This is the first part of a two part review of The Screaming Mimi, both the Fredric Brown novel from 1949 and the film adaptation from 1958, with a few stops in the land of the giallo along the way, in particular Dario Argento's The Bird with the Crystal Plumage from 1970.
INTRODUCTION
Before there was such a thing as a giallo, there was the krimi. Before the krimi, there was film noir and before all of them there was the simple, unassuming pulp crime novel. It’s quite astonishing, really. Considered at the time little more than sensationalist, mainstream, lowbrow literature for the lazy masses, the ripples it formed in the decades between the 1940s and 1970s were profound and far longer lasting than anyone would have ever imagined, especially in the film industry. At the start of the trend of cinematic pulp crime adaptations, there wasn’t anything like them being made in America. The early film noirs must have felt like a breath of fresh air to moviegoers in the 40s, or, if you were the optimistic, moral high ground sort, like a breath of toxic cynicism. With their often grim storylines detailing murder, blackmail, deception and seedy sexuality, the film noir redefined the American crime film from simplistic morality tales to something much more sinister and complex.
Film noir is unique in
that it is (as far as I am aware) the only sub-genre defined by its
presentation rather than its content. There were crime dramas and crime
thrillers before film noir became a thing worth noticing, like William
Wellman’s THE PUBLIC ENEMY or H.C. Potter’s BLACKMAIL, but they were more,
shall we say, socially acceptable than most film noirs, often starring highly
paid actors and backed by generous production budgets. The line of demarcation
between the crime thrillers of the 1930s and the film noir films of the 1940s
is in the look and the inspiration for the narratives. German Expressionism is
all over film noirs. Heavily stylized with extreme chiaroscuro lighting
schemes, film noir eschewed the typical Hollywood glamour. Instead of mining
praised literary works for their inspiration, they looked to the mass appeal
and cheap thrills of the pulp crime novel.
While many of the
authors targeted for adaptation are well known today – like Raymond Chandler
and Dashiell Hammett, for example – Fredric
Brown is not. Though his Ed and Ambrose Hunter novels were popular in the late
40s, even winning Brown an Edgar Award, and his catalog of mystery thrillers is
quite large, he is best known today for his science fiction writing, in
particular his short story Arena, the basis for the classic Star Trek episode
that aired in the first season of the show. Out of his extensive bibliography,
only a handful of his novels have been adapted into films. The novel we’ll be
talking about today, Dear Reader, is The Screaming Mimi.
The Screaming Mimi has been adapted twice for film, but only once by
name. The first adaptation was produced in 1958, close to the end of the
classical period of film noir. By the time this adaptation went before cameras,
the production budgets for most of these films had shrunk to a mere pittance.
Film noirs were always seen as B movies by most production houses, but finding
a new noir with the look and quality of DOUBLE INDEMNITY was damn near impossible
in 1958. Now I could be completely wrong with my assumptions here, but I firmly
believe that many of the changes to Brown’s work that were made by director
Gerd Oswald and screenwriter Robert Blees were made with ticket sales in mind
rather than attention to detail, an unfortunate decision that largely neuters
Brown’s original story. And this is where the obligatory SPOLIER WARNING comes
into effect, because in order to know where Oswald and Blees went wrong, we
have to discuss where Brown went right.
THE SCREAMING MIMI - THE BOOK
Brown’s novel follows a man named Sweeney, an Irish reporter for a Chicago newspaper
called (amusingly enough) The Blade. Sweeney has been on one hell of a bender.
For the past couple of days, maybe even weeks, he’s spent his days drunk,
wandering around town in the same dirty suit. He’s been locked out of his
boarding room by his landlady and fired (at least he thinks) from his job. Then
one night, something extraordinary happens. He comes across a small crowd
standing outside an apartment building. Curious, Sweeney takes a closer look
and discovers a woman, blonde and beautiful, guarded by a large dog, lying on
the floor inside the entrance to the building. As the cops arrive, the woman
stirs and tries to stand. That’s when everyone sees the bloody slash across the
front of her dress. “The Ripper”, someone gasps. When the woman manages to lift
herself up off the ground, something else extraordinary happens. The growling
beast of a dog rears up, it’s teeth grabbing a small piece of cloth attached to
the woman’s dress zipper. The dog pulls at the zipper and off comes her dress,
cementing Sweeney’s fascination.
