The
Tall Target
1951 / 1:18
Tagline: “You'll never see the target till the very end!”
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Noir master Anthony Mann directed this terrific historical thriller. It tells the story of guarding Abraham Lincoln from assassins while he rode a train to Washington, D.C. via Baltimore (“a nest of secessionists”) for his first inauguration in 1861. Dick Powell plays the dedicated bodyguard whose self-appointed mission is to protect the President-elect.
Movie-making genius went into creating the images for this movie. Steam and smoke coming from the train. The cramped spaces of the train, both inside and out of passenger cars. The jumpy light emitted by swaying lanterns. Fight scenes in half-light; amazing is the scene where Powell is holding the head of a suspect in the path of a train wheel that might start at any moment in order to force information out of the treacherous bastard. The ‘end justifies the means’ violence is very post-World War II.
Which brings us to the noir mindset of the picture. Powell is self-appointed because his superiors, corrupt martinets to a man, have heedlessly disregarded overt threats to Lincoln. The American tendency to be always on the make is parodied by an obnoxious little boy. No matter the situation he asks, “What will you give me if I told you.” The greed for money and power drives a Northern major (Adolphe Menjou, duplicitous as usual) to take up sedition as a business practice. In the noir tradition of misdirection and betrayal, regular working guys (Leif Erickson) don’t look like hired killers and loyal union majors don’t look like traitors. Snappy noir dialogue delivered deadpan is also in place: “You don't need a doctor. Just a long box.”
The writing captures the restlessness of the period just before the Civil War. People are saying for the thousandth time the same tedious things about politics and the future of the country, never listening, hating the other side as if they were rats. Sectional divisions are in comments such as “Must all of you New Yorkers be so insufferably boorish” and “I know you think us Southerners a benighted people.” An Abolitionist (Florence Bates) betrays the activists’ tendency to see only problems and tropes, never people, when she asks an enslaved woman (Ruby Dee) tactless questions. Lincoln as a charismatic leader is captured when the bodyguard Powell observes, “I was only with [Lincoln] 48 hours, but when he left he shook my hand, thanked me, and wished me well. I was never so taken with a human man.”
The movie also examines the motives of would-be assassins. Southerners don’t want their way of life disrupted with free labor and are sure the tyrant Lincoln will start a war. Some fanatics are drawn into conspiracy and plots by the teenage boy’s immature taste for underground leagues with secret passwords and arcane handshakes. Thankfully, fanatics are not organizers and Powell says of an inept extremist “He wouldn't shoot off anything except his mouth.”
This is a marvelous example of film-making. Almost all of
it takes place at night, lit by lanterns and lamps. No music adds to the
tension. The acting is stellar.