If Citizen Kane is his greatest, Touch of Evil his grittiest, The Stranger his most underrated and The Trial his most experimental, then The Lady from Shanghai might be the Orson Welles at his most playful. Not that the film is a light-hearted barrel of laughs, but the director seems to be having a good time on both sides of the camera. Juggling film noir, mystery, romance, courtroom drama and occasional surrealism, Welles creates a compelling concoction that’s sometimes narratively messy, but thoroughly enjoyable.
Not bad for a guy who only agreed to star and direct the film in exchange for financial help to save a doomed stage production he was working on. In fact, the story behind The Lady from Shanghai is nearly as interesting as the movie itself, which is discussed in bonus features by Peter Bogdanovich, who has not only written about Welles, he knew the man personally.
The movie itself is a twist-laden thriller with a tough, cynical protagonist, a fetching femme fatale and a couple of despicable bad guys. Welles himself plays Michael O’Hara, an Irish seaman who meets Elsa Bannister (Rita Hayworth) and becomes immediately smitten by her. She offers him a job onboard her private yacht, but when learning she’s married, he angrily declines. Elsa’s husband, wealthy-but-ailing defense attorney Arthur Bannister (Everett Sloane), later convinces him to join the boat crew for a lengthy cruise.
Michael has a dark past, having once killed a man, which is exploited by Arthur’s lecherous partner, George Grisby (Glenn Anders). Grisby offers Michael $5000 to “murder” him, which is to help Grisby fake his own death while Michael hands the police a written confession. Grisby assures him that, with no body, there will be no conviction. Concurrently during the cruise, Arthur’s cruelty towards his young wife infuriates Michael, who eventually accepts Grisby’s offer and use the payoff for he and Elsa to escape from under Arthur's thumb.
"I ain't cleaning this up." |
The narrative occasionally suffers from plot contrivances and a bit of sloppy writing (by Welles’ standards anyway), resulting in a film that sometimes tries to do too many things at once. But overall, the story is very compelling and comes to a satisfying conclusion. Elsewhere, the performances are generally really good. Welles manages to instill Michael with equal measures of toughness and vulnerability, while Hayworth makes a worthy temptress even without her legendary red locks. But the true scene stealers are Sloane and Anders, both of whom waste little time turning the audience against them (in the best possible way).
Though somewhat maligned when first released, The Lady from Shanghai has since become a film noir classic and it’s easy to see why. It may not be Orson Welles’ greatest film, but it might be his most purely entertaining one. The film has been given an excellent 4K UHD facelift, along with a few enjoyable and revealing bonus features. The overall picture and sound is a significant improvement over any previous Blu-ray or DVD version.
EXTRA KIBBLES
A CONVERSATION WITH PETER BOGDANOVICH - The late director discusses Welles, the movie and his admiration of both.
AUDIO COMMENTARY - By Peter Bogdanovich.
TRAILER
DIGITAL COPY
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