The Lady From Shanghai (1948) | |
The Story (continued)
Elsa drives her open convertible up and down steep hills in San Francisco (on Sacramento and Mason Streets) to the Hall of Justice (at Kearny and Washington Streets). She meets her husband in the lobby outside the courtroom, close to where Michael is jailed. During a very slow-moving dolly shot toward them and as the famed lawyer is often interrupted with greetings from his corrupt law acquaintances, the Bannisters have a disagreeable and hateful dialogue about Michael's innocence and Grisby's alleged involvement and plot to fake his own death. Bannister seems determined to make sure that O'Hara is convicted. (Elsa smokes during the scene - something she learned since meeting Michael that clearly associates her with him.) Evidence doesn't help Michael's case - the gun that killed Grisby cannot be found. Although he has never lost a case, Bannister doesn't mind seeing Michael found guilty, but he doesn't want his wife to view a convicted Michael as a martyr:
Allowed to visit Michael in his jail cell alone (by her husband), Elsa speaks to him but is separated by upright black bars and a screen. O'Hara feels doomed to die, but Elsa encourages him to "trust" her husband - "because it's your only chance - because I want you to." When she advises him to admit to his murder of Broome (does she really believe this?), Michael explains that Grisby killed Broome and wanted to murder Bannister too, because "he couldn't get a divorce...so he could get away from his wife." She expresses her profound doubt about Grisby faking his own death - a close-up displays her stunned expression as she tells him: "George didn't have a wife. He wasn't married." An unforgettable, farcical courtroom scene (a vaudevillian theatre of the absurd) makes justice seem ludicrously administered: there are frequent coughing and sneezing fits in the crowd and jury box; bouts of laughter from a disruptive audience that views the proceedings as entertainment; a fat gallery attendee sleeping; two gum-chewing observers, one of whom sticks her wad under her chair; two talkative Chinese girls gabbing in their foreign tongue about the trial (ending with "You ain't kiddin'!"); a jury member guffawing inappropriately when Bannister is identified as "a member of the bar," etc. The trial opens with Bannister loudly objecting to the befuddled presiding judge (Erskine Sanford) about the questioning of a police officer by the district attorney:
Bannister completely discredits Officer Peters' entire testimony (and the D.A.'s appeal for sympathy) by stating that Officer Peters doesn't have a wife or children. The D.A. then calls attorney Bannister to the stand as a witness, to testify against his own client. The questioning about Michael's activities quickly degenerates into a shouting match about improper tactics (with strident accusations of each side about making speeches and drawing conclusions) - and an appeal for a mistrial. Meanwhile, a concerned and modestly-elegant Elsa looks warmly at Michael. Bannister argues that he should be allowed to cross-examine himself (prefacing statements with QUESTION: and ANSWER:) about Michael's virtues, thereby making the trial even more humorous. Elsa is served a subpoena, called as a witness, and questioned about the murdered Sidney Broome (who was employed by her husband as a detective in divorce cases and who also served as a butler in the household and steward on the yacht). As she perches above everyone in the witness box, it is insinuated by the confrontative D.A. that a suspicious Bannister hired Broome to "watch" her - during a period of mutual infatuation with O'Hara. As the courtroom hushes and attentively leans forward for Elsa's answer ("He was very respectful...and I think he was fond of me..."), her face fills the screen as she admits to kissing and loving Michael - in public view - at the aquarium. During jury deliberations over "the fate of Black Irish O'Hara, the notorious waterfront agitator", the ineffectual judge, reflected in a window overlooking a panoramic view of the Bay Bridge and Ferry Building), plays a solitary game of chess and hums to himself in his chambers - an apt symbol for the fateful, kangaroo court proceedings (an overhead view of the courtroom verifies the association). Just before the verdict is announced by the jury, however, O'Hara is coaxed, by Elsa's glance and non-verbal gesture, to take an overdose of Bannister's pain-killing pills that are in the foreground, after "tough"-guy (but weak defense lawyer in this case) Bannister gloats to him:
After Michael downs a handful of pills, confusion and bedlam erupt in the courtroom. Guards drag him into the judge's chambers where they attempt to "keep him moving" and walk off the effects while a doctor is summoned. When he is able to overpower two guards (numerous articles of glass are shattered in the office), he escapes from the building by posing as part of another jury (from another trial about a jewel robbery) on their way to lunch. He is given a sudden fright when a guard shouts at him for listening to another jury member discussing the trial. O'Hara's main objective in his flight (across Portsmouth Square and north on Grant Avenue from Pine Street) is to try and find the gun (and the murderer) that killed Grisby. High above, Elsa watches his exit from a courtroom window. He flees into the Chinatown district of San Francisco where he ducks inside the Sunsing (or Mandarin) Theatre during the performance of a costumed, stylized Oriental melodramatic opera. Elsa has no difficulty following, since she has a command of fluent Chinese and can ask bystanders about his passage. Backstage in the theatre, she telephones her Chinese servants and Li to come to their aid ("to arrange...someplace to take you," she soon tells Michael). She finds him in the audience, the only Westerner in attendance among other wizened spectators, and sits next to him. He admits to being "faint" from the effects of the pills. As they embrace (Judas-style) to avoid being discovered by authorities and she advises him: "don't move," the eyes of the masked or heavily made-up actors on stage dart back and forth when they see the police in the aisles. Michael discovers the gun that killed Grisby is in Elsa's possession in her handbag. Just before he passes out, he denounces her as a blonde Circe - as he sticks the gun into her ribs:
