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Night Moves (1975)
In Arthur Penn's moody, post-Watergate neo-noirish,
psychological detective film and mystery-thriller involving smuggling
and murder, with the enigmatic title 'Night Moves' - it was penned
by Scottish novelist and screenwriter Alan Sharp. Penn's filmography
during the New Wave Hollywood era included Bonnie
and Clyde (1967),
Alice’s
Restaurant (1969),
and Little Big Man (1970).
The title of the private-eye flick could be more significantly
renamed 'Knight Moves' as a chess metaphor, symbolizing the protagonist's
chessboard of life in which he was ultimately myopic, uncomprehending,
and completely 'blind' and misinformed about the events of his case
(and his own domestic situation). The puzzling film concluded with
an ambiguous ending - completely atypical for the detective-mystery
sub-genre, with no resolution in the detective's investigation. Its
tagline was:
Maybe he would find the girl...maybe he would find
himself.
The dedicated, old-school private-eye detective (who
thought he was in a stable marriage until he discovered his wife
was cheating on him) was distracted from his own crumbling marital
problems when he was commissioned to search for a runaway (missing)
teenaged daughter of an obscure ex-film actress in LA. (The daughter
was named after the Biblical seductress Delilah who accepted bribe
money to strip strong-man Samson of his long hair and power.) He
ultimately located the promiscuous, irresistible, pot-smoking girl
living in the Florida Keys, who had suspicious connections back in
Los Angeles to two Hollywood film crew stuntmen and to her ex-boyfriend
(a mechanic). In Florida, the runaway was living with her step-father
(with a charter business) and his liberated lover (with whom Harry
also had a brief affair).
Unexpected, seemingly-unconnected and 'accidental'
events, including multiple deaths-murders and a hidden smuggling
operation of valuable Mexican artwork from the Yucatan to the US,
had completely fooled the misguided, confused and overwhelmed detective,
who was left wounded and in a rudderless boat aimlessly going around in circles.
- middle-aged, chess enthusiast, failed ex-football
player and LA private eye Harry Moseby (Gene Hackman) was given a referral
and spare case by his friend and professional rival-associate Nick
(Kenneth Mars) (owner of a detective agency); Harry preferred to
work independently of Nick's larger PI agency, claiming it was
an "information factory";
he had a card for his own business: Moseby Confidential
- Harry was married to Ellen
Moseby (Susan Clark), an antique store owner; when asked if he would
attend Rohmer's New Wave art film My Night at Maud's (1969, Fr.) with
her partner Charles (Ben Archibek), Harry declined with the film's
most-famous quote: "I saw a Rohmer film once; it was kind of
like watching paint dry"
- in the film's main plot, Harry was called upon to
investigate a missing persons crime case; at a luxurious home in
LA, Harry met with idle rich, ex-actress Arlene, to negotiate
finding her daughter - a promiscuous, dope-smoking, 16 year-old
runaway named Delilah "Delly" Grastner (Melanie Griffith
in an early role at age 16 or 17), born in 1957, who had been missing
for two weeks; during their visit, the fading Hollywood star Arlene
told how Delly was her daughter from her first estranged husband,
Hollywood "big guns" producer Irving Grastner; and then
she bragged about her breasts: "Oh, I had
lovely tits. Even if I do say so myself. They're sitting on a little
bit of silicone now, but when they were up for grabs, they were
really something special"; Harry was
hired by Arlene (for $125/day plus expenses) to find Delly
- before leaving for Florida, Harry spoke with Nick
in his office, who off-handedly showed off his valuable Mexican
artifacts - an important clue to Harry's mystery later revealed:
"You ought to get your money into those little guys. They're appreciating
faster than real estate. Especially now that the Mexicans got their
backs up about their art treasures bein' ripped off"
- listening to an audio tape-recording about Arlene's
past history, given to him by Nick, Harry
learned that Arlene had a troubled childhood; her father went
bankrupt in 1933 and committed suicide when she was 8 years old;
in Hollywood where she appeared in minor films in the mid-late
1940s, she married Grastner in 1949, and Delilah was born in 1957;
she divorced Grastner in 1962 on grounds of "mental cruelty"; Grastner
counter-sued "on grounds of adultery" - she was having an affair
with Tom Iverson; custody of Delly was awarded to Arlene without
alimony, although Grastner
set up a trust fund of $30,000/year for Delly, before dying in
1964; Arlene later married Tom Iverson, but they separated in
1970 due to charges of "bodily assault"
- Harry clearly realized Arlene's motivations
- the only reason that the selfish Arlene wanted Delly back was