A little while later, Sweeney sits on a park bench talking to God, another
lousy town drunk. Inspired by God’s declaration that you can get anything you
want as long as you want it bad enough, Sweeney decides to sober up. Shocked to
find that he wasn’t fired from his job (his bender just so happened to coincide
with his two weeks paid vacation), Sweeney takes on the unenviable task of
trying to solve the ongoing case of The Ripper, a homicidal maniac that has
been slashing up women for the past couple of months. Because what Sweeney
wants and what Sweeney hopes to get, is Yolanda Lang, the woman he found lying
in that entrance way the day before. Tracking The Ripper would mean getting in
close with Yolanda. Catching The Ripper would mean her gratitude. But getting
some time with Yolanda, a striptease dancer at a local night club, turns out to
be more difficult than he imagined. Sweeney has to go through her manager, a
man named Doc Greene. Greene and Sweeney share an immediate hate for one
another.
While Sweeney waits for his chance to meet with Yolanda, he begins
investigating the other murders. He sets his sights on Lola Brent, a clerk in a
small bric-a-brac art store downtown and the most recent Ripper victim.
Questioning the owner, he learns that Lola was fired on the day she was
murdered. Lola had been skimming money from the till for weeks. During her last
hours at the store, she had few customers but did sell a statuette, pocketing
the money and never recording the sale. Noticing the missing item, the owner
questioned her and she eventually confessed to the theft. Sweeney enquires
about the statuette Lola sold that day and is shown a duplicate.
It’s about 10 inches tall, depicting the slim, nude figure of a woman, the
mouth “wide open in a soundless scream”, the arms “thrust out, palms forward,
to hold off some approaching horror”. The statuette, Sweeney is told, is called
“The Screaming Mimi”. Sweeney buys the last available statuette and heads home,
not quite knowing why he bought it in the first place. A chance conversation at
a diner leads to a revelation. The Screaming Mimi has something to do with the
murders. It is after all something a sadist would enjoy owning. The next day,
Sweeney calls up the manager of the distribution firm that sold the statuettes to
the art store downtown and learns the name of the sculptor behind the Mimi, a
man named Chapman Wilson.
Sweeney spends the next couple of days learning more about the other Ripper
victims, talking to everyone from cops to less-than-friendly “mugs”. With his suspicions
that Greene, who Sweeney has learned is an actual, bona fide psychiatrist, is
the man responsible for all these dead women, he enlists a friend to help him
break into Greene’s office. Unfortunately, they find nothing incriminating.
Deciding to take another angle, he learns more about Wilson, the artist who
created the Mimi, and the terrible history behind the statuette. Wilson
modeled it after his own sister. He hears the story of Pell, an escaped madman
that murdered a slew of people before setting his sights on Bessie, Wilson’s
younger sister. Before Pell could use the knife he was carrying on Bessie’s
tender flesh, Wilson gunned him down, killing him. The shock led Bessie to be
institutionalized. She died less than a year later.
After visiting with Wilson, Sweeney has an idea. Knowing that the
murderer still possesses the only other copy of the Mimi, Sweeney talks his
boss into running a front page story about the statuette. Sweeney gives the
distributor a heads up on the story. He tells the man that they should begin
production on a new line of Mimis, marking each one individually so sales can
be tracked. The day the story breaks, Sweeney receives a phone call. There had
been another attempt on Yolanda’s life. She’s gone missing, presumably walking away
from her apartment in shock. But that isn’t the real big news. The Ripper is
dead, fallen to his death from Yolanda’s second story apartment window, the
Mimi statuette lying shattered all around him on the concrete. The Ripper even
made a full confession to the other murders. And who was The Ripper, you ask?
