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The Lady
From Shanghai (1948)
Writer/director Orson Welles' film noir classic
was an imaginative, complicated, unsettling film noir and
taut who-dun-it thriller - a tale of betrayal, lust, a love-hate
relationship, greed and murder set within a deadly love triangle.
Orson Welles served as director, producer, screenplay writer, and
actor, basing his screenplay upon Sherwood King's 1938 novel If
I Die Before I Wake.
The disjointed, stylistic and daring
tale from Columbia Pictures followed the misadventures of Michael O'Hara
- an Irish seaman (Welles), with fatalistic, Irish-accented voiceovers
about how he had become ensnared. At first, he was immediately entranced
by Elsa Bannister (Rita Hayworth, Welles' own estranged wife), a
blonde femme fatale, after he rescued her in NYC's Central Park. He agreed
to be a crew member on her older, wealthy, disabled husband Arthur
Bannister's (Everett Sloane) luxury yacht sailing from NY to San
Francisco (via the Panama Canal). During the voyage, Bannister's
law-business partner George Grisby ((Glenn Anders)) joined them,
while Michael fell in love with Elsa. The shifty Grisby enticed Michael
(for $5,000 dollars) in a fraudulent murder scheme to help him stage
and fake his own death.
Numerous classic set-pieces included the cruise, the jungle picnic,
the aquarium scene, the courtroom scene, the chase through a
Chinese theatre, and the carnival funhouse and
Hall of Mirrors climax. Ultimately due to studio interference,
the film's length was severely cut and edited down by one hour, creating
an almost incomprehensible, discontinuous, cryptic patchwork from
numerous retakes and substantial edits.
- the opening voice-over narration was delivered by
out-of-work, gullible, wandering Irish seaman Michael O'Hara (Orson
Welles) with an Irish brogue accent, as he was strolling on the
streets of NYC: ("When I start out to make a fool of myself, there's very little can stop
me. If I'd known where it would end, I'd never let anything start,
if I'd been in my right mind, that is. But once I'd seen her, once
I'd seen her, I was not in my right mind for quite some time...me,
with plenty of time and nothing to do but get myself in trouble.
Some people can smell danger, not me")
- Michael O'Hara first met short-haired blonde femme
fatale Elsa Bannister (Rita Hayworth) when she
was wearing a polka-dotted white dress, and was seated under the
black hood of a horse-drawn carriage on its way to New York's Central
Park; after offering her a cigarette that she declined to smoke (and
wrapped in her handkerchief), he recollected
- in voice-over: ("...Once I'd seen her, I was not in my
right mind for quite some time...That's how I found her, and from
that moment on, I did not use my head very much, except to be thinking
of her")
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During Michael's Rescue of Elsa During An Assault
in Central Park
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- a few moments later, he discovered her discarded
handkerchief (and cigarette) and her purse - thrown down; he
rescued her after screams of help as she was being assaulted by a couple of 'unprofessional'
thugs; regarding himself as a "brave fella," he fought off the
men, and then drove her home in the cabdriver's horse-cab and
fancifully imagined her as Princess Rosalie; she claimed that she
once worked in Shanghai - hence the film's title; after a few minutes
of acting as the cab-driver, he joined her inside the carriage
- he dropped her off at her car garage where there
was the coincidental mention of brilliant San Francisco "criminal
lawyer" Arthur Bannister (Everett Sloane), although Elsa did not
admit that she was married to him; offhandedly, as repayment, she
proposed that the between-jobs Michael work on her husband's boat
as a deck hand: "If you're a sailor, there's a job for you...Would
you like to work for me? I'd like it...We're short a man on the
crew" - the next morning, she was sailing on a yacht (the Circe) to
the West Coast via the Panama Canal; then, she seductively added:
"l'll make it worth your while"
- Michael was shocked that the garage attendant identified
the lady as the wife of the high-priced, celebrated San Francisco
lawyer Arthur Bannister; in voice-over, Michael mused mischievously:
"Personally, I don't like a girlfriend
to have a husband. If she'll fool her husband, I figure she'll
fool me...The boob that I am, I thought I could escape her"
- the next morning in the seamen's hiring hall, the
famous, older, wealthy trial lawyer Arthur Bannister made his entrance
- cruelly prefaced by a view of his double-set of knotted canes
that served as warped extensions of his inoperative legs; it was
implied that the physically-paralyzed and crippled Bannister ("the
world's greatest criminal lawyer") was also asexual and impotent;
he inquired about locating O'Hara, who was summoned to speak
to him; Bannister was looking for "an able-bodied seaman" who wasn't
an habitual drunk
Bannister's Double-Set of Canes-Crutches During His Entrance
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Bannister Met Michael O'Hara and Offered to Hire Him as a Deck
Crew Member
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In a Bar, Bannister Praised Michael as a "Tough Guy" Who Saved
His Wife's Life
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- in a bar with Michael (nicknamed
Black Irish) and two other sweaty, robust
sailors, Bannister praised Michael for being heroic: "Mike saved
my wife's life...Mike's quite a hero, quite a tough guy"; one of
the sailors, an old war buddy of O'Hara's named Jake (Lou Merrill),
defined what made a guy tough: ("A guy with an edge"); the implication
was that Bannister's wealth ("bankroll
in (his) pocket") provided him with most of his edge; Michael
was forced to take care of the drunken and passed-out Bannister
- embroiling himself further into the sinister grip that both
Bannisters held him in: (voice-over: "Well, it was me that was unconscious.
