Director: Alexander Mackendrick
Writers: Clifford Odets, Ernest Lehman, Alexander Mackendrick
Photography: James Wong Howe
Music: Elmer Bernstein, Chico Hamilton Quintet
Editor: Alan Crosland Jr.
Cast: Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis, Martin Milner, Susan Harrison, Barbara Nichols, Emile Meyer, Clifford Odets, David White, Jeff Donnell
Technically, Sweet Smell of Success probably has to count as a noir, but it’s something of a lightweight one in terms of crime. The corruption runs deep and extends into the police force too, but there’s no particular foul crime—no murders. Instead it’s all about PR and newspaper columns, publicity and celebrity and making it. It’s new enough, and my memory is long enough, that it reminds me a little of scraping out freelance work from magazines and newspapers in the ‘80s. There was a PR angle to everything entertainment journalists did then, and Tony Curtis as press agent Sidney Falco, in perhaps the biggest performance of his career, is a certain ideal of the 24/7 hustler in that world. It's not about money or even power as such there, but rather about fame, recognition, adulation, as only the entertainment industry can deliver it.
I will say my memory is not long enough to remember Walter Winchell, the model for Burt Lancaster’s role as powerful gossip columnist J.J. Hunsecker, but the point is quickly understood. Hunsecker wields enough clout in his column that he can make and destroy reputations and careers. He has a faint odor too of the right-wing anticommunist polemicist / crank. In this particular case, Hunsecker has opinions about who his kid sister Susan (Susan Harrison) should and should not marry. Her beau, Steve Dallas (Martin Milner, later a cop on Adam-12), is a hotshot guitarist in a jazz group otherwise played by the Chico Hamilton Quintet. But Hunsecker thinks Dallas is beneath his sister and he applies his overbearing influence to breaking them up. There’s the story. Without any obvious motivation beyond pathology, it makes Sweet Smell of Success, as Hunsecker himself notes, basically a story about “shooting a mosquito with an elephant gun.”
Technically, Sweet Smell of Success probably has to count as a noir, but it’s something of a lightweight one in terms of crime. The corruption runs deep and extends into the police force too, but there’s no particular foul crime—no murders. Instead it’s all about PR and newspaper columns, publicity and celebrity and making it. It’s new enough, and my memory is long enough, that it reminds me a little of scraping out freelance work from magazines and newspapers in the ‘80s. There was a PR angle to everything entertainment journalists did then, and Tony Curtis as press agent Sidney Falco, in perhaps the biggest performance of his career, is a certain ideal of the 24/7 hustler in that world. It's not about money or even power as such there, but rather about fame, recognition, adulation, as only the entertainment industry can deliver it.
I will say my memory is not long enough to remember Walter Winchell, the model for Burt Lancaster’s role as powerful gossip columnist J.J. Hunsecker, but the point is quickly understood. Hunsecker wields enough clout in his column that he can make and destroy reputations and careers. He has a faint odor too of the right-wing anticommunist polemicist / crank. In this particular case, Hunsecker has opinions about who his kid sister Susan (Susan Harrison) should and should not marry. Her beau, Steve Dallas (Martin Milner, later a cop on Adam-12), is a hotshot guitarist in a jazz group otherwise played by the Chico Hamilton Quintet. But Hunsecker thinks Dallas is beneath his sister and he applies his overbearing influence to breaking them up. There’s the story. Without any obvious motivation beyond pathology, it makes Sweet Smell of Success, as Hunsecker himself notes, basically a story about “shooting a mosquito with an elephant gun.”