In
1967, Arthur Penn’s Bonnie and Clyde immediately proved a counter-culture sensation
by portraying its stylishly-dressed youth heroes as violent, hip, sexy and absolutely
righteous. The protagonists’ mantra of “we rob banks” was deemed heroic in the
Great Depression of the film’s setting, and a statement of Robin Hood-styled
virtues to boot.
In
1968, Noel Black’s film noir Pretty Poison, however, turned Bonnie
and Clyde’s romanticism about crime and violence on its head.
Indeed,
such flights of romantic fantasy about crime and violence are explicitly
critiqued in the Black film, the story of a young man and immovable object,
Dennis (Anthony Perkins) who lives in a day-dream world until that day-dream
runs smack into an irresistible force: “all American” high school student, Sue
Ann Stepenek (Tuesday Weld).
Sue
Ann is, as we eventually discover, a stone-cold sociopath, and Dennis learns
the hard way what his caring parole officer Azenauer (John Randolph) has been
attempting to tell him all along about life:
“You’re going outside into a very real, very
tough world. It has no place for fantasies.”
Pretty
Poison
concerns Dennis’s persistent inability to step out of his fantasy land, and
then dramatically permits him a final, memorable moment of grace regarding it.
In an instant of clarity, Dennis offers a staggeringly insightful coda about
people like his femme-fatale lover, and the world that nurtures them.
Additionally,
Pretty
Poison muses on what kind of society could give rise to a person like Sue
Ann, and through association with all-American symbols -- like the
aforementioned high school marching band (waving an American flag, no less) -- suggests a spiritual sickness
sprouting like a weed inside our borders.
Unremittingly
dark and at times extremely suspenseful, Pretty Poison wonders, essentially, what
happens when Bonnie and Clyde get together but aren’t exactly on the same page
regarding their violent exploits.
One
of them, Pretty Poison informs us, is going to take the fall. Hard.
“Would
you like me if I weren’t a CIA agent?”
Young
Dennis Pitt (Perkins) is released from incarceration, and is told by his kindly
parole officer, Azenauer (Randolph) that a job at Lowell Lumber and Supply has
been arranged for him. Pitt moves into a trailer at Bronson’s Garage, and
begins working at the job.
Bored
of the mundane and highly-repetitive work, the fantasy-prone boy begins to
confabulate stories about being a secret agent on top secret assignment. When Dennis is drawn to a beautiful high
school girl, Sue Ann Stepenek (Weld), he pulls her into his fantastic stories
too. Together, they plot to sabotage the Lumber and Supply building, which
Dennis insists will be used to contaminate the town’s drinking water.
But
on the night of the raid, Sue Ann wantonly commits murder and steals a loaded gun.
More and more uncomfortable with her behavior, Dennis feels “the pressures closing in.” Eventually, Sue Ann arranges for Dennis to be
a patsy in the murder of her mother (Garland), promising him that they will
flee to Mexico together once the deed is done.
Dennis
is arrested for the crime of murder, after turning himself in at a phone booth,
and sent to jail. Meanwhile, Sue Ann --
reveling in her freedom and power -- meets another man whom she can use for her
own sinister purposes.
“You
know, when grown-ups do it, it’s kind of dirty.”
Dennis
Pitt did a very bad thing in his youth. He started a fire that killed someone
he loved, his aunt. And yet Dennis weeps when he speaks of his crime, and seems
truthful when he claims that he never knew his aunt was at home during the
arson attempt. He never meant to hurt anybody. Perhaps because he is unable to
reckon fully with how his actions caused the death of another human being,
Dennis dwells in a perpetual fantasy world. It is a safer place, he seems to
understand.
“I’ve been taking a secret course in
interplanetary navigation,” Dennis tells Azenauer at one point. “I had hoped to be appointed to the first
Venus rocket.” The comment is a
joke, of course, but it reveals the truth about Dennis. He can’t remain tethered
in a dull, mundane world where his talents, he believes, are wasted.
Other
worlds, other fantasies, seem to beckon him.
When
Azenauer gets him a job in a lumber yard, Dennis blows it. He causes an
accident on the assembly line because he is day-dreaming while doing his work. In
particular, he is day-dreaming of Sue Anne, remembering her performance in the
marching band.
These
scenes are especially important in terms of visual presentation. Dennis’s job in
the mill requires him to gaze through an over-sized square scope that enlarges
the bottles passing before his eyes, thus making inspection easy.
Yet
the scope looks completely distorted, and therefore functions as a symbol of
Dennis’s distorted perspective or vision.
Like the scope which enlarges some items at the expense of others,
Dennis’s vision doesn’t reveal the world as it is, but in a tricky, untrue way.
Similarly,
Denis first gets close to Sue Ann after watching a parade involving her
marching band by pretending to be a secret agent. He asks her to hold onto
something important -- a bottle of that red liquid from the mill (mercury?) -- because
he is allegedly under surveillance. Sue Ann is tantalized by this game and does as Dennis asks. Their first date afterwards, importantly is in a movie theater: a place of fantasies come true.
