Nightmare Alley Movie Review
Nightmare Alley Review
"Nightmare Alley" Overview

Rating: NR
1947
Cast and Crew
Director : Edmund GouldingProducer : George Jessel
Screenwiter : Jules Furthman
Starring : Tyrone Power,Coleen Gray,Joan Blondell,Helen Walker,Taylor Holmes
As noir goes, Nightmare Alley is long and meandering -- and just about as dark
as it gets.
A pet project of Tyrone Power, this film gives us Power in probably his
greatest role ever. He starts off as a standard-grade con man, then works his
way into the carnival as an aide to the mentalist (Joan Blondell in a solid
mid-career role). Power's Stanton woos the "electric girl" (the hauntingly
beautiful Coleen Gray), and together they eventually launch a mentalist act of
their own, playing in black-tie nightclubs and landing radio spots and more.
But when a psychiatrist (Helen Walker, the "bad dame" of the film) tempts him
into scamming wealthy tycoons with visions of loved ones from the beyond,
Stanton winds up in deep shit. His eventual return to the carnival is one of
cinema's most poetic, ironic, and heart-rending moments.
Throughout the film, Power is on fire, and each of the three femmes in the film
work as strong seconds to Power's acting. He actually seems to get better as
the film goes on, and one of his last (coherent) lines in the film "I was born
for it..." is something that will haunt you for days.
Director Edmund Goulding (Dark Victory) made few films of this intensity during
his long career, and oddly it has become his best-known work. That's for good
reason. While Nightmare Alley (the title, to my knowledge, is never really
explained) is considerably too long, it still manages to hold our interest
through a marathon second act, delivering us -- just in time -- to one of
cinema's most devastating finales ever.
Highly recommended.
The DVD includes a historian's commentary track.
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Review by Christopher Null
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