And he was exactly as helpless as a sleeping rattlesnake")
- Michael delivered the drunken Bannister to his
yacht in the harbor, where he viewed a glum-faced Elsa dressed
as a calendar-girl - she wore a yachtman's suit and cap with white
shorts; she urged him to stay: "I wasn't sure you'd come"; when
Michael answered: "I'm not staying," she begged: "You've got
to stay"; Michael was coerced to take the job when servant-maid
Bessie (Evelyn Ellis) urged him to help the vulnerable "child"
or damsel in distress: ("She needs you bad, you stay")
- again in voice-over, Michael summarized what he
was doing on the luxury yacht, first sailing in the West Indies
and Caribbean; he saw himself as a self-deceiving
"prize fathead" that was "chasing a married woman but
that's not the way I want you to look at it"
- the lecherous, weirdly insane, paranoid and sweaty
George Grisby (Glenn Anders), Bannister's business legal-partner
(who had flown from NYC to Havana, Cuba), joined the group mid-way,
and boarded the Circe after
lasciviously and voyeuristically viewing Elsa in a bathing suit
from an off-shore motorboat as she stood on some rocks and dove
off; during Grisby's first conversation with Michael, he asked: "I'm very interested
in murders...Would you mind killing another man?...Would you kill
me if I gave you the chance? I may give you the chance"
- once Elsa returned to the ship, she hinted to Michael
that she loathed her asexual husband and was sexually neglected
by him, and that she needed help to be protected; when she drew
near to kiss him, he slapped her, but then they fell into each
other's embracing arms and kissed passionately; as Grisby sped
off in his boat, he witnessed their illicit affair and called out:
"So long, kiddies"; Elsa worried: "Now he knows about us"
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Start of an Illicit Love Affair Between Elsa and
Michael
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- while on the deck of the
yacht one night, Elsa in a black two-piece bathing suit laid flat
on her back on a cushion spread out on the deck; Bannister claimed
to Michael that money for countless operations had saved him from
a lifetime of crippling paralysis; they listened as Elsa sang the
haunting torch song "Please Don't Kiss Me" ("Please don't love me, but if you love
me, then don't take your lips or your arms or your love away");
Michael thought to himself: "Talk of money and murder. I must be
insane, or else all these people are lunatics"
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Elsa Singing on Sailing Yacht: "Please
Don't Kiss Me" - Mesmerizing to Michael
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- Bannister organized a picnic-party
that required the entire crew to march into a dangerous jungle
along the Mexican coast filled with squawking parrots, slithering
snakes, and alligator-infested waters; an important plot point was
abruptly inserted into the picnic scene
- Bannister told Sidney Broome (Ted de Corsia), the yacht's steward,
that he already was painfully aware that he would be the victim of
a murder plot ("There's a plot against my life, correct? I'm
gonna be murdered"); Elsa pulled Michael aside and told him
that Broome was actually a private divorce detective hired by Bannister
to tail and spy on Elsa for evidence of unfaithfulness: ("He wants
to fix it so I'll never be able to divorce him...He wants to cut
me off without a cent")
- during the picnic, Grisby and Grisby teased
Elsa about how Michael served as her
"big strong bodyguard...with an Irish brogue"; Bannister
argued disagreeably with his partner Grisby about his degree of jealousy
- and even admitted: "You
ought to realize I don't mind it a bit if Michael's in love with
my wife. He's young, she's young. He's strong, she's beautiful";
Elsa stood up and objected to their teasing: "I don't have to listen
to you talk like that"; she even agreed with Michael's oft-threatened
sentiments that he should quit their awful company: ("Why should anyone
want to live around us?")
