Borderline (1950/Roan Group)
Picture: C
Sound: C Extras: C- Film: C+
Many people are surprised that Fred MacMurray had a darker
career before the likes of The Nutty Professor and My Three Sons,
so how does the serious actor of Billy Wilder’s Film Noir classic Double
Indemnity become a happy father figure?
Well, besides the eventual end of Noir, MacMurray could have continued
on a serious route. However, his work
as a serious actor started to become a sort of spoof of itself and that persona
started to crack on Borderline, a 1950 Universal Noir that becomes
somewhat comically deconstructive as it goes along.
Sometimes, the moments are forerunners of the likes of Airplane!
and The Naked Gun franchise, but it is not as knowing in doing this all
the time and not as explicitly trying to be funny. However, this was the midpoint of Noir (running 1941 – 1958) and
though WWII was over, the country was getting deeper into a Cold War and the
conservatism of the time was becoming a new domestic menace. This film can be seen as a reflection of
that.
MacMurray plays a pre-DEA agent opposite Claire Trevor,
who also turns out to be working for the same outfit, but neither of them knows
it. Raymond Burr, who would later play
lawyer hero Perry Mason and police hero Ironside, was in the middle of his “bad
guy” cycle. Four years before Alfred
Hitchcock’s Rear Window, Burr was on a roll in such roles and is another
actor who switched personas as the TV era arrived, if not as dramatic as
MacMurray. The film is somewhat uneven,
but always interesting to watch, even when it does not work. It is a fun older film that tried something
different.
The 1.33 X 1 image is claimed to be from the original
camera negative and the print source looks good, but this is a transfer
restoration from 2000 and could use some upgrading later. As it stands, it is average, with some lack
of detail (not severe) and slight digital hazing here and there. The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is smaller than
expected, but may have been intended for Roan’s old 1.0 Dolby-only option that
was not as good. This will do until an
HD version in a few years and there is brief text on the film as the disc’s
only extra.
- Nicholas Sheffo