In comparison to "The Third Man" and the earlier "Odd Man Out", this film of Carol Reed's comes across as a minor work. The camera is restrained; there is no real effort at visual complexity. The story is simple and devoid of all those layers the above two films have. The story is however a clinically effective one, solidly filmed and well played by the cast. I can see perhaps why people may take to it more than "Odd Man Out", although I maintain that "Odd Man Out" is a more fascinating film and a greater one as a whole.
Part of "The Fallen Idol"'s trouble is that, as Pauline Kael says, things are too understated and muted. There is not quite the dramatic frisson; everything is softly revealed and perhaps not shaded enough. The filming is not quite staid or dull, but it is when compared to "The Third Man" and "Odd Man Out". Perhaps summing this up, there doesn't seem to be enough directorial vision to the film. There is a general theme of the difference in child and adult perspectives to events, which does pay dividends, but nothing on a great scale. The ending - possibly a cop-out, possibly not... I can't quite make up my mind about it; it makes things much more cosy, loses the blackly comic tragic angle, but comes up with some very deft touches of dramatic ironic.
The film may not exactly astound, but it is really a very creditable project. This is emphasised by the finely judged playing of the great Richardson as Mr Baines, the engaging child actor Bobby Henrey - from whose perspective we often see the action - and Sonia Dresdel, playing Mrs Baines with a peculiarly prissy, unbalanced malice. A fine performance; a little more animated than Richardson, who is nevertheless affecting in his slow, coiling, slightly askew respectability. Michele Morgan isn't especially interesting; a shame as her part is a bit of a weak link; a very standard character rather lacking in nuance or interest. The romance between Richardson and Morgan is only passably conveyed; a sign of British cinema's reticence perhaps... Powell and Pressburger or Lean - "Brief Encounter" I am of course thinking of, specifically - may have handled this aspect better. Maybe it is the actors or the script that add to this void of impression; "Odd Man Out" and "The Third Man" have very satisfying strands of illuminating romanticism in them. At times it is a bleak romanticism that pervades these films; "The Fallen Idol" offers only coy hints, and not a great amount of chemistry. Possibly this can be put down to the film being poised, much of the time, from a child's eye view of the world.
A major thing that lets down the film is its very inconsequential opening section; it struggles to really draw the viewer in. The pace does pick up admirably later on though, with the cleverness of the script becoming ever more apparent. While the screenplay is nowhere near the sprawling brilliance of "The Third Man", Greene does an effective job in dramatising the story. What with this well-judged if perhaps a little unspectacular screenplay here from Greene, and the astonishing flourishes of Robert Krasker's camerawork in "Odd Man Out", one sees a few pieces slotting into place for the trio's work [along with other players, of course] on the coming "The Third Man".
The ending brings the film much closer to conventionality; while the script is very clever in spinning its tale, the film doesn't have a maverick mark upon it, which one has come to expect from Reed. Yes, the last shots are very nice, and well done, but things very much veer towards normality, rather than the movingly ironic, as they have been promising to. "The Fallen Idol" is very much a laudable, impressive film. A small-scale winner, but by no means a Carol Reed film that astonishes and dazzles the eye and the mind.
Rating:- ****/*****