|
The Killers (1964) (aka Ernest
Hemingway's 'The Killers')
In director Don Siegel's remake of Ernest Hemingway's
short story of the same title, a crime-drama thriller - and a redo
of the original classic film noir The Killers
(1946); originally made as a TV movie; it was deemed excessively
violent and then released theatrically instead; this film contained
Lee Marvin's career-defining iconic role that he would further explore
in John Boorman's Point Blank (1967):
- the Sage Home of the Blind opening sequence, when
middle-aged, tough-guy hit-man Charlie Strom (Lee Marvin) and his
side-kick Lee (Clu Galager) walked past two blind boys playing
cops and robbers on the lawn ("Bang bang, you're dead!"),
and barged into the front door; the cold-blooded killers were wearing
matching sunglasses and tailored suits, and brutally coerced the
blind secretary Miss Watson (Virginia Christine) in the Administration
office to learn the whereabouts of teacher Jerry Nichols - alias
Johnny North (John Cassavetes); after terrorizing her, they walked
to Johnny's upstairs classroom, where they found him teaching car
maintenance to a group of blind people; Johnny calmly and passively
accepted his death without resistance, even though he had received
a warning phone call about the two killers, but said that calling
the police wasn't necessary: "It's alright. I-I know them...I
know them"; he was gunned down in cold-blood by the two killers
wielding guns with giant silencers
Opening Sequence at Sage Home of The Blind
|
|
|
|
- the subsequent inquiry by Charlie for answers about
the simple hit they had just committed (for a huge sum of $25,000)
- why didn't the doomed North flee? Charlie was plagued by Johnny's
calm demeanor, the identity of the person who hired them for the "simple
hit," and the ultimate fate of a million dollars after Johnny
was involved in a well-publicized million-dollar robbery of a US
postal mail truck - who actually absconded with the money?: ("I've
hit a few guys in my time....Now, if they had a chance, they always
ran. But he just stood there and took it...Whoever laid this contract
wasn't worried about the million dollars. And the only people that
don't worry about a million dollars are the people that have a
million dollars")
- the revelation of North's past in a series of flashbacks
through interviews with North's associates, first in Miami with former
mechanic and friend Earl Sylvester (Claude Akins); Johnny had been
a champion race car driver, but suffered a career-ending crash and
was hospitalized; four years before his hit-man death, he had become
entrapped by one particular "dame," according to Earl;
there were flashbacks to the scenes of Johnny's growing, ill-fated
romance with sociopathic, double-crossing, untrustworthy femme
fatale Sheila Farr (Angie Dickinson); when dating Johnny, she
asserted her love:
"You're east, west, south... and my North"
- Charlie was obsessively determined to find out Johnny's
motivations, as he told Lee over a steak dinner: "Slim chance
or no, we're gonna find out...No, it's not only the money. Maybe
we got that and maybe we don't. But I gotta find out what makes a
man decide not to run. Why all of a sudden he'd rather die?"
- a second flashback occurred during the hit men's forced
interrogation of Browning's gang associate Mickey Farmer (Norman
Fell), as he was taking a steam chamber bath; they wanted his perspective
on Johnny's association with Sheila, Browning, and his involvement
in the robbery; they learned that after Johnny's hospitalization
after his racing crash, Sheila had enticed ex-race driver Johnny
to get involved as the pro-getaway driver (for a cut of $100,000)
in the million-dollar robbery of a US postal mail truck; during planning,
Johnny learned that Sheila was actually the mistress of sugar-daddy
mob boss Jack Browning (Ronald Reagan, in his last acting role -
and sole villainous role); she admitted that she was a gold digger: "All
right, so I like nice things, expensive things. - Doesn't everybody?
