Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Poseidon Quickies: Betting on "The Gambler"

Another in a string of movies I've taken a chance on for decompression viewing during this year is 1954's The Gambler from Natchez. I opted to record it because it stars one of our hunks from movies and TV, Dale Robertson and had an interesting supporting cast as well. I'll be pointing out a few tidbits of interest about it, though my plans for a "big reveal" fell completely flat as I had to confront the fact that my memory is not what it used to be... Ha ha!

Our handsome hero is Dale Robertson, freshly returned to New Orleans from a military tour of duty. (If you haven't already, you must see the beautiful man here!)

As he departs the riverboat which has brought him home, he hears a local girl singing as she sweeps the deck of her own family boat. Debra Paget has her attributes out where they can be spotted!

Sorry this one turned out so blurry. On Paget's boat is her father, Thomas Gomez, and a helpful deckhand played by the imposing Woody Strode.

Robertson is nearly offed in a dispute over a card game, but Paget saves his life. He likes what he sees, but she is a good girl who refuses to accept any sort of gift from a man unless they are engaged and he's hardly in that position at the moment.

On the road home, he comes upon a carriage with a lame horse and a stranded female passenger. Lisa Daniels surely likes what she sees, too, but tries to maintain a level of decorum as he uses his own steed to see her safely home. A bumpy ride and some rain soon sees them becoming a little more familiar with one another on their trip.

Arriving at her large estate, she introduces Robertson to her elegant brother, Kevin McCarthy.

McCarthy has company of his own, one Douglas Dick.

It's not hard to see that in spite of his slick charm, McCarthy is going to be the villain of the piece. His whole manner changes when he discovers that Robertson's father is a local landowner himself, one who has amassed much of his fortune from extensive gambling.

Dick is clearly not in the best condition. Under the influence of alcohol, he can barely stay with the conversation, though he does give Robertson a bit of attention. McCarthy paints him as a man suffering from unrequited love, ostensibly for the blonde Daniels.

However, my own gaydar tells me that Dick is far more captivated by McCarthy. Subtle glances, placement of props, etc... do nothing to divert me from my suspicions...

Dick also wields an ever-present handkerchief which I have often found is a symbol of effeminacy in classic movies where some things just could not be properly addressed. In any case, these two have definitely been up to something. It seems they have done in Robertson's father while making it seem justified and are none too happy to see the son come rolling home.

In fact, on his way from McCarthy's, Robertson is stabbed in the back and winds up floating down the river unconscious! Paget spots him and the athletic Strode is able to fish him out and get him into their boat.

Paget is understandably interested in Robertson's recovery and starts off the healing process with a kiss on his prettily chiseled face.

The back-stabbing and journey down the river (not to mention a night's sleep!) have done nothing to mar his pompadour hairstyle!

His bandages can't seem to decide if they want to cover up his nipple or not. We prefer not, ourselves...

This is now the second time Paget has saved Robertson's life, though there still is no significant romance brewing. Two years after this movie, Paget would costar with (and grab the attention of) Elvis Presley in Love Me Tender. It is said that Priscilla Beaulieu (later Presley!) decided to completely overhaul her hair and makeup scheme in order to look as much like Paget as possible to land Presley for good herself. Whether that happened or not, she did win him for a period of time.

Now realizing that his father was set up to be killed, Robertson decides to go after the men who committed the act. He heads to the hotel where his papa was murdered.

Here, we meet the third corner of a deadly trio, John Wengraf (a onetime matinee idol of Austria) who is spending his own quality time upstairs with Dick when he finds out Robertson is on the premises.

In a "blink and you'll miss her" moment, Juanita Moore appears as Lisa Daniels' maid, trying to prevent Robertson from bursting in to see her. Moore couldn't have imagined that within 5 years she'd be costarring with Lana Turner in Imitation of Life (1959) and gleaning an Oscar nomination! The award went to Shelley Winters for The Diary of Anne Frank.

We're not 100% sure where Daniels' loyalty lies, but she seems to be aligned with her brother for the time being. Note how he wields his knife at waist level before the reclining Dick.

Having learned that a waiter at the hotel has squealed on them to Robertson, they put another dastardly plan in motion.

Things ultimately come to a head on McCarthy's glitzy riverboat, giving Paget and Gomez a chance to change out of their grungy duds and doll up a bit.

Now I know I can sometimes be guilty of projecting, but all this time McCarthy has really only had eyes for Dick. Suddenly, he seems somewhat taken by pretty Paget.