During the Jungle Picnic
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Elsa's Whispered Secret to Michael About Broome and Bannister's Set-up To Keep
Her Broke
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Bannister and Grisby Teasing Elsa About Michael as Her Lover
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Elsa: "I don't have to listen to you talk like that"
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- hateful of her own life and
the love triangle forced upon her, Elsa agonized about being in
their distasteful and destructive company; Michael arrived and
noted their cruel game-playing: "Is this what you folks do
for amusement in the evenings, sit around toasting marshmallows
and calling each other names?"; it appeared that Elsa was
forced to marry Bannister - either she had been blackmailed about
her shady, miserable past in China, or was enticed by his money
Michael's Disgust at Their Petty Amusements
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Michael's Monologue About A Shark
Feeding-Frenzy
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- Michael was prompted to recall an
experience he had while fishing off Brazil and likened them to
a pack of blood-seeking 'sharks.' He remembered that the mad predators
had a feeding frenzy upon themselves until none survived: "...
in their frenzy, they ate at themselves. You could feel the lust
and murder like a wind stingin' your eyes. And you could smell
the death reeking up out of the sea. I never saw anything worse
until this little picnic tonight. And you know, there wasn't one
of them sharks in the whole crazy pack that survived"
- as Michael hiked above Acapulco with Grisby, he
noted the beauty and its underlying corruption: ("...you
can't hide the hunger and guilt. It's a bright, guilty world")
- at the top of their climb next to jagged peaks above
the ocean, Grisby convincingly argued (in his quirky, sing-song
voice), that he wished to disappear from the world and escape before
Armageddon - a nuclear holocaust that would end the world; on a
rocky cliffside peak, O'Hara was asked by Grisby to accept his "straightforward
business proposition" - a diabolical murder scheme that paid
$5,000 dollars: "It's me...I want you to kill me!"
- on a moonlit Acapulco street the next night, Michael
told Elsa about Grisby's weird proposal of suicide and his fear
of the world exploding; she also admitted to having
thoughts of suicide for herself, and asked Michael if he ever considered
killing himself. She was already aware of Grisby's insane, suicidal
impulses: "He's not sane, neither is Arthur"; Michael punched out
Broome, who was tailing them and spying on them, and then ran after
Elsa who had fled the scene; he promised to protectively care for her
and provide a safe haven away from the evil of her surroundings, but
she was doubtful that as a "a foolish knight errant," he would be able
to fulfill his promises: "You're big and strong, but you just don't
know how to take care of yourself. So how could you take care of me?"
- the yacht arrived in San Francisco/Sausalito in
the early fall, according to Michael's voice-over; he considered
himself a fish that had already been thoroughly "hooked" (literally
swallowed and eaten alive) by Elsa's pleas for aid; he naively believed
he could run off with Elsa, save her from
the sea of shark's blood, and take care of her (with the $5,000
bounty for killing Grisby); the foolish Michael fantasized
about "running off with you [Elsa] to
a desert island to eat berries and goat's milk"; however,
she doubted his realistic ability to support her and declined
his offer: "And I'd have to take in washing to support you";
when she heard about Michael's promised $5,000 dollars, she smiled,
knowing that he had accepted, in his mind, Grisby's diabolical murder scheme
- to carry out Grisby's absurd plan, in Grisby's office
that evening, Michael listened to part of the typed, confessional
statement that he must sign; he also received half of the payout
money; by now, Grisby had ruled out suicide (it's "against
the law"), and instead wanted Michael to help him fake his murder; Grisby
described how he would disappear - he convinced the gullible O'Hara,
with double-talk and insane logic, that a murderer couldn't be
convicted, in California, if there was no corpse to be found: ("You
swear you killed me, but you can't be arrested. That's the law.