to live off her trust fund, that required them to be living together,
with Delly in her custody; all assets would revert to Delly on
her 25th birthday
- Harry drove up to the Magnolia Theatre marquee,
advertising Eric Rohmer's New Wave art film; after parking across
the street to surprise his wife after the show, he made the shocking
discovery that his wife was having an affair when he saw her riding
off with another man and kissing him at a stoplight
- to help locate Delly, Harry had been
directed by Arlene to speak to Delly's former "creep" boyfriend
Quentin (James Woods), a greasy, suspicious LA mechanic working under
a car; Harry noticed Quentin's left black eye and broken nose; Harry
also roughed up Quentin to receive a tip about Delly's recent whereabouts
- she had been in New Mexico on the set of a film, where she allegedly
'hit on' stuntman/pilot Marv Ellman (Anthony Costello); Harry deduced
that Quentin and Marv had fought over Delly's romantic attention
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LA Mechanic - Delly's Ex-Boyfriend
Quentin (James Woods)
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- Harry attempted to 'investigate' Helen's lover by
confronting crippled Marty Heller (Harris Yulin), who lived in an
art-filled Malibu beachfront house; when asked, the bookish intellectual
Marty described their affair as not serious: "For
me, it's not too serious. For Ellen, ask her. I'd be guessing";
Harry was provoked when Marty began to examine details about Harry's
own past he had learned from Ellen, including a failed football career
with the Oakland Raiders and child abandonment, and how he had tracked
down his lost parents with clues: ("What a great athlete you
were. But you were different. You were brighter, you're more sensitive...Ellen
told me how you were left by your parents when you were very young
and you were brought up by relatives and what kind of effect that
had on you...It's a clue, isn't it? I mean, isn't that what you do,
you look for clues? Didn't you track down your parents and find them?
Mr. Keen Tracer-of-Lost-Persons?")
- once he returned home, Harry brought up Ellen's
affair with Marty, and she asked why he hadn't come to her first;
she also accused him of treating her affair like one of his cases:
"You wanted to trap me and make me incriminate myself, and then
you could go get the evidence, like I was one of your crummy divorce
cases. It's a wonder you didn't photograph the bed while you were
there"; he felt like she was criticizing his life style and his work (calling
it a "joke") because of his decision to do small-time independent
work instead of working for Nick's agency
- to distract himself from his domestic issues, Harry
visited the New Mexico film set, there, he spoke
to director Joey Ziegler (Edward Binns) and stuntman/pilot Marv Ellman; at a country-western bar
after a day of shooting, Harry was stunned to hear the studly,
female-chasing Marv openly admitted his two-timing of both mother
and daughter: "Me and Arlene, we got it on together a couple of times. There's nothing
like having a mother and a daughter. Gives you sort of a kind of
perspective. Know what I mean?"; he also called the "magic
mechanic" Quentin a "weirdo...a freak";
when Joey was asked: "You think Delly knew that Marv and her mother were making it?",
he answered: "A blind man on a gallopin' horse would've known. Arlene ain't Lillian
Gish"
Stuntman-Pilot Marv Ellman (Anthony Costello)
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Stunt Director Joey Ziegler (Edward Binns)
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Quentin Working on Marv's Airplane in NM
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- the next morning as Harry left the New Mexico movie
set, he observed that Quentin, who had been called
to the set, was tinkering with Marv's airplane - a foreshadowing
- during another brief visit by Harry with Arlene
back in her LA home, she invited him to share in her big bathtub,
but he declined: ("Maybe
some other time when I'm feeling really dirty"); Arlene was
upset to learn from Harry that Delly had an affair with Marv in New
Mexico - "I think maybe she's tryin' to even up the
score"; in fact, nymphette Delly was seducing both of her mother's
ex-lovers: stuntman/pilot Marv Ellman and Arlene's second ex-husband
Tom Iverson (who was running a charter boat business in the Florida
Keys for the last six months); Harry realized Delly would probably
be found in the Florida Keys with her step-father Tom Iverson
- during a short conversation with Ellen in their driveway before leaving for Florida,
Harry was sarcastically insulted by his cheating wife to remain and
talk out their issues: "Couldn't that wait a day so we could talk?" - but he insisted that he
had to leave immediately to pursue recent leads; she minimized
his work and insulted him: "Why? So you can pretend you're solving something?"
