Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

Streaming Shuffle

Cause for Alarm!

Thumbscrews also have a simple premise.

Wikipedia classifies this 1951 domestic thriller as a melodrama, and here you can mostly understand that as meaning “about a woman.” Melodrama aims for the huge, tumultuous emotions of archetypal fears and fantasies writ large: Cause for Alarm may brush against some of the genre’s tropes, but it doesn’t share its aims. This isn’t about gasps or tears. This is a 74-minute panic attack.

And it’s a doozy of one. The film excels at conveying the sticky, almost unbearable friction of ordinary complications rubbing up against a character’s desperate and terrified tunnel vision. In fact, that is the movie: one woman on a frenetic, high-stakes quest to accomplish a perversely mundane task. You see, she needs to retrieve a letter she’s already mailed.

Loretta Young stars as Ellen, a devoted wife caring for her sick husband. When they met in the war, George Jones (Barry Sullivan) was an ace pilot—smooth and charismatic enough to quickly woo Ellen away from his friend, pining naval doctor Ranney Graham (Bruce Cowling). But those glamorous days are gone. Now they’re hip-deep in a suburban world of picket fences and chatty neighbors, and George has been laid low by an unpredictable heart condition. And while he lies in bed, his frustrated mind churns.

Ellen, he decides, is trying to kill him. She’s in cahoots with Graham, now their loyal family physician.

Cause for Alarm leaves some intriguing ambiguity about how sincerely George believes this. Sullivan gives excellent frenetic seethe, and he could be—as Graham fears—a sick man in the grip of a delusion. But maybe he’s choosing that delusion, letting it authorize his revenge, because he also gets a dark, disconcerting speech about a ship in a bottle he treasured when he was a child, one he stomped to pieces rather than surrender. Ellen is like that, he says: Graham may want her, but George will ruin her before he turns her over. He’ll ruin them both, even if he has to do it from beyond the grave. He’s written a letter to the district attorney, outlining all his suspicions—and it’s a letter Ellen innocently rushed out to their querulous postman just that morning.

Now George is dead, and the clock is ticking. Worse, Ellen is an ordinary woman caught in a nightmare; not only is she not a master criminal, she’s not even a very good liar. She’s not flawlessly smooth under pressure. She’s tap-dancing on the slippery edge of an abyss.

Cause for Alarm does a brilliant job tightening the screws on both her and the audience. One of its greatest strengths in that regard is surrounding the ever-more-agonized Ellen with well-observed minor characters who often feel like they’ve been plucked from a comedy: the world she’s supposed to be in, a world of nosy, passive-aggressive aunts and beleaguered mail carriers who whine about the heat and their pensions, spins on, but its jokes are now serious roadblocks. When there’s a dead body in your house, you can’t have someone casually appropriating your spare house key. When your life and freedom hinge on getting a letter returned to you, a comic relief figure being a stickler for rules and regulations is anything but funny.

This is all well-plotted and intense, and the movie even adds in some aching what-could-have-been musings: there’s a bittersweet, painful moment where Ellen—after suffering through a lot of loneliness because George never liked her talking to their neighbors—connects with the kindhearted woman next door, and she can’t know whether or not it’s already too late. Right now, the neighbor sees Ellen’s fraught distraction and reaches out to her. Will she be as sympathetic tomorrow, if word of that letter gets out?

None of this, though, would work without Loretta Young’s lead performance, enormous-eyed and luminous and practically gasping for air. This was one of Young’s final films before she largely made the jump to TV, and it’s all you need to want to see more of her.

Cause for Alarm! is streaming on Tubi, Hoopla, Fubo, and MGM+.

Want to support more great writing like this? Get exclusive member benefits like access to our Discord, early access to Media Magpies content, and more by joining our Patreon!