Gun Crazy @75: "All you need to make a movie is a girl and a gun."
A boy loves guns, he's obsessed with them, thrilled by them, given purpose by their dangerous nature. He grows up, and the love persists. One day, the boy finds a girl who shares the same fascination. A match made in hell, they come to love each other as much as they're besotted by the firearms, falling headfirst into a romance bound to become a tragedy. Even as they embark on a life of crime, the boy refuses to kill while the girl is all too eager. It doesn't end well, but it's a horny good time while it lasts. Guns and sex, sex and death, death as love, and love is the American way – and you know what? That's cinema, baby. That's also Joseph H. Lewis' Gun Crazy, also known as Deadly Is the Female, a B-movie masterpiece that often feels like the urtext of film noir, chronologically displaced as it might be.
Today, it celebrated its 75th anniversary – there are disputes over Gun Crazy's first release, but we're going with the January 20th, 1950 date – so let's explore what makes this violent tale such vital, essential cinema…