Niagara (1953)
Directed by Henry
Hathaway
20th
Century Fox, 88 minutes, Not-rated (Bad acting warning)
★★
You have to do it. You'll hate yourself afterward, but you
still have to do it. Everyone does. What, you ask? See the 1953 Marilyn Monroe
vehicle Niagara right after you get
back from visiting Niagara Falls. It was box office boffo back in '53, but it
sure looks like buffoonery in the present.
The set up is simple enough. A wholesome Midwestern couple,
Ray and Polly Cutler, come to Niagara Falls for a delayed honeymoon. It's the
'50s and Ray (Max Showalter) was too busy with his job with Quaker Oats to get
away with the missus (Jean Peters) after the wedding, but that's all to the
good as he's such a clever lad that he's won a slogan contest and some dosh to
finance the trip. The destination has as much to do with Ray's hope of seeing
Mr. Kettering, a company big shot over on the U.S. side, than of taking in the
view.
The Cutlers arrive at the rustic cabins overlooking the
falls, but the couple in their unit hasn't yet checked out. Rose Loomis
(Marilyn Monroe) pleads that her husband is ill and the Cutlers valiantly agree
to take another cabin. George Loomis (Joseph Cotten) is indeed sick–of both
life and his wife's philandering. He's a Korean vet suffering from PTSD and
while the cat was away at war, the mouse sure did play. Rose is younger, more
vivacious, and more than a little on the slutty side. It might be more accurate
to say that she was the cat, one playing with George and trying to lure him
into a trap wherein Patrick, her boyfriend du jour, would kill him and toss his
body over the falls. When the Rainbow Tower Carillon chimed the song
"Kisses," Rose would know the plan had succeeded. In the meantime she
spends her time squeezing into tight dresses and driving both George and the
local teenagers crazy. (Why the "kids," as Rose calls them, hold their
record hops at a local motor court is never explained.) Rose is your basic
femme fatale, but with a wiggle and a bump.
You don't need me to tell you that there's no film if the
murder scheme goes exactly as planned. Queue some scenes along the falls, in
the tower, and on the river. My first thought was of how different this film
would have been had Alfred Hitchcock directed it. Instead it was Henry
Hathaway, whose métier was Westerns. Niagara
thus has the disjointed feel of a B-Western in which the plot hardly matters as
the audience is just waiting for the shoot-out. Replace the corral with
Niagara's churning foam and this film is
essentially a watery Western.
Hathaway tried to add noir elements in scenes inside the
Rainbow Carillon and by making Joseph Cotten sullen and dark, but he's just not
up to the task. I'm sure Cotten must have thought dozens of times, "Toto,
I've a feeling this isn't an Orson Welles film anymore." Cotten's talents
were wasted in this film, as were those of Jean Peters who was known for being
a film siren in her own right, though in this film she's done up more like
Ginger on Gilligan's Island. Peters
could actually act, though, which is far more than can be said for Monroe. In this
film, Monroe played to every stereotype you've ever associated with her. Her
attempts to be dramatic were risible and the best that can be said is that
she's as good as Showalter, who plays a gee-whiz kid who's around 30 going on
12. The Ketterings (Don Wilson and Lurene Tuttle) are also more over the top
than, well, a barrel over Niagara.
Niagara's real
standout is, of course, the falls. They looked a bit differently in 1953. They
were higher as there was less rock debris at the base, you could get much
closer to them, and they appeared even more powerful as there wasn't much
surrounding them. The US/Canada border was pretty much an open one and there
was very little development on either side. Nor did you have to wait in a long
line to pay $20 to park your car; there was plenty of on-street parking. The
film's final dramatic scenes above the falls play out a little bit like Lillian
Gish leaping onto ice floes in Way Down
East, but if you've been to Niagara you can generate your own adrenaline during
the film's climax.
As movies go, Niagara
is a small cask of hogwash tumbling over the precipice. Somehow it seemed so
much better when I saw it on TV as a child, but maybe that's because Monroe and
the 1950s seemed more plausible back then. Objectively, this is a really dumb
film. But if you go to Niagara Falls, you'll want to watch it. Go ahead. It's
okay. The guilt passes quickly. Then you can laugh about it.
Rob Weir
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