It was Doc Greene.
But something about this doesn’t seem right to Sweeney. He goes looking for
Yolanda and manages to track her down with little fuss. She’s alone in a small
room at a boarding house, decked out in a black wig and guarded by Devil, her
loyal dog. Sweeney confronts her, revealing the terrible truth. He knows who
she is. Her name isn’t Yolanda Lang. It’s Bessie Wilson. He tells her that he
knows all about the attack she survived. He knows all about Pell. All about her
brother. All about the Mimi. He’s figured it out. He’s figured out how Greene
faked her death and took her out of the institution. And worse, he knows that
she’s the killer, triggered into the horrible attacks on women by the sight of
the very statuette that depicted her own close encounter with death. The night
she was attacked… that wasn’t The Ripper. That was Greene. He hoped that the
encounter would act as a reverse shock, sending her back into the role of
victim instead of her playing out the role of her attacker. When Greene
confronted her in her apartment, Devil jumped him, forcing him out of the
window. His confession was done out of genuine love for her, a last ditch
attempt to shield her from any consequences. Yolanda makes no attempts at
answering Sweeney’s charges. Devil begins to growl, ready to pounce. As Sweeney
sweats it out, waiting for the cops to arrive, Yolanda drops her dress and
picks up a large knife. Sweeney’s life is saved when the cops arrive, knocking
the dog unconscious and taking the murderess into custody.
As a quick page turner, The Screaming Mimi is a good read though not
without its faults. Like in most detective fiction (and really, that’s what
this is), clues are not really logically sussed out as much as they are
intuited. And that leads to a level of disconnect I often feel with novels of
this sort. I can buy the whole “putting two and two” together thing just fine,
but there are numerous instances in The Screaming Mimi where Sweeney just seems
to divine the answers to his questions out of the clear blue sky. We have come
to expect that sort of thing from Sherlock Holmes, a man who is designed as a
kind of superhero able to process multiple streams of almost imperceptible data
and correlations across an impossible stream of variables, always arriving at
the correct answer for no other reason than he’s Sherlock Holmes. But Sweeney
is just a reporter. And moreover, the majority of his detective work involves
reading other people’s reporting and interrogating suspects who would have been
questioned to death back when the murders took place. His sudden realization
that the Screaming Mimi has something to do with the murders is a realization
founded in narrative economy more than reason and logic.
The worst thing about the Brown’s story however isn’t the leaps in logic.
It’s the fact that Sweeney, as charming as he is, doesn’t do very much. Brown
spends more time telling us that Sweeney wants a drink then he does
incorporating Sweeney into the narrative. This is literally a narrative where
the main character seems to exist outside of the story looking in instead of
feeling like an integral part of the narrative momentum. At no point do we
really feel like Sweeney is in danger and that makes the novel feel much more
like a procedural than a thriller. While I enjoyed the novel a good bit more on
my second time through, my first time reading the book I found myself just
wanting something drastic to happen. As it stands, we spend a lot of time reading
lines that tell us that stuff is happening but very little time actually
feeling the earth move under our feet.
The novel is also dripping in homophobia, racism and sexism, but I’m
willing to chalk that up to simply being a product from a much more intolerant
time. Even Lovecraft, a master of horror fiction, couldn’t go a single story
without his xenophobia and racism showing through.
But for all my complaints, I still enjoy the book. It’s quick, written
with assured ease and great wit, and has an ending that probably would have had
more of an impact had its final act reversals not been blunted by decades of
imitations. There’s a fluidity and grace behind the narration, and the
characters, though perfunctory, all have a unique manner of speaking that makes
them feel more rounded than they actually are. It’s charming, in its own way,
and it has personality. And we all know that personality goes a long way. That’s
what makes the film adaptation of The Screaming Mimi such a letdown because, as
we’ll soon see, the film adaptation took everything Brown worked so hard to
create and turned it into a much different beast.