Showing posts with label WB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WB. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2026

DVD Review: Stranger on the Third Floor (1940)



Stranger on the Third Floor (1940)

(Released: 2010 by the Warner Archive Collection)  

Another looong DVD Review by Joe Torcivia

 
Summary:  You heard of “The First Noel”, but could this be “The First Noir”? 

Perhaps so, if the text on Warner Archives’ packaging is to be believed!  Let’s take a look, shall we?    

“‘Stranger on the Third Floor’ is the little B-Picture that launched one of the greatest movements in cinema history: ‘Film Noir’”.

“The highlight:  A suspense-and-sweat-drenched dream sequence that jolted 1940 audiences into an exciting new way of looking at the movies.” 


Quite a claim, and all the more interesting as this was NOT a Warner Bros. picture, but rather an RKO Radio Pictures production merely packaged for DVD release by Warner Archives.  RKO being the studio that gave us such classics as “Citizen Kane”, “KingKong”, “Gunga Din”, the Val Lewton produced series of horror films, and so much more. 

They even gave us (would you believe) John Wayne as Genghis Khan in "The Conqueror", with Agnes (Endora)  Moorehead and William (Cannon) Conrad thrown in for good measure! 
 
Don't look here for a snarky comment, folks! 
I actually kinda liked this one, it's casting absurdity aside!

 
For all I know, by now, the vast Time Warner media empire may even encompass what was once RKO. Anyway, that dream sequence was “jolting” enough, I’ll sure give ‘em that!  More on it to come…


Did you ever want to kill a man?”

My son, there’s murder in every intelligent man’s heart!” 

These are exciting times for New York City newspaper reporter Michael Ward.  He and his lovely fiancée Jane are apartment hunting, in anticipation of the big day soon to come...


...and Ward’s paper is about to give him a big raise for his personal account of a particular story that he has become personally involved in. 

Oh, yes… the story.  Ward’s testimony will send a down-on-his-luck schlub with a minor criminal record, “Joe Briggs” (movingly played by Elisha Cook, Jr.), to the electric chair for the murder of “Nick”, a neighborhood diner owner.   Ward did not witness the ACTUAL killing, but found Briggs, alone in the diner, standing over the body of the throat-slit dead man – for what looks to be some pretty damning circumstantial evidence. 

Is Briggs to be "Cook-ed"? 
Briggs is convicted and sentenced to death.  He emotionally maintains his innocence, calling out to Ward, who once lent him money for a meal in that very same diner.  Jane, in the courtroom and hearing Briggs’ cries, is quite naturally upset, and begins to distance herself from Ward.   

Cooks... that is *LOOKS* like it!

A highly effective scene depicts Ward on what seems to be an endless walk home after the trial.  He suffers pangs of conscience, as he makes his way through crowded New York City sidewalks.  Though surrounded by fellow citizens, he is completely “alone”, haunted by his vacillating thoughts:

“What if she’s [Jane’s] right?  After all, I didn’t actually SEE Briggs kill Nick.  All of the rest of the evidence was circumstantial too.

“So what?  That doesn’t make it any less reliable.  If the courts had an eyewitness for everything, nobody’d ever be convicted. 

“Sometimes, they DO get the wrong man!  Why did he have to have a criminal record?  Now, they’ll have to give him the chair.  He’ll die, and I’ll never know for sure!” 

As he reaches his dumpy apartment building, Ward’s thoughts are interrupted by the sight of an odd-looking man on the building steps.  An furtive little fellow with darting eyes, played by the great Peter Lorre, later described in the film as: “A strange looking man [ with ] big, bulgy eyes, thick lips, and he wears a long white scarf”. 

Hmmm... Fits the bill? 

He later finds Lorre’s stranger skulking around inside the building and confronts him.  The stranger flees and immediately disappears, as if into thin air. 

Turns out Ward’s prissy and nasty neighbor in the adjoining apartment, Mr. Maine, is found dead with his throat slit in the same manner as was Nick.  Maine frequently had words with Ward, and (in the type of anger born of frustration and exasperation) Ward is known to have publicly threatened to (at least figuratively) kill him.  

Ironically, Ward is taken into police custody on the same type of circumstantial evidence upon which Briggs was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. 

How's it feel, Mike? 

Before his arrest, however, we are treated to Ward’s amazing dream sequence referenced above. 

In it, Ward is interrogated by six look-alike, cigar-chomping detectives with dark suits and derby hats.  The dream continues to unfold with amazing cartoonish exaggeration. 


Jane screams in horror over Ward’s murder conviction, hemmed-in by sharply tall, drawn skyscrapers.  Fellow reporters cackle over three-foot high headlines of “MURDER!”, as Ward drowns in a swirling vortex of such newspapers.  