Look it up for yourself. There's no such thing as homicide unless
they find a corpse"); he implied that his wily partner, Bannister,
would cleverly exonerate O'Hara
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George Grisby Plotting
His Own Phony Murder with Michael in San Francisco - Michael
Signed a Confessional Statement
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- the next morning at 9 AM, Michael secretly met Elsa
in San Francisco's Steinhart Aquarium; during the clandestine meeting
between the two secret lovers Michael and Elsa - they were deliberately
positioned before predatory fish; he told her of his love and arrangement
of rescue plans so that they could be together; she encouraged her "beloved
fool" to elope with her after the murder plot, and begged:
("Tell me where we'll go, Michael. Will you carry me off with you into the
sunrise?...Just take me there. Take me quick. Take me"); after
a passionate kiss, he admitted his "foolish"
decision to raise money by pretending to murder Grisby; she read his
pre-signed, fake confession with the description of the crime to be
committed in Sausalito; Elsa tried to warn the gullible Michael about
her conniving husband who was undeniably behind
Grisby's proposal ("It's a trap of some kind...I'll
swear my husband's behind this whole thing"); the sequence ended with
another kiss - she passionately called him her "beloved fool"
as the screen blackened
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Elsa and Michael in Aquarium With Backdrop of Predatory
Fish
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- the night of the 'murder' at the Bannisters' house
in San Rafael, Sidney Broome (the Bannisters' butler/detective)
revealed to Grisby that he knew all about his dastardly plan -
to kill Arthur Bannister and then frame Michael; to silence Broome,
Grisby shot him, point-blank, and mortally wounded him - a major
plot twist
Broome Bribing Grisby To Not Reveal Grisby's Scheme
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Grisby Stunned by Broome's Knowledge and Offer
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Grisby Shooting Grisby Point-Blank and Mortally-Wounding
Him
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The Film's First Plot Twist
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- Grisby returned the gun to Michael (to use for Grisby's
own planned but faked 'killing'), and they drove together to the
Sausalito dock;
however on the way, they rear-ended a truck that smashed their
windshield in two places and bloodied Grisby; Grisby rationalized
that the concerned truck driver would make a "good witness" who
saw them just before the 'murder'
- meanwhile, Elsa had heard the gunshot and found
Broome dying on her kitchen floor; she listened
as he told her that he knew about the plot against
her husband: "There's gonna be a murder. Ain't
gonna be no fake murder, not this time. Somebody's gonna be killed...Yeah,
your husband. Maybe he's the one who's gonna be knocked off...Could
be? You'd better get down to his office if you want to do anything
about it"
- once they arrived in Sausalito, Grisby pulled away
from the harbor in a speedboat, as Michael took multiple shots
into the ground to fake the 'murder'; when he phoned the Bannister
house, he heard the last dying words of Broome - also revealing to
him Grisby's sinister scheme: "Get down to the office, Montgomery Street.
You was framed. Grisby didn't want to disappear. He just wanted
an alibi - and you're it. You're the fall guy. Grisby's gone
down there to kill Bannister, now"
- in the complicated plot, Michael drove to downtown
San Francisco, where he was apprehended by police, for being suspicious
(blood, a confessional statement, and a fired
gun discovered on Michael's person); he was horrified to learn that
Bannister was still alive, and Grisby was dead (laid out on a stretcher);
Michael was arrested
- incriminated by the false confession that he had signed [it shouldn't
have incriminated him], and framed on a fabricated murder charge
of Bannister's business partner; Bannister would act
as O'Hara's legal representative, defending him for both murders
(Broome and Grisby) and reluctantly serving as Elsa's protector; Michael
realized that he had become the fall guy for Grisby's murder
and that a vengeful Bannister was now representing him as his defense
lawyer for a court trial; he remarked on the insanity of his
situation: "And me, charged with a couple
of murders I did not commit. Either me or the rest of the whole
world is absolutely insane"
- in the Hall of Justice outside the courtroom (and
near where Michael was jailed), the Bannisters sat together and
conversed about Michael's innocence and Grisby's alleged involvement
and plot to fake his own death; there were problems with the case,
one of which was that the gun that killed Grisby
couldn't be found; Michael's own story about how Grisby had hired
him to pretend to kill him wouldn't stand up to scrutiny;
Bannister asserted: "If your Irishman doesn't want to go to the
gas chamber, he's got to have to trust me....I wouldn't trust him
with my wife...I've never lost a case, remember? Besides, my wife
might think he was a martyr. I've got to defend him. I haven't
any choice. And neither have you"
- while Elsa visited Michael in jail, he tried to
explain to her 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"; Elsa informed him that Grisby wasn't
even married
