stuck with endless shots of Myra as she stews and worries.

We get that her relationship with Lester causes her angst, but the film sticks us with too much material that intends to depict her inner concerns, and these scenes create a real drag on the proceedings.

In addition, Fear suffers from a narrative that lacks logic. When Myra finds out about Lester’s murderous plans, she pursues her own methods to contend with him and to foil these actions.

Which begs the question: why not go to the police? Myra possesses concrete evidence of Lester’s plans, so why play games with him? I’d think she’d want to get law enforcement involved and end the threat immediately.

Of course, if that occurred, we wouldn’t have much of a movie, and despite the amount of credulity stretched, the second half of Fear manages reasonable intrigue. That segment of the film allows Crawford to make Myra more dynamic, a factor that partly negates her prior passivity.

But it’s not quite enough. The combination of a far-fetched plot and an often awkward performance by Crawford causes more damage to Sudden Fear than the film can overcome. While this thriller offers moderate entertainment, it fails to engage on a consistent basis.


The Disc Grades: Picture C+/ Audio C-/ Bonus C+

Sudden Fear appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.37:1 on this single-sided, double-layered DVD; due to those dimensions, the image has NOT been enhanced for 16X9 TVs. The movie came with a watchable but erratic transfer.

Sharpness seemed up and down. Much of the film offered acceptable clarity, but wider shots tended toward too much softness. I noticed no issues with shimmering or jaggies, but light edge haloes cropped up at times.

With natural grain, I didn’t suspect digital noise reduction here, and print flaws were absent. Blacks seemed moderately dark and deep, but contrast was less impressive, as whites appeared a bit too bright on occasion.

Shadows showed fairly good delineation. All of this brought us an average presentation.

I also didn’t find anything stellar via the film’s iffy Dolby Digital monaural soundtrack. Audio quality was adequate for its age but no better.

Speech tended to be somewhat brittle and sibilant, but the lines remained intelligible enough. Music also showed some shrill qualities, and effects seemed slightly rough.

Occasional instances of background noise crept into the proceedings. This seemed like a spotty track, even given its era.

Fear appeared on Blu-ray in late 2016, and I assumed this 2021 DVD would offer a new transfer. As far as I can tell, though, it did not.

That means this 2021 DVD seems to simply regurgitate the 2016 transfer. It came with the same relative strengths and weaknesses, though the DVD inevitably worked less well because it lost the superior abilities of Blu-ray.

Because of this, the DVD comes with weaker definition, blander blacks/contrast and slightly thinner audio. If you don’t have Blu-ray capabilities, the DVD works, but otherwise the 2016 BD clearly remains preferable.

In addition to a re-release trailer, we find an audio commentary from film historian Jeremy Arnold. He presents a running, screen-specific look at the source novel’s adaptation and character/story areas, cast and crew, music, sets and locations, themes, interpretation, and the movie’s reception.

Arnold provides a quality historical commentary. He touches on a good mix of topics and moves the discussion along at a good pace. We learn a fair amount about the production in this useful chat.

As a thriller, Sudden Fear lacks consistency. While its second half picks up the pace, the story stretches believability too far and the plot sags too much of the time. The DVD comes with erratic picture and audio as well as an informative commentary. Sudden Fear delivers an up and down piece, one better served on the pre-existing Blu-ray.

To rate this film visit the original review of SUDDEN FEAR

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