After World War Two and Citizen Kane, Hollywood experimented with different and, sometimes, radical approaches to narration. Films featured false (or badly remembered) flashbacks, narration delivered by a corpse floating in a swimming pool at a mansion off Sunset Boulevard, and stories nested within stories. The late David Bordwell has written a book on this subject, characterizing it as Hollywood's reinvention of narrative. Godard said that his pictures had a proper beginning, middle, and end but just not in that order. The same can be said for many post-war film noir. Arthur Ripley's 1946 noir, The Chase (adapting Cornell Woolrich's The Black Path of Fear) is a noteworthy example of the sometimes hallucinatory innovations in narration characterizing that period.
A troubled war veteran is starving on the streets. While ravenously watching a cook making eggs and bacon through a glass window, the vet, Scotty, finds a wallet on the street. Fundamentally an honest man, Scotty treats himself to a meal, buys a cigar, and, then, sets off to find the owner of the wallet. In a lavish marble mansion, Scotty encounters a smarmy and sadistic gangster named Eddie Roman (Steve Cochran). The mansion is filled with Greek and Roman statuary; there's an obsequious butler, a henchman played by a lithe and serpentine Peter Lorre, and, of course, a blonde moll as cool and marmoreal as the statures strewn about the place. Roman admires Scotty's sangfroid and honesty and hires him to be his chauffeur. First, he tests Scotty's driving ability by making him steer the limousine while Roman operates a floor accelerator in the backseat, goosing the big car so that it roars toward a train on a railway track at over a hundred miles an hour. Roman and Scotty narrowly avert a crash. Peter Lorre wipes sweat off his face. Scotty gets the job.
Scotty is played by Robert Cummings who purses his lips and spends most of the movie looking baffled. He gulps down pills by the score, apparently some kind of tranquilizer since he has PTSD from his service in the Navy in the War. Scotty's main assignment is carting Roman's moll, Lorna, around southern Florida. Needless to say a romance ensues between Lorna and Scotty. Scotty buys tickets planning to elope with Lorna to Havana. They cross the sea on a steamer and, in Havana, someone knifes Lorna and plants the murder weapon on Scotty. He flees through the shadows of Havana and takes refuge in a curio shop. A Chinese merchant, an old woman, appears as a figure of doom. Ultimately, the bad guys, including Lorre, pursue Scotty through the blackness of the curio shop, having gunned down the old woman. Scotty is shot and falls down some stairs. But it's revealed that this has all been a dream. Scotty has fallen asleep in his room, waiting for nine pm when he intends to abscond to the port with Lorna. Now, Scotty is completely amnesiac and can't even recall who he is, let alone his plot to elope with his fearsome boss's girlfriend. He finds the number of his psychiatrist, possibly on the pill bottle and calls. The two men meet and, then, adjourn to a glitzy nightclub - how this could be construed as therapeutic is hard for me to see. Eddie Roman and his gun-thug, Peter Lorre also come into the same glittering and overlit night club. Scotty sees Roman and, then, remembers his mission for the night. He darts away in a hurry to pickup Lorna. Roman and Lorre chase after him, Lorre holding the steering wheel and Roman manning the accelerator from the backseat. The limousine races to beat a speeding locomotive but slams into the train crossing at the same time that the locomotive has reached that point. There's a big, fiery wreck. Meanwhile, Scotty and Lorna sail for Havana. They reach Cuba and the film repeats previous shots of them in front of a nightclub -- images we saw in the first half of the film. Lorna embraces Scotty and ostensibly the film ends happily ever after.
The plot is barely serviceable and compromised by the use of dream to rewrite the fatal history of Lorna and Scotty's elopement. But it's flamboyantly made achieving surreal effects on what must have been a very low budget. Cochran, who plays Eddie Roman, was a bad guy in real life, "pretty much a douche" as Guy Maddin characterizes him on the commentary -- in the film, he viciously slaps a girl giving him a manicure, taunts his wife, and makes strange quasi-homosexual remarks. In feeds a business rival to his mastiff in one memorable scene; Ripley accomplishes the murder with just shadows, darkness, a broken bottle of Napoleon cognac, and the sound of a growling dog. Havana is filmed like a von Sternberg location -- it's all shimmering moire patterns of light and dark, shadowy grillwork, steps and ladders lit to cast huge shadows, a tropical pattern of dark lattices and roving points of light; no one's face is ever visibile. There are odd dreamlike kinds of interference and paralysis. When Scotty tries to leave the crowd in front of the night club, the hack driver suddenly starts speaking impenetrable Spanish and no one can understand him or communicate their destination. It seems that the man would refuse to go where they want anyway. Some early love scenes are shot with rear projection of the stormy sea, a tropical pier, and someone with a bucket of water simulating surf by sometimes tossing white handfuls of water into the range of the camera. Oddy enough it's very effective in a turbulent, Emily Bronte-style a kind of demotic Gothic. After the dream we have a sense of fatality, events repeat themselves in a strange way. Everything has more or less already happened and now is coming back as farce or delirium. The editing seems slightly agitated, disjunct, shots don't exactly fit together right leading to a sense that the space in which the movie happens is full of fractures, gaps, parts that don't mesh right. The climactic scenes with the speeding train and the limousine in its pursuit are filmed with obvious miniatures -- it looks completely phony, but the hero is the plaything of fate and the spectacle of a tiny car and locomotive colliding somehow seems symbolic of the movie's dreamlike aura.
I bought the DVD primarily for the self-effacing commentary of the great Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin. His narration is primarily biographical, sketching outlines of the careers of the principal figures in the movie, including a memorable and hair-raising account of Steve Cochran's death. Maddin is fanatical about dates and film titles and presents a queer perspective that is simultaneously hard-boiled and fey. At one point, he says of Cochran: "you wouldn't want to be his cell-mate", then, pauses and murmurs "Or, maybe, you would." The leading lady, Michele Morgan, was a French actress who had fled to the United States during the war years; she died in 2016 at the chronological age of 96 but technically was only 24 -- she was born on February 29, 1920.