We move to a surreal courtroom scene – quite unusual for a 1940 picture – consisting of a very sparse, open set containing only what is necessary to convey the bizarre visual.  [ JOE’S NOTE:  If you’ve ever seen the Western sets for both LOST IN SPACE’s “West of Mars” (1966) or STAR TREK’s “Spectre of the Gun” (1968) you will have some idea of the sparse, almost dreamlike sense of set decoration employed here. ]


 

Peter Lorre’s stranger appears as a spectator in this quasi-courtroom, amid literally endless rows of otherwise empty seats that seemingly stretch to infinity.   The judge stands and makes his pronouncement: 


It is the judgment of this court that you be taken to the state prison – and be there PUT TO DEATH in the manner prescribed by law… and may God have mercy on your soul!

And, lowering his gavel, the judge instantly morphs into the Statue of Justice!  The heavy shadows of IRON BARS are cast upon the blank walls, entombing Ward. 

As he is prepared to take the final walk to the electric chair, we cut over to a cell containing Briggs, the very same man who was convicted on Ward’s testimony.  [ JOE’S NOTE:  Don’t ask why Ward is taken to be fried before Briggs.  It’s just a dream! ]  

Briggs laughs maniacally:  “HA-HA!  Now, YOU’RE looking for somebody to believe YOU!  To say YOU ain’t done it!

“Why should they?  Did YOU believe ME?  Would YOU tell ME you didn’t think *I* done it?  No!  HA-HA!  Okay, kid… Go and DIE!”

A silhouette of the electric chair looms – about EIGHT FEET TALL! 


Past the dream sequence, Ward is convinced the killer is Peter Lorre’s creepy stranger, but is believed by no one but Jane – who begins to scour the town for any evidence of the existence the bug-eyed man with the long white scarf.   

We’ll stop here in the interest of avoiding Major Spoilers, but suffice it to say that “Stranger on the Third Floor” suddenly eschews its surrealist sensibilities and, at the 00:52:22 mark of the 01:03:59 abruptly turns unexpectedly creepy and exciting for its final 5-6 minutes! 


Now, I’m not sure that 1940’s “Stranger on the Third Floor” was the single film that led American cinema (not to mention both Peter Lorre and Elisha Cook, Jr. along with director John Huston, actors Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor and Sydney Greenstreet) directly to “The Maltese Falcon” (1941), but enough of the primary building blocks of Film Noir (at least as *I* understand the term) are there for Warner Archives to make the case.  

The Maltese Falcon: Bogart gives Greenstreet "The Bird"!

…And, you’ve GOT to give it some points for creativity and its vibe of general weirdness. 

As is our custom in these reviews, we’ll break it into CONS and PROS.  

Also, by now, we’ve gone over the general debits and credits of The Warner Archive Collection in great length in other such posts.  Suffice it to say these are general “No-Frills” releases, pressed in the DVD-R format, which will not play on a computer. 

No Extra Features, save a Theatrical Trailer – and even that is not always guaranteed.  No subtitles, alternate language tracks, or other expected amenities of the DVD viewing experience.

 
The CONS:

No Theatrical Trailer:  This is unusual, but not completely uncommon, for Warner Archives sets.  As you know from previous reviews, I love movie trailers of this vintage, so this is a definite “CON”.  

 
The PROS:

Logical Chapter Skips:  This category is a literal “toss up”, when it comes to Warner Archive Collection product.  The earliest WAC DVDs (and occasionally those released thereafter) came with fixed 10-minute interval Chapter Skips – regardless of where that put viewers logically within the film.  Later WAC releases, (though, inexplicably, not all) offer Chapter Skips that work more logically with the film. Stranger on the Third Floor” offers Logical Chapter Skips.  I’ll take that as a “PRO” and run!   

The Cast:

·         Peter Lorre as “The Stranger”.  (Scarfs are Scary)
  

·         John McGuire as “Michael Ward”. (Tormented Protagonist)

·         Margaret Tallichet as “Jane”.  (Fiancée turned Detective)

·         Elisha Cook, Jr. as “Briggs”.  (Did He, or Didn’t He?)

OVERALL:



Is it really the beginning of Film Noir?  I’m not qualified to say, but it IS an interesting – and offbeat (in the “good” sense of the word) product of Golden Age Hollywood – and I liked it a lot! 

Stranger on the Third Floor” is highly recommended for fans of Peter Lorre, Golden Age Hollywood murder mysteries, exaggerated and nightmarish imagery… and (let’s go for broke) Film Noir!   

Monday, May 4, 2026

The Best Tune That is Looney!

 Well, I guess I asked for it...

Now that the voting is closed in our Gottfredson Guessing Game, and the results will be posted soon, I volunteered, as a lead-in to the Big Event, to offer up "My Favorite Looney Tunes Short", followed by "My Favorite Carl Barks Story"...

...So, here they are!  Looney Tunes today, Barks maybe in another day or three, and finally the glory of Gottfredson!  