Upon meeting her, his walking stick is standing at attention...

I love the way McCarthy looks in this film with his long sideburns and natty clothing. Remember when Beverly Hills 90210 came on in the 1990s and Luke Perry brought these sort of sideburns back for a whole new generation?!

He kept reminding me of someone until it finally dawned on me. McCarthy seemed to be channeling the look of one of his very close comrades.

There's more than a passing similarity to Montgomery Clift in The Heiress, released 5 years prior. Look at the nose, mouth and jawline (and sideburns.) Now I know we have to consider the source, but Truman Capote was quoted on the subject of McCarthy and Clift. (McCarthy was at Michael Wilding and Elizabeth Taylor's home on the 1956 night when Clift was nearly killed - and was facially disfigured - in a nasty car accident, an accident McCarthy witnessed.) "In the two books about Monty, they have things about him and what a great friend he was to Monty. And in the books, McCarthy says he had no idea that Monty Clift was homosexual and was absolutely amazed...Why, he said, it never crossed his mind. Well, it had crossed the mind of every single trolley-car conductor in Hollywood, so it was very difficult to believe that it hadn't crossed the mind of his best friend for seven and a half years. I mean, how far can hypocrisy go?" Incidentally, Tennessee Williams also believed that Clift and McCarthy were more than friends... I'm not one to repeat gossip, so be sure and read it carefully this once. Ha ha!

Now, on to what was going to be my big pay-off regarding this movie, which was diminished by my feeble memory banks. The waiter who snitched on McCarthy and Dick - Jay Novello - found himself caught between a rock and a hard place. Robertson forced him to come clean about the murder plot, but that left him at the mercy of the two evildoers.

Dick and McCarthy come to the hotel to check into their room and are accompanied by a large, heavy chest. They have one of the bellmen bring the chest up to their suite.

But what's inside?

Turns out to be the deceased body of Novello!

They plan to dump the corpse in Robertson's room and frame him for the killing of the waiter.

These two conspirators, and possible lovers, bickering over a chest which contained a dead body reminded me of something I'd seen once before long ago.

And the name Douglas Dick did ring a bell (well, it certainly isn't forgettable!)
Dick had come onto the movie scene (following a career in the coast guard and a stint as a print model) in the mid-1940s. In 1948, he worked for Alfred Hitchcock in the movie Rope. As I had not scene Rope since the late-1980s, I had recalled him as the murder victim (a young blond man strangled and placed in a chest!)

Perhaps you can understand my mistake. The men aren't all that dissimilar.

Anyway, Rope concerned two college-age friends (implied lovers) who decided to kill a person just for the enthralling experience of it. Gay actors John Dall and Farley Granger portrayed the lethal twosome.

They pile the young man's body into a chest...

...then perversely have the guy's parents and fiancee over for dinner, the food for which will be served atop the chest!! I was so excited that Dick might have had a hand in both of these sequences, but as you can see, I hadn't remembered him correctly.

He is IN Rope, however. He plays the former lover of the dead man's fiancee, adding to the awkward kink of the party as set up by the killers.

Seeing Rope again for the first time in ages, I was stunned by the endless rubber-faced mugging of Dall as the more dominant half of the killing duo. He seemed to be projecting every expression to the back row of the movie house across the street!

Anyway, there's still that vague connection between the movies, such as it is. I'll do better next time. LOL Mr. Dick, by the way, retired from acting in 1971 to pursue psychology and lived to be 95. Also, as this is surely my final post of 2020, I'd like to take a moment to wish all of you a very Happy New Year! Here's hoping for a far, far better 2021 than what many of us have had to endure this last year. Thanks so much to those of you who have been so kind to comment, e-mail or otherwise share your genial and encouraging thoughts, compliments, etc... It means a great deal to me. Stay safe and be healthy!

6 comments:

Dan said...

Well, wasn't that fun! I suspect what kept Robertson from being a bigger star was that he looked too much like too many better known actors. Like Lee Horsley, he was good looking without being particularly distinctive.

Douglas Dick is one of our Perry Mason regulars. In fact, in his most recent appearance, he also plays a rather "colorful" character. Don't be fooled - he was also the murderer!
John Dall also made quite a few Mason appearances, always playing up the smarm. In his most recent appearance, he got bopped on the head with an oriental dog sculpture. Believe me, he deserved it.

Kevin McCarthy and Jay Novello were everywhere on 70's TV. I suppose it is possible McCarthy didn't know about Clift, but it would have taken a big dose of willful ignorance.

