Tension, for which you see an excellent promo poster above and two more below, is an unlikely but interesting film noir about a mild mannered pharmacist played by Richard Basehart, who’s married to hot-to-trot Audrey Totter and discovers she’s cheating on him. When she finally leaves him for an apelike creature played by Lloyd Gough, and the ape issues Basehart a solid beating, he decides he’s been pushed too far. You’d think that pharmacists would be among that select group of people you really don’t want to anger, but this particular pharmacist has a much more elaborate scheme in mind than just a dose of chemicals, and his determination to commit an untraceable murder leads to him building a very traceable double life. In that second life things get complicated when he meets lovely Cyd Charisse, who he wants to make a permanent addition to his future.
Basehart’s plot will not go as intended, of course, but the way in which it fails is a surprise, and the complications keep piling up. Tension has flaws, to be sure. The detective played by Barry Sullivan does things that, as far as we know, would get any murder case tossed out of court, but you have to go with it, since he tells you from the jump he’ll do anything to solve a case. The plusses of the movie outweigh any weird bits, and with Totter on board, it’s probably a must-see. The sinuous clarinet melody she gets every time she appears onscreen is over-the-top, but she’s a major scenery chewer anyway, so it actually fits. We didn’t like her in Lady in the Lake, but she’s delivered in everything else we’ve seen—this flick, particularly. And Charisse, by the way, gets one of the better entrances we’ve seen in vintage cinema, straddling two high railings with a camera in hand. She’s as hot as a human being can get. Tension premiered today in 1949.