According to Jack Boozer, "The lethal seductress … largely abjures traditional romance and passive domesticity, choosing instead to apply her sexuality to homicidal plots in the service of greed."

In Jacques Tourneur’s Out of the Past (1947), Jeff Bailey (Robert Mitchum) falls in love with two women who represent two forms of love: Ann Miller (Virginia Huston) is a woman of virtue, a lifelong companion and friend, while Kathie Moffat (Jane Greer), the femme fatale, is a passionate and seductive lover.

Driven by self-preservation and a desire for revenge, Kathie is a liar, a thief, and a killer. Her dark nature is first revealed when Jeff tells her that Whit Sterling (Kirk Douglas) is alive, and she coldly replies, “I hate him. I’m sorry he didn’t die.” Kathie stole $40,000 from Whit, tried to murder him, and feels no guilt or remorse. According to Jack Boozer, “The lethal seductress … largely abjures traditional romance and passive domesticity, choosing instead to apply her sexuality to homicidal plots in the service of greed.”1 Kathie fits this definition. Despite her dark nature, Jeff and Whit cannot resist her alluring nature.

In contrast to Kathie, Ann is a woman of virtue—innocent, trusting, and loving. In her first scene, she sits with Jeff by the lake, looking at the clouds. As Jeff muses about marrying her, she says, “I wish you would.” Ann is faithfully devoted to Jeff and will never abandon him. At the film’s midpoint, when he is wanted for two murders, she retreats again to nature, sitting by a stream in quiet contemplation, refusing to believe that he is guilty. Ann’s connection with nature reveals her virtue and innocence. She uncontaminated by the dark urban world of Jeff’s past.

While most of Anne’s scenes are in daylight, Kathie is a creature of the night. After Jeff kisses her on the moon-lit beach, she only appears at night until the day they leave Mexico. Later, when Jeff re-unites with her at a cabin in the country, he says, “Then I saw her walking up the road in the headlights.” However, this light is not the natural light of the Sun or Moon; it is man-made and artificial, reflecting Kathie’s artificial character. Unlike Ann who is never false, Kathie is never fully honest with Jeff, often lying or concealing the truth from him.

Ann is at peace in the natural world, but Kathy is a violent and unpredictable force of nature. When Jeff first sees her, he says in awe, “I saw her coming out of the Sun.” Kathie is like a comet, dazzling Jeff with her alluring beauty. The next time he sees her, he says, “She waited until it was late, and then she walked in out of the moonlight, smiling.” These juxtaposing scenes—one in the Sunlight, the other in moonlight—reveal the extremes of Kathie’s character. Although she is beautiful, she is a creature of darkness, capable of love, but poisoned by hate.

Kathie and Ann represent two forms of love and light. Ann is a heavenly creature: an angel of light. Kathie is a false and deceptive light, putting Jeff and Whit under a sexual spell. Ann loves Jeff unconditionally, but Kathie’s love is conditional. In the climax of the film, after Whit threatens her and Jeff betrays her to the police, both men are shot dead by the femme fatale.

Notes

Jack Boozer, “The Lethal Femme Fatale in the Noir Tradition,” Journal of Film and Video 51, no. 3-4 (1999-2000): 20, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20688218