As I mentioned in the previous Comments Section, these things often come grouped in "Top Threes", and Looney Tunes and Barks are no exception. I'll run 'em all down with explanations as to why they fall where they do.  Good fodder for your comments too!  

FAVORITE LOONEY TUNES SHORT: "Rabbit Seasoning"! Chuck Jones, Michael Maltese, and Mel Blanc are ALL at the top of their game in this one!  With Bugs, Daffy, and Elmer as the most perfect, textbook versions of the characters as we know them best!  

This is the second of the "Duck Season, Rabbit Season Trilogy" and far and away the best, in terms of  character design, character movement, witty dialogue (...which you all know that I LOVE), and voice performances! 

But for me, as a writer, what REALLY sets "Rabbit Seasoning" apart from its predecessor "Rabbit Fire", and its successor "Duck! Rabbit, Duck!", is that it has the strongest ending of the three, paying off a gag bit expertly laid earlier in the cartoon by Michael Maltese!  The now-immortal "Would you like to shoot me now, or wait 'till you get home?"

In comparison, the "Elmer Season" closing gag of "Rabbit Fire", and the "Baseball Season" closing gag of "Duck! Rabbit, Duck!", despite these cartoons' other fine moments, cannot help but fall flat!  

Those who know me in real-life know that "Rabbit Seasoning" is chock full of go-to quotes for me:

"You keep outta dis, he doesn't have to shoot you now!" (from Bugs). 

"Let's run through that again!" (lisping like Daffy Duck).

"Pronoun trouble!" (from Daffy). 


"Well I say he DOES have to shoot me now - so SHOOT ME NOW!" (from Daffy)

"Yaess?" (from Bugs). 

"Ohhh no you don't! Not again! Sorry!" (from Daffy). 

"Yeah, you're so smart! If I was a rabbit, what WOULD you do?" (from Daffy). 

"Right-o!" (from Daffy).

"No more for me, thanks! I'm drivin'!" (from a dazed Daffy).  

David, Thad K., and Jonathan Gray, for instance, have heard most, if not all, of these at random moments in different and unrelated conversations! 

And, while not a quote, I must also cite Elmer's "hat-erection" when kissed by Bugs in drag! 

.........................

Rounding out my "Top Three" at #2 is something as opposite from "Rabbit Seasoning" as a Warner/Schlesinger short can get... "Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur" (1939, Chuck Jones). 

In the stone age, a primitive, manically wild version of Daffy Duck, heckles a put-upon Jack Benny-inspired caveman and his clumsy pet dinosaur literally to death!  And it IS that unexpected death of our three main characters that makes this one of my three favorite endings in cartoons!  (I'll exclude modern things like "Rick and Morty" - Thanks, Thad! - from this list, because the "unexpected ending" has become more of a norm!) 

Daffy has "died" at the end of at least two other cartoons, "Draftee Daffy" and "Show-Biz Bugs", but the novelty and execution of the triple-demise makes this one the best!  

.........................

Daffy has the honor of appearing in ALL THREE of my favorite Looney Tunes shorts... and this one just happens to have my *second-favorite* ending in all of cartoons... #3 is "Yankee Doodle Daffy" (1943, Friz Freleng).  


Talent agent Daffy mercilessly hounds theatrical empresario Porky Pig into giving the lollipop-licking, almost silent, diminutive duck, Sleepy Lagoon, an audition. 

 Notice Friz Freleng (as Porky Pig!) in the portrait adorning Porky's office! 

What wins it a place in my "Top Three" is the ending of Sleepy not just unexpectedly demonstrating a shockingly beautiful operatic voice - that's great enough!  But, what REALLY puts it over the top is the last-second addition of Sleepy CHOKING as he sings his last line!!!


It's that "going back for one more gag, once you think it's over" that truly appeals to me as a writer!  Not seeing the originals of many of the stories I translate, you may not notice this, but adding an extra gag to compliment the one that precedes it is something I try to do whenever possible! ...and it just might have been this cartoon that would eventually inspire me to do so!  

.........................

Something I just realized at this writing... While Bugs Bunny is my favorite Looney Tunes character, it is Daffy Duck who stars in all three of my favorite shorts! 


And a DIFFERENT VERSION of Daffy in each one, to boot!  Primitive Manic Daffy, Obnoxious Huckster Daffy, and Jealous and Resentful Daffy!  I'd say the duck has had quite an evolution over the years!  

Drop some comments on us, and let us know what you think!  

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

I’m Not an Artist (...or Colorist), But… WHAT Massive Fist?!

I am not an artist, nor am I a colorist.  If I WERE a colorist, I would be a worse colorist than I would be as an artist.  

It's not just a matter of specific skills of art and coloring that I have never possessed, it's also my admitted lack of creative imagination in those two areas!  

