Saigon (1947)
47KSaigon (1947). 1h 33m | Not Rated
“Like Singapore, Calcutta and Macao, Saigon sets off to an Asian port of intrigue. Demobbed in Shanghai after action in the Pacific Theater, three flyboys postpone their return to the States because one of them, Douglas Dick, has only a month or two to live. The catch is that he doesnu0026#39;t know it; his pals Alan Ladd and Wally Cassell guard the secret, having decided, under cover of operating lucrative commercial flights, to pack `a whole lifetimeu0026#39; of excitement and pleasure into his brief span left.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eTheir first assignment, however, proves their last. Shady war profiteer Morris Carnovsky pays them a suspiciously large sum to take him to Saigon, the `Paris of the Orient.u0026#39; But, detained by police and gunshots, he doesnu0026#39;t show for the punctual flight; instead, they carry his `secretary,u0026#39; Veronica Lake, carting along a briefcase crammed with half a million. The crate theyu0026#39;re flying has to crash-land, and they make the rest of the journey by boat to Saigon, giving a romantic triangle time to form: Both Dick (avidly) and Ladd (reluctantly) fall for Lake. But a police inspector (Luther Adler) just happens to be aboard as well….u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eYet another romantic adventure in subtropical heat, Saigon owes much to John F. Seitzu0026#39; solid camerawork (which deserves special mention for avoiding ceiling fans). Itu0026#39;s pretty by-the-book, but not nearly so embarrassing as Laddu0026#39;s Calcutta of the previous year. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe movie marks the last screen pairing of Ladd and Lake, an emblematic couple in the noir cycle noteworthy for their chilly emotional temperature. Whatever cryogenic chemistry they generated in This Gun For Hire and The Glass Key and The Blue Dahlia had by this time, alas, gone inert; few sparks get struck this close to absolute zero. Only the perfunctory conventions of the genre insist that their future together will be either a long or a happy one. Even that pretense is belied by the movieu0026#39;s final shot in a cemetery.”