He is dragged away, kidnapped by Elsa's servants, and taken to a hideout - a deserted funhouse/amusement park closed for the season. One of the greatest visual effects in cinematic history is in this final sequence of the film - the famous Crazy House/Hall of Mirrors scene. As Michael awakens after being taken there by Elsa's accomplices, he explains the full murder plan - in voice-over, as he hallucinates:
[The murderer and mastermind of the whole affair turns out to be the villainess Elsa, in true film noir fashion - she literally 'shanghai's' him. She had planned to kill her husband (with co-conspirator Grisby) for a share of the money, then kill Grisby and frame Michael for the crimes. From his vantage point, Grisby was expecting to disappear (with partnership insurance) with everyone presuming he was dead - after Michael had 'murdered' him. But when Grisby killed Broome, she knew that the plan would fail so she killed Grisby herself - off-screen - (or warned Bannister to kill Grisby?). Michael realizes that he was duped by Bannister, Elsa, and Grisby as they circled around each other like sharks - and made him their fall guy.] Wondering if he is "crazy" or not, he walks through a hallway before a moving web of black shadows, a fragmented drawing of a wild horse, a grotesque sign reading "STAND UP OR GIVE UP", and other angular, expressionistic surroundings reflecting his mental instability. He trips a mechanism in the "Crazy House" and careens down a long, zig-zag slide or chute past a menacing, thirty-foot high dragon's mouth halfway down. After descending the labyrinth, he emerges into the Hall of Mirrors on a rotating, unstable floor. The Hall of Mirrors (the Magic Mirror Maze) is constructed with myriad mirrors - huge, distorted closeups mingle with multiple fragmented images. Blonde, dark femme fatale Elsa, appearing in a shadowy doorway, shines her flashlight at his face. As she confesses her guilt to him, she exhorts him to understand why she duped him and was fated to frame and betray him. [Her guilty wrong-doings are never shown on-screen, only the consequences.] She vows her love for Michael without directly answering his question: "You and me, or you and Grisby?" He restates her earlier proverbial statement - challenging her to aim for "something better" than her original nature [to STAND UP rather than GIVE UP], but she declines. She believes in following her "original nature (to) the end" (i.e., satisfying her greed and pretending to love him) rather than truly loving him:
A moment later, her brilliant, crippled husband arrives - walking with his gnarled canes. His image is prismatically multiplied a dozen times in a layered series of vertical panes. He confronts the deceitful couple and then vengefully threatens his rotten wife with a letter he has written to the D.A. explaining her guilt and Michael's innocence. He also threatens to shoot her ("I'm aiming at you, lover"). Surrounded by myriad, countless images (all of their illusionary, multiple identities) that they will shoot to bits, Bannister bemoans the fact that their self-canceling killings will be indistinguishable ("killing you is killing myself"):
As Bannister (Elsa's cruel pimp husband) and Elsa (a beautiful femme fatale) self-destructively draw their guns and shoot at multiple likenesses of each other, the screen erupts into a wild kaleidoscope of smashed glass, cracked and chipped pieces of mirror, and shattering bits of their false images. Their aim is confused by the contradictory mirror images that break into splinters during the wild shooting as one fake image splinters and another replaces it. Witnessing the double murders as he steps back and watches them destroy each other, Michael is horrified by the shattering of glass as the deceptive facades of their evil images are reflected and then blown away - and all that is left in the violent shoot-out is their guilt, greedy hunger, pain and misery. They finally are able to break through all their surfaces until they mortally wound each other. At its climax after the panes have been blasted away, both Bannister and Elsa are dying and face each other across a scene of shattered glass. Still in character, Bannister remarks:
Elsa stumbles with Michael into another room. The camera films at ground level down next to Elsa on the floor, as she agonizes over her death. While she is dying, she has one last exchange with Michael. He recalls their conversation in the streets of Acapulco about the badness of the world, and his fishing tale about blood-thirsty sharks. After she admits her own "original nature" delved into corruptness and evil and surrendered to "badness," her pleading fails to gain his sympathy, even after an appeal to his sentimentality:
Unhooked from her charming and fatal attraction, Michael abandons her to die alone. As he leaves, the revolving exit gate makes a death rattle as it rotates. He walks away from the corpses (the two dead sharks left from the blood-lust), and emerges renewed to life - released out of the dark fun house's nightmare into the dawn's air and light next to the beach. As he walks across the street to call the police and the camera slowly ascends, the "innocent" (or stupid-minded) sailor reflects and narrates to himself about how he will be proven legally innocent and exonerated by Bannister's letter. Although corrupted by being made bait (the fall-guy) between a wealthy (but greedy) bunch of tough sharks, he predicts that he may become more ambivalent, forget Elsa and put her corruptive influences behind him - if he grows old enough:
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