- Harry tracked Delly to the Florida Keys, where the liberated Delly was
living with her "bum" stepfather Tom Iverson (John Crawford) and his sexy
hippie mistress Paula (singer Jennifer Warren), who was found feeding
dolphins at the dock; Harry introduced himself to Paula as a "private
investigator" searching for Tom's missing stepdaughter Delly
- at Iverson's place, Delly was first seen unclothed
behind a clothesline (similar to Brigitte Bardot's entrance in ...And
God Created Woman (1956, Fr.)); Harry quickly realized there
was a sexual menage-a-trois, love-triangle of sorts between the threesome,
and Harry was also rapidly becoming infatuated with Paula himself
- that evening, Tom admitted to Harry that he was
physically-enticed by the provocative Delly, and it would be better
for him if she returned to LA: "I want that kid the hell outta
here. You see, I, uh, - I get pretty foolish with her, and I -
uh, you've seen her. God, there oughta be a law!"; Harry replied:
"There is" [Note:
There were other undisclosed reasons to remove Harry from the property]
- at the same time, Harry also had to deflect the advances of the tempting and seductive
Delly - revealed in a conversation with Paula, after he saw Delly
wearing one of his shirts and preparing to shower in his room:
(Paula: "Did she offer you the key to the city?" Harry: "Well, no.
It was more like a sightseeing tour" Paula: "How do you
resist?" Harry: "Oh, I just think good, clean thoughts, like Thanksgiving,
George Washington's teeth")
- the same evening with a bottle of bourbon, Harry
was playing chess with himself, re-enacting a famous game from
1922, when Paula asked pointedly: "You beating yourself?"; she
admitted that she knew how to play: ("I know the moves"); he explained
the famous game: "Black had a mate, didn't see it. Queen sacrifice.
And three little knight moves. Check. Check. Check." He then gave
his reaction to the defeat: "...he didn't see it. He played something
else, and he lost. Must have regretted it every day of his life.
I know I would have. Matter of fact, I do regret it,
and I wasn't even born yet" [Note: The game was between K. Emmrich (white) and Bruno Moritz (black),
played in Hamburg, Germany. Moritz could have won by sacrificing
his Queen followed by three knight moves, but didn't see it and
lost. Harry was confessing and foretelling how he had lost in life,
was often misdirected, and didn't notice the obvious.]
- at the dock the next day, Delly refused to return
to California with the PI: (Delly: "Are you kidding?...Well,
you can forget it. I'm not going back to that bitch!...She doesn't
want me. The money! I know Arlene and so does Tom. He hates her
as much as I do");
Delly rightly believed that Arlene's intentions to have her back
were only selfish and due to her trust fund
- during a night-time dive sequence from a glass-bottom boat (named "Point
of View"), Harry learned more about Paula's varied and "bleak"
background: "I taught school, I kept house. I waited tables. I did a little stripping,
a little hooking, and I trod a lot of water"; she wondered about
his profession: "Do you ask these questions because you wanna know the answer, or is
it just something you think a detective should do?"
