the blackmailer’s charter
by Douglas Messerli
Janet Green and John McCormick (screenplay),
Basil Dearden (director) Victim / 1961
Through a half-intentional coincidence, I
spent the weekend of international LGBTQ pride marches watching Basil Dearden’s
1961 film Victim, one of the first English-language films to actually
deal with homosexuality head on. Yes, The Children’s Hour—based on
Lillian Hellman’s 1934 play—was released in the very same year as Dearden’s, a
film hinting, winking, and nodding to a possible lesbian relationship. A couple
of years before Tennessee William’s Suddenly, Last Summer played with
gay child abuse and cannibalism. And in the following year, the US film Advise
and Consent lamely dealt with some of the same issues. As I have shown,
moreover, there have many dozens of smaller and larger films that hover around
the issues, some of them rather joyfully embracing their would-be/maybe gay and
lesbian figures.
But Victim actually confronts it, and with a fairly open-minded
head detective who, despite the British laws which declared homosexuality a
criminal act, nonetheless seems to want to help save the many gay men
who—fearing for their careers, their closeted marriages, and their terror of
imprisonment—must suffer what he describes as “the blackmailer’s charter.” His
assistant represents the popular view of gays as disgusting beings who all need
to be rounded-up and arrested.
The film begins not with the central character, barrister Melville Farr
(Dirk Bogarde)—the character’s name alone calling up the gay American author
and a sense of his distance from the society in which the barrister is now
safely entrenched—but with a much younger working man, Jack “Boy” Barrett
(Peter EcEnery), who upon seeing the police arrive at a construction site in
which he is working, bolts, calling a friend to immediately remove a package
from the back of his closet. That package evidently contains a scrapbook with
articles and pictures not only of Farr, but several other respectable
businessmen, a barber, a bookseller, a noted actor and others, with whom he has
consorted over the years.
If
“consorted” seems a very archaic word-choice, it’s perfect here, for the
picture with Farr shows them simply in a car, the lawyer’s hand around Boy, who
is in tears (a photo, incidentally, that we never actually see, despite
testimony of several reviewers that do see it). Evidently the husband and wife
writers of this film want us to believe that Farr himself, once a gay man whose
university lover (again in a non-special relationship) committed suicide, has
since lived in a solid heterosexual relationship with his beloved wife, Laura
(Sylvia Syms) without sexually going astray.
Boy attempts to escape to the nearby countryside, only to again
encounter the police and be arrested. Even though the police chief attempts to
explain that he should explain his activities so that they might find the
blackmailer—Boy has stolen £2,300 from his current employer—the young man keeps
silent, as do most of the figures of this ultimately tragic work of suspense.
The barber, also faced with blackmail sells his business in order to move away,
but when approached by mobsters suffers a heart-attack and dies. So Boy, like
so many gay men of the day, feels trapped. Sooner or later, he recognizes, the
police will shake the truth out of him, and not only might he be imprisoned but
many of his previous companions will be taken down as well. He, like Farr’s
early lover, hangs himself.
The film might timidly have moved on from here in the manner of Evelyn
Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited or as the early lover of the title
character of E. M. Forester’s Maurice did, enwrapping its characters
into hidden married existences. Farr might have faded back into his closeted
life, protecting his career and the domestic placidity of his home life. But it
is precisely here that Dearden’s film grows brave, as Farr determines to track
down the blackmailers on his own, involving one of Boy’s friends (apparently a
heterosexual), as he follows down every clue.
Meanwhile, his wife realizes that the call she has intercepted from Boy
Barrett to her husband is the same figure which the newspapers have now
reported as being dead. She confronts her husband who quite honestly explains
the situation (a scene, apparently,
Who cares, really, if Farr, encouraging his wife to leave so that she
will not be involved with what will surely be an ugly court case, is later
reunited with her. He, unlike so many before him, has been honest, admitted a
love that was not supposed to have been named. And despite this film’s
timidity, in hindsight it proves to be quite brave, facing a storm of protest
the British and US censors at the time—as well as homophobic critics.
For once, I totally agree with Pauline Kael’s comments:
“The hero of the film is a man who has never
given way to his homosexual impulses; he has fought them–that's part of his
heroism. Maybe that's why he seems such a stuffy stock figure of a hero... The
dreadful irony involved is that Dirk Bogarde looks so pained, so anguished from
the self-sacrifice of repressing his homosexuality that the film seems to give
rather a black eye to heterosexual life.”
After several actors (including James Mason and Stewart Granger) turned
down the role, Bogarde, who was living with his business manager Anthony
Forwood, suggests he may have made one the “wisest” decisions of his life,
allowing him to abandon the pretty boys of the matinee idol and comic roles to
which he had previously been assigned. He went on to play in Pinter and De Sica
films as a conflicted, often gay-oriented figure which demonstrated his true
acting abilities.
Los Angeles, July 1, 2019
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (July 2019).
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