Today we are going to jump to yet another genre within my silent movie "project" - crime.
The movie is "The Lodger: A Story From the London Fog" from 1927 which, despite being Alfred Hitchcock's third film, is regarded as the first one that's truly Hitchcockian.
I watched it on YouTube here.
"The Lodger" is based on the 1913 novel with the same title written by Marie Belloc Lowndes and inspired by the Jack the Ripper murders of 1888.
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Public domain via Wikimedia |
The film starts with a young blonde woman screaming.
Next you see an advertisement for a show called "Golden Curls" before you see the woman on the ground, murdered, a note pinned to her coat saying "The Avenger" in a triangle.
A witness describes the murderer she has seen, tall, the lower half of his face hidden by a scarf.
The woman has become the seventh blonde victim of the serial killer who always strikes on a Tuesday.
Next we go to the house of the Buntings and their daughter Daisy, a mannequin. Joe, the policeman who's in love with Daisy, is visiting.
Then a mysterious looking man hiding half of his face under a scarf is turning up at the door asking to rent a room. When shown to the room, he insists on the portraits of blonde ladies to be taken off the wall as they "get on his nerves".
Over time, the lodger seems more and more suspicious to the Buntings and Joe who has been assigned to "The Avenger" case, but can't prevent the eighth murder.
Mrs. Bunting's reason is the lodger going out late at night and another victim being found the next day, also he has locked a cabinet in his room. Mr. Bunting gets nervous when he buys a dress for Daisy as a gift and Joe can't stand the lodger and Daisy obviously being drawn to one another.
So they try to keep Daisy away from the lodger, but she won't have that and goes on a late night date with him which is interrupted by Joe whom she then tells she never wants to see him again.
When they are home again, Joe turns up with some colleagues to search the lodger's room. In the locked cabinet they find a gun, newspaper clippings about "The Avenger", a map of the murder sites, and the portrait of a blonde girl.
The lodger explains that it's his murdered sister, but Joe arrests him, anyway. The lodger escapes, handcuffed, and when Daisy finds him, he tells her the story of his sister and how his mother urged him on her deathbed to not rest until justice is done.
Daisy takes him to a pub and gives him brandy to warm him up, but his hands being hidden raise suspicion, even more so after they leave and Joe comes in to call the station to tell them about the escape. An angry mob forms hunting after the lodger and beating him despite Daisy and Joe, who has been given the information that "The Avenger" has been arrested, trying to defend him. Only when a paper boy turns up with the news, the mob lets go of him and he falls into Daisy's arms.
In the end, we see the lodger, Daisy, and her parents at his grand house, living happily ever after, no doubt.
I think I wanted to like the movie more than I actually did because so many people praise its brilliance. It might have had to do with my watching it while being sick. Although it's not extremely long, I couldn't even make it through in one go, possibly because I didn't feel good, possibly because I found some scenes to be too long for my liking and not very relatable.
If I thought my lodger could be a serial killer with a blonde girl obsession, would I want him to live in my house where my blonde daughter lives as well?
Where does Daisy take that blind faith in him from? Why is she so sure he's innocent? On the other hand, I feel Joe - whom I didn't like much throughout the movie - only arrests the lodger out of jealousy. The gun, map, newspaper clippings or even the portrait don't prove much, he could just be a person obsessed with true crime like all the others greedily waiting for news on the case. If his sister was the first victim, was he never mentioned in the case files or didn't Joe even read those?
Why didn't the lodger go to the police instead of insisting to bring the killer down himself? I'm sure his mother would have been okay with that.
Someone wrote that the "second part felt more like a romance than a mystery or thriller" and I agree.
The lodger looked very soulful and haunted and I wasn't even surprised that he wasn't the murderer in the end. To me, it would have been more of a plot twist if he had been.
It is said that Hitchcock had actually planned the lodger to be the murderer, but that the studio thought that Ivor Novello, who was a matinee idol, couldn't possibly be. There couldn't even be an ambiguous ending and to be honest, I found the happy ending a bit flat although I should have been happy for the young lovers, I guess.
What I liked were the use of light and shadow, angles, and effects which Hitchcock brought to perfection throughout his career, but for me they weren't enough to support the plot.
A note on the score for the version I watched. It was commissioned for the restored movie and is by Nitin Sawhney. I found it worked very well in some scenes, but an absolute no go for me was the singing in two scenes, that just didn't fit in there.
I don't know, maybe I would feel different watching it with a clear head a second time. I'll let you know if I try again.
Sources:
1. Matt Buchholz: Week 28: The Lodger (1927), Contradicting Myself, and Sound. On: Hitchcock 52, July 15, 2016
2. Christina Wehner: The Lodger (1927). On: Christina Wehner - Classic movies, musicals, old books, and the Great American Songbook, August, 13, 2018
3. Sam Wigley: Then and now: The Lodger reviewed. On: British Film Institute - Features, August 10, 2012
4. Philip Kemp: The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog: The first true Hitchcock movie. On: The Criterion Collection - Essay, June 27, 2017