- during the dive, the fully-nude Delly discovered
a crashed plane with the decomposed remains of the pilot; fish
were seen eating at the dead pilot's eyes; Delly didn't reveal
that the dead pilot was Marv Ellman, her own lover and one of
Arlene's ex-boyfriends; a marker was left at the crash site to alert
the Coast Guard
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Delly's Nighttime Nude Dive and Shocking
Discovery of Decomposing Skull of Pilot Marv Ellman in Submerged Plane
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- the crash was allegedly an accident, but more probably
the result of a larger plot - and specifically the actions of greasy
LA mechanic Quentin, Delly's former boyfriend, who had monkeyed with
the plane's mechanics to sabotage the plane, in order to get back
at Marv for stealing Delly away; it was kept from Harry that the
plane piloted by Marv held stolen smuggled goods from Mexico (the
film's MacGuffin); when Tom was notified, he blamed the crash on
the legend of the Devil's Triangle; the same night, Paula came to
Harry's room and seduced him - to keep him distracted (while Tom
went back to the sunken plane)
- after the traumatic discovery, Delly changed her mind
about leaving and begged Harry to take her back to LA to live with
her mother Arlene; he returned her and was paid off, but soon regretted
that he had delivered her back into a squabbling, family situation,
after Quentin in the driveway sarcastically criticized him: "You
brought another happy family together"
- Harry entered Marty's beach home and interrupted
his wife Ellen having sex in the back bedroom with Marty; Harry
struggled to reconcile his marriage by proposing that he would
give up his detective agency: ("I'm gonna give up the agency...
It's not for you. I'm doin' it for me"),
and later at home in bed with Ellen, Harry described how he had
finally tracked down his missing father in Baltimore, but then when
he had the chance, he just walked away: ("I just sat there for
a while and watched and then went away") - he had chosen to
become estranged, but now he didn't want to repeat the situation;
she asked for him to not be remote and return to her: "We've
taken a long time to get this far. I don't wanna pour it all away"
- their newfound rapprochement was interrupted by news
that Delly had suspiciously died in a car accident on location,
on an LA movie set where she was a stunt extra; Joey
Ziegler was driving the car and had survived, but was seriously injured
and required to wear a half-body cast on his right arm and side;
with Harry, Ziegler watched amateur 16 mm documentary footage shot
at the scene, showing mechanic Quentin tinkering
under the green 1940s Ford: ("We had some trouble under the
car. Muffler or something like that, and he went in and fixed it")
Harry with Injured Ziegler (with cast) Watching Video
Footage At the Time of the Crash
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Quentin During Setup of Scene, Tinkering Under the Car
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Ziegler Had Set Delly's Passenger Seat Belt
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Delly's Bloodied Face
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- the accident compelled Harry to return to the case;
he suspected foul play and important questions needed answers: Was the
accident orchestrated by Ziegler who had set Delly's safety belt? What
part did mechanic Quentin also play in the murder, if any? ("Could
he have futzed that car?"), and Was
Delly silenced because she knew too much? Or Was it because Delly's
trust would now transfer to Arlene?
- Harry returned to Arlene's house after Delly's death,
and was astonished by Arlene's drunken and indifferent reaction to
Delly's passing: ("I
think that Delly never had a chance with you as her mother. She
was on a downhill slide right from the start") - presumably
because she financially benefitted from Delly's death: ("So
I'm not grief-stricken. What does that make me?... Delly isn't the
only kid who ever had it rough. When I was her age, I was down
on my knees to half the men in this town. I'm sorry the poor
little bitch is dead. And when the time comes, I'll cry for her,
but you won't be around to see it, Mr. Smart-Ass-Moseby")
- while grilling Quentin at his place, Harry listened
as Quentin blamed Arlene since she was the only one with a clear
motive to murder Delly; he further revealed to Harry that the dead
pilot in the plane was Marv Ellman; Harry speculated that Delly didn't
reveal Marv's identity to him to protect Quentin from being charged;
Delly was silenced because she knew that the jealous Quentin had
rigged the plane to crash: ("She figured you did it. You futzed
the plane!"), but Quentin denied
the accusation that he had tampered with the plane, and with the
car that killed Delly: ("She thought I had it in for him. I
didn't....What would I wanna kill Delly for?"); Quentin fled
on a motorcycle
- Harry returned to Ziegler in his trailer to ask more
questions about Tom and Paula - about how the accident was never
reported as it should have: "They never reported the plane to
the Coast Guard. Why?"; Zielger admitted that Quentin
and Tom had known each other - for years, they had been associates
in the stunt business; that meant that Quentin had been working in
cahoots with Delly's stepfather Tom (and Paula), and was responsible
for the two accidents, including Ellman's plane and the auto-wreck;
Harry realized he had to return to Florida to pursue Quentin, and
told Ellen: "There's something wrong and I can figure it out"
- upon Harry's return to Florida, the
shocking ending culminated with the deaths of most of the key individuals: Quentin's
body was found floating in Tom Iverson's dolphin pen swim area --
Tom had presumably murdered him; Harry found Tom at the dock on-board
the glass-bottom boat and confronted him with a gun and asked about
Quentin's murder; Tom admitted killing Quentin when
he threatened to go to the Coast Guard to tell them about the unreported
plane crash; the two engaged in a vicious fist-fight - ending with
Iverson charging at Harry head-first and knocking himself out on
a wooden piling (was he dead or not?)