- Michael's kangaroo-court trial was an unforgettable,
farcical courtroom sequence (a vaudevillian theatre of the absurd)
that made justice seem ludicrously administered - with a disruptive
audience, an ineffectual judge, a quirky jury, and the fact that defense attorney
Bannister was called to the stand as a witness, to testify against
his own client; Elsa also testified that Michael was "fond" of
her, and that she kissed Michael - in public view - at
the aquarium;
Bannister Speaking on Witness Stand to Judge in Michael's Courtroom Trial
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Bannister Cross-Examining Himself
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Elsa on the Witness Stand - Michael Was
"Fond" of Her and "Very Respectful"
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- after downing a handful of Bannister's pain pills,
Michael created bedlam in the courtroom, and was able to overpower
two guards and escape - his objective was to find the gun that
killed Grisby - and shift the blame to the murderer; he joined
another group of jurors on their way to lunch outside
- Michael
fled into the Chinatown district of San Francisco where he ducked
inside the Sunsing (or Mandarin) Theatre during the performance
of a costumed, stylized Oriental melodramatic opera on stage; Elsa
followed him and sat next to Michael in the audience to avoid discovery
by authorities searching in the aisles; to his shock in another
plot twist, Michael discovered the gun that killed Grisby was in
Elsa's possession in her handbag; just before he passed out, he
denounced her as a blonde Circe -
as he stuck the gun into her ribs: "You
killed Grisby, yes. You're the killer"
Elsa Sitting With Michael in the Audience of a Chinese Theatre
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Embracing as Elsa Cautioned: "Don't move"
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Michael Found The Gun that Killed Grisby in Elsa's Purse
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- in true film noir fashion, the murderer and
mastermind of the whole affair turned out to be the villainess
Elsa - she literally 'shanghai'd' him. She had planned to kill
her husband (with co-conspirator Grisby) for a share of the money,
and then frame Michael for the crime, while Grisby disappeared
(or was killed too) and was presumed dead by everyone; the plan
was fouled up when Grisby unexpectedly killed Broome, so she killed
Grisby herself - off-screen - (or she warned Bannister to kill
Grisby?) and Michael was blamed for it
- Michael was dragged away, kidnapped by Elsa's Chinese
servants, and taken to a hideout - a deserted, off-season funhouse/amusement
park; the angular, expressionistic surroundings in the "Crazy House"
reflected Michael's mental instability; he careened down a chute
(he was literally the "fall guy") and emerged into the Hall of
Mirrors on a rotating, unstable floor. The Hall of Mirrors (the
Magic Mirror Maze) was constructed with myriad mirrors - huge,
distorted closeups mingle with multiple fragmented images
- the visually-intriguing, climactic confrontation
and shoot-out in the Hall of Mirrors remains one of
the greatest visual effects in cinematic history; the three main
principal characters were reunited in the funhouse
- blonde femme fatale wife Elsa explained her
side of the story - "George was supposed to take care of Arthur.
But he lost his silly head and shot Broome. After that, I knew
I couldn't trust him. He was mad. He had to be shot"; Michael then
asked about his own fate with her - cynically asking: "Into the
sunrise? You and me, or you and Grisby?"
- as O'Hara watched, Bannister delivered an ominous
speech to his wife before firing commenced - he vengefully threatened
his rotten wife with a letter he had written to the D.A. explaining
her guilt and Michael's innocence: ("...I presume
you think that if you murder me here, your sailor friend will get
the blame and you'll be free to spend my money. Well, dear, you aren't
the only one who wants me to die. Our good friend, the District Attorney,
is just itching to open a letter that I left with him. The letter
tells all about you, lover. So you'd be foolish to fire that gun.
With these mirrors, it's difficult to tell. You are aiming at me,
aren't you? I'm aiming at you, lover. Of course, killing you is killing
myself. It's the same thing. But you know, I'm pretty tired of both
of us")
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Reflective Images in the Hall of Mirrors
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- the couple self-destructively drew their guns and
shot at multiple likenesses of each other, as the screen erupted
into a wild kaleidoscope of smashed glass, multiple distorted mirrors
that broke and shattered, as they both mortally-wounded each other;
their aim was confused by the contradictory mirror images that
broke into splinters during the wild shooting as one fake image
splintered and another replaced it; still in character, Bannister
uttered his last words: ("You
know, for a smart girl, you make a lot of mistakes. You should have
let me live. You're gonna need a good lawyer")
Deadly Shoot-Out in Hall of Mirrors Between Elsa
and Arthur Bannister
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Bannister's Speech to Elsa
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"I'm aiming at you, lover. Of course, killing
you is killing myself. It's the same thing."
