Strange Impersonation (1946) is so cheaply produced that film historian Robert
Smith has called it "one of the cheapest films ever made by an important artist and the
most impoverished film of Mann's career." That would be Anthony Mann, here making his
ninth feature film and soon to hit his stride as a masterful director of film noir and
westerns.
Of his early career, Mann said in a 1967 interview, "My first films were shot under
conditions that I'd rather not talk about. After all, what do you want, with a budget of 50 or
60 thousand dollars, actors who can't be made to say lines, and non-existent sets?" What
Mann found he could do, when presented with a mediocre script such as
Strange Impersonation, was to find moments he could milk directorially, using
lighting, editing, and composition to visually express what was happening thematically or
emotionally in the story.
Those moments are what remain most interesting in viewing the film today. A noirish
Republic Pictures programmer, Strange Impersonation takes awhile to get going -
too long, actually, for a 68-minute film - and the overall story never really leaves the realm
of the silly. Scientist Brenda Marshall tests a new anesthetic in a dangerous home
experiment, and her assistant Hillary Brooke sees an opportunity to sabotage the test so
that she can have fellow scientist William Gargan to herself. Marshall ends up facially
disfigured and manages to swap identities with another woman, thanks to a twist of fate
and some nifty plastic surgery (though to us it looks simply like a new hairdo and different
makeup), and she returns to get her revenge on Brooke and win back her man.
It's hard to see why these women would fight over William Gargan. His scientist character
is weak and bland, and emanates the sex appeal of a stapler. Perennial supporting player
Hillary Brooke is the real star here. While she had parts in top-notch movies like
Ministry of Fear (1944), The Enchanted Cottage (1945) and The Man
Who Knew Too Much (1956), certain film buffs remember Brooke most fondly for her
appearances in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death (1943) and The Woman in
Green (1945), in which she played the title villainess role opposite Basil Rathbone's
Sherlock Holmes. Her character in Strange Impersonation is of that ilk, and she
does a fine job indeed.
Brenda Marshall (aka Mrs. William Holden) is OK, but in some sequences Mann doesn't
restrain her enough and she tends toward the shrill. In his brief scenes, H.B. Warner
leaves an impression as the plastic surgeon who sees through Marshall's scheme and
warns her, after completing her surgery, "You cannot escape the person you are." (He is
nice enough to offer her a cigarette, however!) A few months after this movie's release,
Warner could be seen playing Mr. Gower in It's a Wonderful Life (1946).
Mann is at his best here in scenes like the first reveal of Marshall's scarred face, using
lighting to express the shock of it. There are also snappy plastic surgery montages and,
most impressively, a police interrogation that is especially well composed and shot. An
expressionistic montage in this sequence seems like almost a dry run for the opening of
Mann's Reign of Terror (1949)! While these stylish sequences merely pop up
occasionally in an otherwise ordinary picture, they do show quite clearly what a talented
craftsman can do.
Kino's DVD of Strange Impersonation looks fairly good except for a few shots for
which there must not have been any decent available film elements. It is now available as
part of a boxset from Kino entitled Film Noir: Five Classics From the Studio Vaults. The
other titles are The Hitch-Hiker (1953), Scarlet Street (1945) (in a hi-def
digital transfer from the preserved negative), Contraband (1940) (the second
collaboration between Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger), and They Made Me a
Fugitive (1947), a British suspenser.
All have been previously released by Kino as stand-alone editions, but those editions are
very expensive. Bundled together here at a very reasonable price, this offbeat boxset is
simply a must-own for fans of classic cinema, who will no doubt be happy to forgive Kino
the fact that Contraband, fine film that it is, is simply not a "film noir."
For more information about Strange Impersonation, visit Kino International. To order Strange
Impersonation, go to TCM Shopping.
by Jeremy Arnold
Strange Impersonation - Anthony Mann's Early Film Noir on DVD
by Jeremy Arnold | September 19, 2007
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