So thanks, Mr. P, for all the work you do to brighten our days. Your little essays are always so respectful, well researched and well written, and a lot of fun. A very happy 2021 to you.

rigs-in-gear said...

Geez, Louise, where does the time go? It was 48 years ago last week our house was broken into and robbed while we were all attending a showing of... The Poseidon Adventure, I kid you not.

"Paget is understandably interested in Robertson's recovery and starts off the healing process with a kiss on his prettily chiseled face." I guess today she'd be guilty of assault, as he's obviously in no condition to give consent!

"These two conspirators, and possible lovers, bickering over a chest which contained a dead body reminded me of something I'd seen once before long ago." Whew... for a second there, I thought you going for Arsenic and Old Lace They were sisters, not lesbians, I would admonish.

Thanks for another great year of magic as only the movies can deliver. Especially this year.

Shawny said...

Poseidon, thank you for a year of wonderful posts. Happy (as happy can be) new year!

Gingerguy said...

I read the last good wishes quickly and thought it said thanks for sharing your genitals....lol.. I know it's not that kind of blog! forgive me- though Strode gave me a woody.
John Dall is such a ham, in The Corn is Green that accent is too much, and you are so accurate about Rope.

I love Debra Paget, and can totally see Priscilla co opting that look that evolved into a gothic visage,and like Elvis himself with the black hair and bright blue eyes. Fun recap of this movie, thanks for making this year a little less bleak, and wishing you smooth sailing ahead for the new year

joel65913 said...

I enjoyed this picture. It has that fantabulous high gloss sheen that was a benchmark of 50's 20th Century Fox movies. Everything looks showroom new and flawlessly coordinated, ridiculously unrealistic but oh so lovely to look at. It's been so long since I've seen it though that I don't remember a lot of the leering between the characters that you point out.

Dale Robertson was a handsome man and a passable actor (unsurprisingly my first exposure to him was when I saw his costarring flick with Linda Darnell-Dakota Incident-when I was a kid) but never exudes any particularly strong individuality to push him out of the crowd.

Same goes for Debra Paget. She was certainly one of the most beautiful women of her time and 20th certainly tried hard enough to make her a megastar but behind that china doll loveliness there wasn't a fire like the one Ava Gardner possessed. It made and still makes Ava vivid onscreen while Debra is merely a pretty girl going through the paces.

Yes we all hope for a MUCH better year than 2020 and at least from the signs so far it looks promising. The orange swamp lizard is almost gone, an adult will be in charge once again who will take things in hand and steer the nation and lead us out of this mess. It won't happen overnight but just the knowledge that someone who cares about our country and wants to do the actual job of governance rather than be a glory hound is comforting.

Hope it's a great year for you!

Poseidon3 said...

Hello all! Glad that several of you enjoyed this post and were moved to leave a comment.

Dan, there are times when Dale R. looks a lot like Clark Gable, but without that famous screen magnetism (which appeared off-screen, too, to many who met him!) How fun that you know Dick from seeing him on "PM!" I enjoy discovering new people and seeing them in various projects once their persona is clear in my mind. Try as I might, I just never could warm to Dall... I appreciate your kind remarks about the blog very much!

rigs-in-gear, some things you just NEVER forget. My mother and I had a similar experience in that we were coming home one Christmas Eve after having been away at one of her friend's and were going to watch "Camelot" on TV... only, we'd been burglarized and, thus, had no TV! Left a lifelong distaste in my mouth for thieves. LOL about "Arsenic and Old Lace!" I'm glad you've enjoyed coming here. Thanks!!

Shawny, thanks very much! Glad you get a kick out of my nonsense here.

Gingerguy, I appreciate your tireless support. Paget will always be special to me thanks to "The Ten Commandments" (and one of these days I need to see her work in "Tiger of Bengal" and "The Indian Tomb" in which she plays Seetha the Sheeva Dancer! LOL) I have never seen "The Corn is Green." I was a kid when Kate Hepburn re-did it for TV and I guess I felt that was enough... Maybe sometime.

Joel65913, thank you, too, for your enduring support and your always informative comments that add in tidbits that I either didn't know or neglected to mention. I loved "Dakota Incident!" Never was there a redder dress on screen than the one Linda Darnell wears in that one! I think Debra probably lacked ambition, especially after wedding a wealthy Chinese oil man! And the writing was probably on the wall that she'd be generally decoration in her films (a real problem, too, when decorative parts began calling for outright nudity as well in many cases! That was not going to be her way.)