The Killers (1946) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Background
The Killers (1946), a neglected screen classic from director Robert Siodmak, is an intense, hard-edged, stylish film noir of robbery, unrequited love, brutal betrayal and double-cross. It featured two unknowns: Burt Lancaster in his film debut (at age 32) and a break-out memorable performance from 23 year old MGM contract actress Ava Gardner. Her role as the film's duplicitous, strikingly-beautiful, vixenish and unsympathetic femme fatale made Gardner an overnight love goddess and star. Former Broadway news reporter/columnist-later-independent film producer Mark Hellinger, with his first film for Universal, was known for stark, hard-boiled crime-gangster films (e.g., The Roaring Twenties (1939), High Sierra (1941), Brute Force (1947), and The Naked City (1948)). He selected a sharply-written script from screenwriters Anthony Veiller and collaborator John Huston (uncredited) that was loosely based on Ernest Hemingway's 1927 short story of the same name. [Note: Hemingway's 10-page short story was composed of the same content re-created in the film's opening thirteen minutes. His works have often been adapted for the screen (e.g., A Farewell to Arms (1932), For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943), To Have and Have Not (1944), The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952) and The Sun Also Rises (1957)), but this was reportedly the famous author's most favorite and praised adaptation.] Posters described the twisting, "tense, taut" film as "the screen's all-time classic of suspense!" Other great film noirs from Siodmak in the 40s included:
This post-war, moody, expressionistically-lit black and white film was a big box-office success. It was nominated for four Academy Awards, Best Director, Best Editing (Arthur D. Hilton), Best Original Screenplay (Anthony Vieller) and Best Score (Miklos Rozsa), but came away empty-handed. It is often noted that part of Rozsa's memorable doom-laden score, with a rising and falling dum-de-dum dum - most recognizable in the restaurant shoot-out scene close to the end of the film, was later used for the Dragnet TV series. About half of the film is unfolded through eleven fragmented, disconnected and unrelated flashbacks, following a technique perfected in Citizen Kane (1941) - but they are different in form. They only reveal the story (clues and pieces of the puzzle) in disjointed fashion rather than portray varying perspectives on the main character. The narrative is composed of two strands - a journey into the dark noir world by an obsessive insurance company officer investigating an unwarranted, mysterious killing (of the Swede) and a hat factory heist, and the reconstructed story of the dead man's enigmatic and troubled past - and why he passively and quietly accepted his fateful, sacrificial death without resistance when delivered by two evil emissaries from his past. The emphasis on flashbacks underlines the influence of the past upon the present. The film was remade by the project's original director Don Siegel - but many years later in a made-for-TV film The Killers (1964). The remake starred Angie Dickinson as the deceitful femme fatale, Lee Marvin and Clu Gulagher as the hit men, and Ronald Reagan (in his last feature film role) as the gangster. And acclaimed Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky adapted the Hemingway story for his first student film in his film school days - a short 19-minute The Killers (aka Ubijtsi (1958)). The Story The film opens with a quintessential sequence or prologue, the one faithfully borrowed from Hemingway's short story about two hit men (the 'killers' of the film's title) seeking a doomed man in a small town. The un-nerving, thirteen-minute scene is reminiscent of the opening of director Billy Wilder's noir classic Double Indemnity (1944), another tale of an insurance investigation, when the film's mortally-wounded hero meets his tragic fate. Typical of film noirs, the ominous scene begins with a car driving through the night with its headlights illuminating a driver's and passenger's silhouettes from behind as they approach a city outskirts sign for BRENTWOOD, NEW JERSEY. The pair are unsmiling, contract killers Max (William Conrad later famous for the TV detective show Cannon) and Al (Charles McGraw), sent to the small rural town to track down a Tri-State Oil Co. attendant. Finding the filling station closed, they cross the street to Henry's Diner where George (Harry Hayden), the manager unobligingly tells them that none of the dinners on the menu that they wish to order are ready until 6 pm, about ten minutes away. Al is upset and begins the playful taunting: "Everything we want's on the dinner. That the way you work it, huh?" They deliberately harass and terrorize the proprietor:
And they also intimidate the other counter patron, Nick Adams (Phil Brown), and order him and Sam (Bill Walker) the diner's black cook back into the kitchen to tie them up. When George asks what it's all about, he is bluntly and non-chalantly told that their intention is to fulfill a murder contract and kill "the Swede" when he appears at his regular time for dinner:
When their target, a regular customer using the alias of Pete Lunn, is late and not expected to show on schedule, the gunmen leave to locate the Swede's address in the daybook at the rural filling station. The proprietor unties the two men in the kitchen, and Nick (the Swede's co-worker) runs out the back, takes a shortcut over four neighborhood fences, to get to the Swede first and warn him that he is an intended murder victim. The camera pans down the length of the bed where the Swede/Pete Lunn (Burt Lancaster) lies passively in his shadowy, dim room in a white T-shirt - his head shrouded in darkness. Breathing heavily, Nick bursts into the Swede's boarding house room with the news that two men are coming to rub him out, but the resigned, immobile Swede responds stoically, calmly and with little surprise that there's nothing to be done to change his impending fate. With no strength to even rise from his bed, or will to run, the acquiescent and unresistant Swede awaits his physical sacrificial death - although he's already emotionally dead. In his last words, he mentions that in his past, he made one fatal error, and it has come back to haunt him:
Nick leaves stunned - in disbelief. Only a few minutes later, the fatalistic Swede calmly listens as the two cold-blooded gunman-executioners climb the stairs to his cheap apartment room. He knows that his life isn't worth living anymore. He half-rises from his bed as they open the door and brutally empty their guns of ten bullets into his body. It is the ex-boxer's final knock-out. The scene fades into black and reopens with a closeup of the personal effects of the Swede: his work uniform, Henry's Diner meal ticket, watch, deck of cards, letters, insurance policy and wallet. They are being examined in the Brentwood, New Jersey police department by the police chief (Howard Freeman) and intrigued insurance investigator James Reardon (Edmond O'Brien) of the Atlantic Casualty & Insurance Company. The chief concludes that the case is "out of our hands" because the murderers were from out of town and were specifically looking for Lunn. Curiously, the Swede's beneficiary in his life insurance policy is Mary Ellen Daugherty, at the Palms Hotel in Atlantic City. Reardon takes one of the Swede's possessions during his quest: a green silk handkerchief with a large golden harp at its center and surrounded by three-leaf clovers. Reardon questions the chief, one of many acquaintances of the Swede's (over a ten-year period) that the investigator will encounter in his journey to discover why the victim accepted his death. The Swede arrived in Brentwood about a year earlier, and "kept pretty much to himself." Reardon is given a summary of the Swede's character by Nick Adams:
In the county morgue, the mortician Mr. Plunther (John Berkes) explains how the Swede died of eight bullet wounds: "Got eight slugs in him. Near tore him in half." Reardon notices that the deceased has fighter's hands - with broken knuckles. According to Nick, the Swede's phrase 'I did something wrong - once' occurred a long time ago. A few days before the murder, the Swede had become sick with stomach problems. The first of the film's eleven flashbacks begins at this point, summarized below:
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