TATTOOED STRANGER, THE (director: Edward Montagne; screenwriter: Philip H. Reisman Jr.; cinematographer: William Steiner; cast: John Miles (Detective Frank Tobin), Patricia Barry (Mary Mahan), Walter Kinsella (Lieutenant Corrigan ), Frank Tweddell (Captain Lundquist), Arthur Jarrett (Johnny Marseille), William Gibberson (Aberfoyle), Rod McLennan (Captain Gavin), Jim Boles (Fisher), Henry Lasko (Joe Canko), 1950)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
A second-rate, watchable noir film, distinguished by its gritty authentic NYC location shots and the lack of acting ability exhibited by this largely unknown cast and the low-level crime committed, where the detective jokes that this crime didn't even make it into "The Daily News." The plot centers around a murder investigation of a woman who is killed with a shotgun and found in a stolen car in Central Park. The police don't know who she is, who did the crime, or where she was murdered- apparently her body was dumped here from another location.
Lt. Corrigan (Walter Kinsella), the veteran detective, and Detective Tobin (John Miles), rookie homicide detective, are the lead investigators, in a case which will take them across NYC- from the beautiful Botanical Gardens in the Bronx, to the dinghy tattoo parlors in the Bowery and by the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and finally to a gravestone cutting site in the Bronx, where the climactic shoot-out takes place.
The hero of this tale is the awkwardly nice, college boy, war hero cop, Tobin. He doesn't seem like he is an actor or a cop, but he does appear as if he is a genuinely nice person, which in the long run might prove better for humanity, but it doesn't help this film, a film that could have used something more from him to spark this ordinary TV-like crime drama. This trite subplot, tried so often, of the crusty veteran Corrigan, who is suspicious of the rookie Tobin, questioning his previous experience in the forensic lab, afraid he will be useless to him since he hasn't been tested in the field. The rookie must therefore prove himself before he is to be accepted.
Finding an exotic type of grass in the car, the bachelor rookie is sent to the Museum of Natural History, where the expert on that kind of flora is the attractive Mary Mahan (Patricia Barry), a perfect love match for our hero, as they will stay on that clue for the remainder of the film. Corrigan in the meantime has figured out that the dead lady is a waitress, and when they visit her in the morgue, a drunk tries to carve out the tattoo on her wrist. When he panics and takes off as the cops approach him, he is killed by Tobin who saves Corrigan from being killed by him.
This takes them hunting down tattoo parlors, where they find an amiable tattoo artist who goes by the monicker, "The Electric Rembrandt" (Jarrett). He recognizes the woman from the picture of the double-tattoo the cops show him of a U.S. Marine Corps emblem and one of a navy anchor. They soon discover that the victim has many names, that she has been married four times, and collects insurance benefits from her dead husbands. The twist in the story is that her first husband isn't dead as believed, it seems he jumped ship just before the ship he was on sunk, and the cops are now sure he is their mad murderer.
The poor tattoo artist gets hammered to death by the killer, as he is intent on rubbing out any witness to his crimes. Why he goes on this rampage is never made clear, except it is surmised that he might be the jealous type. Since we never hear him speak or clearly see his face, we can only assume that the cops are right.
The story winds up in the Bronx granite yard, as the killer goes there to execute the owner of the site.When spotted by our hero, he shoots it out with him unsuccessfully among the many gravestones, which makes for a colorful scene, the best and most memorable one of the film. When its all over, Corrigan arrives and tells the wounded kid, as he is with his now girlfriend, Mary-- "It looks like you need someone steady to take care of you."
REVIEWED ON 8/30/99 GRADE: C-
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net
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