Film Review
The third and last of Jacques Tourneur's low budget horror films made
under the tutelage of producer Val Lewton at RKO is less effective than the two
films that preceded it -
Cat People (1942) and
I Walked with a Zombie (1943) -
but it still manages to be a chilling little thriller, noteworthy for
being one of the earliest examples of the psycho-thriller genre.
Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) and the spate of increasingly
gruesome slasher movies it engendered all owe something to this
little known film. Tourneur was himself dissatisfied with the film, partly
because in adapting Cornell Woolrich's novel
Black Alibi he was unable to pursue
the supernatural elements which had featured heavily in his previous
films. Whilst
The Leopard Man
has some superficial similarities with
Cat People (it features the same wild cat
and was marketed in such a way as to make it appear to be a sequel to
that film), it is a far more mundane
proposition, with no fantastic plot elements (apart from some tedious
fortune-telling nonsense) and a pedestrian murder mystery which is
wrapped up all too tidily.
Jacques Tourneur may not have been excited by the undistinguished plot,
but this seems not to have dampened his creativity greatly.
The Leopard Man is as visually
striking and atmospheric as Tourneur's previous films, and the director
performs miracles with his paltry 150,000 dollars budget (a derisory
figure even for an RKO B-movie). With the help of his talented
cinematographer Robert De Grasse, Tourneur creates a sustained mood of
menace that builds to an intolerable climax just before each of the
murders, and it is this sense of anticipation (
by the pricking of my thumb, something
wicked this way comes...) which makes the film so frightening
and memorable. Sound is used as effectively as the
near-expressionistic lighting to build the suspense and give the
impression that something evil is lurking in every shadow, ready to pounce out
at us. It's too bad that the film has to end with a banal stock
B-movie plot resolution; it's also too bad that the characters are mostly
one-dimensional and the dialogue unspeakably corny in places. In
all other respects,
The Leopard Man
is hard to fault - not quite in the same league as Tourneur's
previous horror masterpieces, but a creepy little spine-tingler all the
same.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jacques Tourneur film:
Days of Glory (1944)
Film Synopsis
In New Mexico, Jerry Manning hires a trained leopard as a gimmick for
his girlfriend Kiki, a nightclub performer. On its first night,
the leopard takes fright and runs off into the night. A short
while later, a local girl is attacked and killed, apparently by a
savage wild animal. When another woman is found dead with similar
wounds in a cemetery, everyone apart from Manning believes the escaped
leopard is to blame. Manning senses there is something strange
about this second killing and begins his own investigation, anxious to
prevent a third death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.