Paul Muni - a performance rivaling Brando in Streetcar?
I was so impressed with this movie when I saw it on TCM the first time, when Alec Baldwin chose it as a guest programmer. I watched it again last night, after seeing "A Streetcar Named Desire" last weekend. Brando's performance in "Streetcar" is nuanced on so many levels, but when I first saw "Fugitive" I was astonished at how Modern, how Method-like, how gritty, powerful, and naturalistic Muni's performance is. There is nothing of the hamminess or staginess or overblown theatricality found in the performances of so many early films.
Muni shows so much depth and range here. I felt like I was in the chain gang, sweating like a mule in the unforgiving summer heat, choking with dust, not even allowed to wipe the sweat off my brow without permission. The scene where he pulls his leg irons off over his feet BEFORE the gang master notices he's missing is like a caged animal knowing he has 2 seconds before the bear trap slams down on him again. The claustrophobic frenzy he's in is tangible and frightening, with a dash of "maybe I might just make it out of here!" He so should have gotten an Oscar for this.
Anyway, I get why Brando or Olivier are the greatest of all time, but I say that Muni's preformance here rivals Brando. Sacrilege or No?
Love is the best, most insidious, most effective instrument of social repression