Little-by-little, Sue Ann appears to be drawn into Dennis’s
web of fantastic lies involving his life as a secret agent, and his plan to raid the
paper mill factory before the drinking water can be contaminated.
Yet
a close watching of the film reveals another truth.
From
the very beginning, Sue Ann wants to be rid of her bossy, controlling mother
(Beverly Garland), and no matter the flight of fancy that Dennis engages in, he
is used by Sue Ann to make that plan become a reality.
Sue
Ann pulls the trigger, but Dennis is her patsy, the man with a criminal record
who goes to jail for the crime she commits. Thus Pretty Poison pulls a
nifty little dramatic trick on the viewer.
We believe, for the longest time, that Dennis is deceiving Sue Ann about
who he is, and what he is really doing with her. In fact, it is Sue Ann who is
the great deceiver, leading Dennis down a road which will see him charged for
murder and jailed. Sue Ann puts the thought in Dennis’s head of fleeing to
Mexico, and before long, Dennis is mindlessly dreaming of a Mexican beach, as
we see in several brief cuts.
It
is clear that Sue Ann wishes to be free, and that she uses Dennis for that purpose,
to procure her freedom. It is also clear
that though she knows she wants her mother dead, Sue Ann isn’t certain, even,
that her mother’s death will make her truly happy. “I feel
empty,” she notes at one important juncture, and it seems like an important
admission. Sue Ann may not be able to feel empathy, or any emotions for others.
She may only feel that emptiness, and so resorts to violence to alleviate it. She looks like a normal person, but is something else, a truth revealed by compositions in which Sue Ann appears upside down in the frame.
Twice
in the film, Sue Ann shows real enthusiasm and excitement during the act of
murder. First she bludgeons and then drowns a guard at the lumber mill. In this
scene, she mounts the dying man (who is face down in the water) and rides him
in a perverse mockery of the sexual act. In the second case, she shoots her
mother at point blank range, and even that isn’t enough to sate her desire. She fires again and again, over and over, as
if trying to recapture the thrill of murder repeatedly. To put it indelicately,
the only thing that seems to get Sue off is killing.
So
where Dennis – perpetually playing at being a secret agent -- notes in
mock-heroic dialogue that “emotions can
be fatal in times like this,” Sue Ann seems, in reality, unable to express
emotions except in the prosecution of murder or other violent acts.
Importantly,
Pretty
Poison also suggests, albeit obliquely, that Sue Ann has done something
like this before.
On
the dresser in her bedroom is a photograph of a mysterious soldier. Dennis
looks at the photo and asks who it is. Sue Ann lies and claims she doesn’t
remember. It seems entirely likely that this mystery man was the last victim
who fell for her charms (and is now conspicuously absent). This seems
especially likely given that after Dennis goes to jail she picks up with
another mark, planning to lead him into trouble as well.
Contrarily,
the photo could be of Sue Ann’s absent father (as a young man), who she reports
died in Korea. Perhaps she lied to
Dennis, and she had him killed, just as she plans to have her mother killer.
Either
way, the photograph exposes Sue Ann, which is why she refuses to explain it in
any detail.
Dennis
realizes too late what Sue Ann is, but refuses to testify against her because,
in his experience, people “pay attention”
only those things they notice themselves. This means that society at large will
have to determine what Sue Ann really is. Dennis, oddly enough, seems to feel
safe in jail, away from the “pretty poison” he encountered in the outside
world. He is reflecting on his own lesson in a way when he makes this important
remark. He didn’t believe Azenauer that the world is cruel and tough place, with
no room for fantasy. Now, after his
experience with Sue Ann, he believes it.
What
remains so shocking about Pretty Poison is the way that Sue
Ann’s pathology slowly comes to the surface. She is a beautiful, blonde, All-American
high school girl, ensconced in the marching band, and curious about life, and
what the future holds. Scratch the surface a little, however, and one detects
that seething appetite for violence, and her slick, seductive way of operating.
She uses her youth, her appearance and her very sex to cow those around her.
Eventually
someone will notice, right?
Pretty
Poison is a smart, stunningly-performed film noir because it suggests that some people
-- not unlike Dennis -- are drawn to romantic visions of rebellion and
forbidden love; very much like the imagery featured in the (great) Bonnie
and Clyde.
But
by the same token, Pretty Poison suggests that such fairy tales have little practical
use in reality, and those who believe them will be “poisoned”, in a sense, by
their expectations that such stories represent how the real world really works.
They can offer only a distorted lens.
So
if Bonnie
and Clyde, an icon of the counter-culture youth of the day, raises important questions
about violence, crime and love, Pretty Poison voices a somber,
frightening answer.
Great take on a terrific little move, thanks. Interestingly, Tuesday Weld was Warren Beatty's first choice for the role of Bonnie in "Bonnie and Clyde," but had a new baby at the time and turned him down. She was a great beauty and a very smart, subtle, underused actress who could reveal the instability and psychosis under the surface. She probably would have been a terrific Bonnie, and that might have launched the film career she deserved.
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