By Marc S. Sanders
Guillermo del Toro’s Nightmare Alley is a visual feast of the macabre set in a Depression era western America. Every caption caught on film is unbelievable to look at, and while I know del Toro released his picture in black and white to enhance its film noir theme, I was truly delighted with the color version of the film. With del Toro’s direction and photography designed by Dan Lausten, every dimension and sparkle of color from a sunset to a dreary cloud in the sky to the lights on a Ferris wheel spinning in an open field from the distance is absolutely jaw dropping. Nightmare Alley is a modern technical masterpiece. It makes me want to go back and watch the original 1947 version, as well as explore other productions in the film noir category.
Bradley Cooper portrays Stanton Carlisle, a murderous drifter who ends up accompanying a traveling carnival of garish figures who entertain their quirky qualities for townsfolk to be marveled and amazed. There’s the flexible snakeman, the world’s strongest man (del Toro regular, Ron Perlman), the smallest man alive, the electrical woman, the psychic and the terrorizing, caged “geek” who will eat the head off a live chicken in front of your very eyes. At first Stanton serves as a heavy meant to carry loads and set up and strike the tents and stages as the show moves from town to town. He connects though with the psychic (Toni Collette) and the architect behind her façade (David Strathairn). Soon, Stanton is adopting their techniques of using code words and hand gestures to “read the minds” of the various audience participants.
He goes even further by redesigning the electrical woman’s presentation. Before she was using teslas to demonstrate her will to generate electrical currents. Now she can be zapped in an electric chair. The woman is Molly (Rooney Mara), and a relationship begins that sends her and Stanton on a successful tour away from the carnival where they entertain more sophisticated and wealthier nightclub guests with his psychic abilities. One attendee, however, is on to Stanton’s devices, a beautifully alluring psychiatrist named Lilith (Cate Blanchett). She maneuvers Stanton into using his manipulative talents into conning her clients. She has recorded her sessions and will share confidential information with Stanton. Then, he will use that towards his ongoing psychic advantage as a means to swindle them of their fortunes. Lilith and Stanton will split the rewards. The play seems convincing enough for the likes of a wealthy industrialist named Ezra, played by Richard Jenkins yearning to reconnect with his deceased wife at a cost of thousands of dollars for Stanton’s services.
The narrative of Nightmare Alley is so absorbing. Everything is beautifully staged. A fun house hall of mirrors has a décor of disturbing imagery. Stanton enters this place symbolically at the beginning of the film in search of the runaway “geek.” The surroundings display the seven deadly sins around a large skull and other haunted house imagery. del Toro demonstrates what Stanton is about to enter, which occupies the remainder of the film. Stanton performs on the motivations of greed and lust and vanity. Maybe, pride as well. At least those are the first couple of sins that come to my mind. How will his actions reflect back on him later on, though?
The film is also performed by a magnificent cast. Cooper is doing some of his best work here. While I feel like I’ve seen Blanchett’s deceitful character before, I don’t mind. I can’t think of anyone else to play the role. Curiously, del Toro has Mara, with her snow-white complexion, dressed in red quite often amid a cast of characters and extras wearing blacks and dark greys. She’s meant to stand out as the innocent. Molly questions Stanton’s decisions while also trying to convince him to end his charades. Yet, she only serves as a disturbing pawn in the shyster’s tricks. Will Stanton corrupt Molly though? It’s one thing to put on a magic show for a couple of hours each night. It’s another when you are swindling the massive fortunes of others and toying with their despair.
Other surprise performers that appear include Willem Dafoe as the showman for the “geek,” and a late appearance by Tim Blake Nelson to close out the film and deliver what’s to come of Stanton.
Nightmare Alley deliberately moves at a slow pace, but that only allows you to take in its various environments. From the carnival tents to the nightclubs to the alleyways, to Ezra’s snow covered never-ending garden, and even Lillith’s gold embossed office of cabinetry and furniture are so hypnotic and dark in its intended film noir way. Again, while I’m sure there’s some striking qualities to the black and white interpretation of the film, I really fell in love with the colors provided by Lausten’s photography.
I won’t call this a favorite film of mine, but I loved the journey of it all. I appreciated the script by del Toro and Kim Morgan, adapted from the novel by Lindsay Gresham, that depicts a sinful man like Stanton devolve into more sin, until he’s only undone by a smarter sinner than he; a sinner masked within beauty and wealth with a noble and educated profession. Bradley Cooper and Cate Blanchett perform beautifully with one another. They make a terrific pair. I only hope they’ll do another film together.