Oh, I have an almost limitless creative imagination in the area of WRITING!  This Blog, my many APA and fanzine writings of yore, and my professional comics work bear testament to that.  But, even if I had sufficient skills in the areas of art and coloring, my work would at best rank as pedestrian, as I have scant (all together now) creative imagination to apply to said work. 

Art is, of course, a matter of subjective taste.  Meaning that while I (and, presumably, most of you) really like things like THIS...


 ...Or THIS...


 ...Or THIS...


...I do allow for the possibility, remote as it may be, that there COULD BE some folks who actually like THIS...

...Even if it's only the artist himself, and possibly his editor!  

But, when COLORING fails, it's pretty much universal!  For instance, take the cover of HAWKMAN #6 (DC Comics, Cover Date: February-March, 1965) and its titanic struggle between Hawkman and a great winged-gorilla. 


Hawkman says: "Got to bring my mace UP -- before that massive fist comes crashing DOWN!" 

MASSIVE FIST?!  WHAT MASSIVE FIST?!  Without squint-staring really hard, do you see any massive fist?  

Quick aside: It has nothing to do with the quality of the digital image used above.  I have the actual comic here beside me as I write this, and the "real thing" looks exactly the same!  


It would seem to be a matter of too much dark brown concentrated in what should be a critical area of the illustration!  

Let's assume there was insufficient room for artist [The Great] Murphy Anderson to position the gorilla's arm and fist elsewhere on the cover, as the dramatic focus of the piece is the gorilla about to smash Hawkman into a fine Hawk-puree! (Sorry, but my keyboard doesn't allow for the accent mark, and spell-checker isn't offering it either!) 

But, perhaps just the slightest bit of gradation in the dark brown might have made a difference, or maybe a better-defined outline of the gorilla's arm and fist to separate it in depth relative to the  gorilla's wing! 

Then again, the coloring techniques of the Silver Age were far more limited than they would be beginning in the 1980s, so I don't have a definitive solution to offer.  

But, that's why I’m Not an Artist (...or Colorist), But… I'm still left to ask "Massive fist? WHAT massive fist?!"


Oh, and for a "massive fist" that you actually CAN see clearly, try this on for massive-size!  

Oh, THAT massive fist! Got it!  
No, actually Superman got it... right in the super-breadbasket! 

Friday, February 21, 2025

Separated at Mirth: Pick Your Poison(ed Water)!

If faced with a choice of soapy bath water as in POPEYE #50 (Dell Comics, Cover Date: October-December, 1959), or soapy wash water as in YOSEMITE SAM #27 (Gold Key Comics, Cover Date: April, 1975), what would YOU do to keep from dying of thirst?   

 

The oddball thing about poor Sam's predicament is that Bugs Bunny DOESN'T WEAR ANY CLOTHES, so what is he washing?  

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Adventures in Comic-Boxing: The Case of the Migrating Penguin!

When it comes to PENGUINS, Warner Bros. Looney Tunes has a pretty memorable one that twice co-starred with Bugs Bunny...

Walter Lantz had a pretty memorable one of his own... CHILLY WILLY! 

But there must have been a brief period during Chilly's tenure at Lantz when he may have become dissatisfied with his contract... and briefly defected to Warner Bros.

Otherwise, how would you explain THIS?!    

WALTER LANTZ NEW FUNNIES #278 (Dell Comics, Cover Date: July-August, 1960) 

...Yes, really! Let's dolly in for a closer look... 

Maybe he was tired of working with SMEDLEY?  


...Or lower-tier players like Homer Pigeon?  

...And taking SECOND BILLING, NO LESS!  The unhappiness of that experience even caused him to put on TOO MUCH WEIGHT!   

The GOOD SCRIPTS, like "The Legend of Rockabye Point" (possibly the single funniest cartoon of all time)... 

...And "I'm Cold" stopped coming, much to the little guy's displeasure.  

Or maybe he just wanted to work with "that Oscar-Winning Rabbit, Bugs Bunny!" Or the rabbit's renowned animation director Chuck Jones?  


Ya, know... like that OTHER penguin did!  

But, alas, Chilly's experiences at Warner Bros. were not good... 

...Being a PENGUIN and all, they cast him in a BATMAN movie, as a "hench-peng" to THIS GUY!  


Chilly didn't like that AT ALL!  

Coincidently, at that time, Walter Lantz decided to lure him back with the promise of working with THEIR top star, Woody Woodpecker...

...And so, he once again became "Walter Lantz Chilly Willy"


...And remained happily so (though still "chilly") ever after! 


...OR... COULD IT HAVE BEEN MUCH SIMPLER THAN ALL THAT?  

Could it have possibly been nothing more than a... PRINTING ERROR?!  

Could THIS...

...Have been erroneously run in place of... THIS?   
                                         

...Eeeh, COULD BE!