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Bannister Firing at Elsa
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Elsa Reflected in Broken Mirrors
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Shattered Mirrors
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Bannister's Last Words: "You should have let me live"
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- witnessing the double murders as he stepped back and
watched them destroy each other, Michael was horrified
by the shattering of glass as the deceptive facades of their evil
images were reflected and then blown away - and all that was left
in the violent shoot-out was their guilt, greedy hunger, pain and misery
- Elsa stumbled with Michael into another room where
she engaged in her last exchange with Michael during a prolonged
death scene; it was filmed at ground level down next to her on the
floor, as she agonized over her death; he recalled their conversation
in the streets of Acapulco about the badness of the world, and
his fishing tale about blood-thirsty sharks; she admitted her
own "original nature" had delved into corruptness and evil,
and that she had surrendered to "badness", but her pleading
failed to gain his sympathy, even after an appeal to his sentimentality
- Elsa: (gasping) "He and George,
and now me!"
Michael: "Like the sharks, mad with their own blood. Chewing away at their own selves."
Elsa: "It's true. I made a lot of mistakes."
Michael: "You said the world's bad and we can't run away from the badness. And
you're right there. But you said we can't fight it. We must deal
with the badness, make terms. And then the badness'll deal with you,
and make its own terms, in the end, surely."
Elsa: "You can fight, but what good is it? Goodbye."
Michael: "You mean we can't win?"
Elsa: "No, we can't win. (poetically) Give my love to the sunrise."
Michael: "We can't lose, either. Only if we quit."
Elsa: "And you're not going to?"
Michael: "Not again!"
Elsa: "Oh Michael, I'm afraid. (He strolled away) Michael? Come back here.
Michael! Please! I don't want to die! I DON'T WANT TO DIE!"
- in the film's conclusion, unhooked
from her charming and fatal attraction, Michael abandoned her; as
Michael left her to die alone, he walked away to call the police;
he predicted that he might become more ambivalent, forget Elsa and
put her corruptive influences behind him - if he grew old enough:
(voice-over: "I went to call the cops, but I knew she'd be dead before they got
there and I'd be free. Bannister's note to the DA (would) fix it.
I'd be innocent officially, but that's a big word - innocence.
Stupid's more like it. Well, everybody is somebody's fool. The
only way to stay out of trouble is to grow old, so I guess I'll
concentrate on that. Maybe I'll live so long that I'll forget her.
Maybe I'll die tryin'")
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Elsa Bannister (Rita Hayworth) Riding in a Central Park Carriage
Michael O'Hara (Orson Welles) (Voice-over: "Some people can small danger,
not me")
Michael Inside the Carriage with Elsa ("Rosalie")
Elsa to Michael: "There's a job for you...Would you like to work
for me? I'd like it...We're short a man on the crew"
Elsa: "I wasn't sure you'd come"
Michael: "I'm not staying"
Elsa: "You've got to stay"
Elsa In a Bathing
Suit Viewed Through a Telescope by Leering Grisby on the Cruise
Arrival of George Grisby (Glenn Anders) - Bannister's Business Partner
Grisby's Questions to Michael About Murder
Arthur Bannister (Everett Sloane) on Deck of Ship Speaking to
Michael About His Use of Money
The Trek to the Jungle For a Picnic
During the Picnic Preparations, Bannister's Premonition to Sidney Broome That
He Was Going to Be Murdered
Michael During a Hike Above Acapulco: ("It's a bright, guilty world")
Grisby's Fears About a Coming Apocalypse
Atop a Cliff, Grisby's
Request to Be Murdered (for $5,000 dollars):
"It's me...I want you to kill me!"
Elsa Expressing Her Own Suicidal Thoughts to Michael
Michael Promising To Save and Protect Elsa
At the Sausalito Dock, Michael Fantasizing About Running Off With Elsa to a Desert
Island (with $5,000)
Meeting In the Aquarium - Beginning With A Passionate
Kiss
In the Aquarium - Ending With A Passionate Kiss That Blackened the Screen
Grisby and Michael Driving to Sausalito to Stage Phony "Murder" of Grisby
Rear-End Accident With Smashed Windshield
Broome Confessing Real Murder Plot to Elsa As He Was Dying
On the Phone, Broome Also Confessed to Michael The Murder Plot to Kill Bannister
In Downtown SF: Bannister Was Alive, Grisby Was Dead (on Stretcher), and Michael
Was Arrested For Two Murders
In the Hall of Justice - Bannister With Wife Elsa
Elsa Visiting Michael in Jail
Michael Awoke in the "Crazy House" - He Was Literally the "Fall Guy"
"He and George, and now me!"
"It's true. I made a lot of mistakes"
"You can fight, but what good is it? Goodbye."
As Michael Walked Away - Elsa's Death: "I DON'T WANT
TO DIE!"
Michael's Film-Concluding Departure
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