Out of the Past Jacques Tourneur (U.S., 1947)
One of the most exquisite and intriguing of all the noirs, crafted into a complex narrative in which past, present, and future are linked as in a Mobius strip. Mitchum, hiding out in a small-town identity, is forced to relive his career as a private eye when an unresolved case opens up again like a chasm. Once upon a time, he fell in love with the woman he was sent by mobster Kirk Douglas to trace; in a Mexican cantina, he became the fly to Jane Greer's spider, and now she's come back, like a very live ghost, to haunt him. Out of the Past provided the signature Mitchum role-laconic and smitten at the same time and his sexiest line in cinema, spoken to Greer: "Baby, I don't care." Sex, or a sucker's game? Greer may be the quintessential femme fatale of film noir,. her presence (and past), out of the shadows into light and then back again, echoes an obsession with the unknown, the refusal of any kind of sanctuary, that is central to Tourneur's world view.
Written by Geoffrey Homes (pseud. for Daniel Mainwaring) from his novel Build My Gallows High. Photographed by Nicholas Musuraca. With Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming 95 mins, B&W, 35mm,Warner Bros.