I can do without"; he accepted her job offer to take part in
the heist, as "strictly business"
- although they still appeared to love each other
- in an unexpectedly violent scene, Browning vehemently
slapped an insolent Sheila across the face [Note: Ronald Reagan later
claimed he regretted the scene]; protective of Sheila, Johnny slugged
Browning backwards, and threatened: ("If you touch her again,
I'll kill ya!"); Browning held a handkerchief to his busted
lip and vowed: ("After the job, we'll settle this, North");
Johnny yelled back: "Let's settle it now," but Sheila cautioned
him to hold off
Just Before the Robbery
Jack Browning's (Ronald Reagan) Violent Slap of Sheila
|
|
|
|
The Slap
|
Johnny's Slugging of Browning
|
Browning's Vengeful Vow
|
- after the heist, Browning became a respectable
LA real estate businessman; in LA, the hitmen arranged with Browning
to meet with Sheila in her downtown LA Knightsbridge Hotel; after
barging in many hours earlier than expected, she asked:
"You've proved that you can be rude. Now, what do you want?",
Charlie replied simply: "The money"; she claimed: "I
don't have the money...Can't you get it through your heads? Johnny
North took it. He slugged Jack and got away clean"
- the sequence of Sheila's brutal interrogation in her
hotel room, knowing that she was lying; Lee punched Sheila in the
face, and then she was held by her ankles from the 7th story hotel
window, to force her to tell the truth about the past: (Charlie: "Throw
her out....Maybe she can remember the truth on the way"); under
duress, she admitted that the night before the robbery, she had come
to Johnny in his hotel room, to tell him that he was going to be
cut out of the deal after the heist; Johnny threatened to kill them: "I'm
gonna get to them before they get to me," but she convinced
Johnny to let Browning live ("Promise me you won't kill him"),
in exchange for sharing the money together afterwards; however, the
duplicitous Sheila was setting up Johnny; she was actually two-timing
Johnny and had betrayed him to Browning; she had advised Johnny to
take the money after the heist and drive it to her
- after Johnny's heist of the money, Browning (who had
been tipped off by Sheila) approached Johnny with a gun in their
pre-arranged meeting place, a hotel room - Sheila even urged Browning
to murder Johnny: "Get it over with, Jack"; although seriously
wounded in the stomach, Johnny was able to escape into the dark woods
- the scene of Charlie's statement that Sheila's betrayal
of Johnny had already been enough to kill him, even though she was
eager to blame Browning for the hit on his life: "You see, the
only man that's not afraid to die is the man that's dead already.
And you killed him four years ago. You didn't need us"
- the last deadly tragic sequence - with a long sniper
rifle, Browning ambushed Lee and lethally wounded Charlie as they
departed from the front of the LA hotel; with his last ounce of strength
and dripping blood from his wound, Charlie drove to Browning's suburban
home; there, he found Sheila and Browning emptying a safe; to save
herself, Sheila blamed Browning for the ambush and the theft of the
heist money: "Please. I-I didn't want to. He made me do it.
I couldn't help myself"; first, Charlie shot Browning dead,
and then turned his gun on Sheila who pleaded for her life: ("Please,
I didn't want to have anything to do with it. I-I had no choice"),
but Charlie snarled back:
"Lady, I don't have the time!" and shot her dead too (with
a wide angle lens emphasizing the size of his silencer-gun
|
|
Dying Charlie with Imaginary Gun - on Browning's
Front Lawn
|
The Ending at Browning's Suburban Home
|
- with a briefcase full of money, the dying Charlie
emerged onto the outdoor brick walkway and stumbled over to the
driveway, where he pulled a trigger on an approaching police car
using an imaginary gun in his empty hand; then he fell over dead
onto the suburban front lawn, with the briefcase opening and spilling
cash next to him on the grass
|
Johnny North Warned About Approaching Cold Blooded Killers
Killers: Charlie and Lee
Femme Fatale Sheila Farr (Angie Dickinson)
Race Driver Johnny's Career-Ending Violent Crash
Johnny - Hospitalized and Visited by Sheila
Charlie's Steam Bath Interrogation of Gang Member Mickey
Johnny's Romance with Sheila
Sheila's Brutal Interrogation in Hotel Room by Lee and
Charlie
Sheila's Two-Timing of Johnny
Browning with Sheila - Caught Emptying Safe
Charlie Aiming at Sheila
Sheila After Double-Crossing and Blaming Browning
- She Was Shot to Death by Charlie Who Snarled: "Lady, I don't
have the time"
|