- with Paula, Harry insisted on knowing what was going
on: "What the hell is going on? I wanna know"; she
admitted the smuggling plan to Harry; she confessed that they were
working in cahoots with pilot Marv Ellman to smuggle a pre-Colombian
art sculpture into Florida piece by piece, over a period of months;
Marv's plane had crashed with a major statue from Mexico, worth half
a million dollars, that was still underwater
- Harry demanded to return to the plane crash site in
the glass bottom boat: ("Point of View") to dive for the
smuggled object, and Paula was incredulous: "You mean you're
gonna solve the case and find the booty?"
- as the sun rose on their trip to the dive-crash site,
Paula and Harry set off to Marv's earlier sunken
plane to again try and collect the large stolen Mayan statue inside
the plane; Paula explained how she had naturally joined the criminal
activities with Iverson and Marv: ("I got into it because I
got involved with Tom"); Harry demanded confirmation from her
that Tom had immediately returned to the crash site when she distracted
him: ("That
marker you left, that was for him, not the Coast Guard, so he could
move your piece of junk away from the plane. And you kept me out
of the way")
- she devastated Harry by admitting that she had seductively
kept him away with love-making the night of the plane's discovery,
while Tom stealthily returned to the plane to unsuccessfully retrieve
the Yucatan relic; she tried to reassure Harry: "What does it
matter, Harry?...You're asking the wrong questions. Why don't you
just be content you've solved the case," but he was still unsatisfied:
("I
didn't solve anything. I just fell in on top of it")
Harry Strafed by Tom's Yellow Seaplane - Piloted by Ziegler
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Harry Shot in the Leg
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- as Paula was underwater, Harry was attacked
by Tom's yellow Piper Cub seaplane; with machine-gun fire fired
by the pilot; Harry was hit in the leg as
Paula emerged on the surface from scuba diving; Joey deliberately
landed the plane on the water and steered it and its pontoon
to deliberately hit and kill Paula; the pontoon also struck
the inflatable raft carrying the ancient statue and broke off
- the disabled plane (with its missing undercarriage)
crashed into Tom's boat where Harry was located; through the "point
of view" of the glass-bottom boat AND the seaplane's window, Harry
observed Ziegler caught in the plane's cockpit as he drowned in the sinking plane; Ziegler
was still wearing the cast after the car accident that had killed Delly
- the final image was of dying and bruised Harry, unable
to stand up on Iverson's stranded glass bottom boat;
he could only reach the throttle with a small fishing net, and ended
up circling aimlessly about the Gulf of Mexico wreckage as he bled
out and pounded his fist into a cushion: "I missed it"
Crash of Ziegler's Plane into Iverson's Boat
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Harry Watched Helplessly as Ziegler Drowned in Plane's Cockpit
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Harry's Own Uncertain Fate - Circling in a Boat Endlessly
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Private Detective Harry Moseby (Gene Hackman)
Harry with Wife Ellen Moseby (Susan Clark)
Harry Moseby's Client: Divorcee Arlene Iverson (Janet
Ward) - Ex-Actress Mother of Delly
Harry Admiring Nick's Valuable Mexican Statues in His Office
Harry's Unfaithful Wife Ellen Moseby
Discovered with Marty Heller (Harris Yulin) Outside Movie Theatre
Marty Confronted by Harry at His Beachhouse
Harry Confronting His Wife Ellen About Her Affair with
Marty
Arlene - Upset That Delly Was Sleeping with Both Marv and Tom Iverson
Tom Iverson's Sexy Hippie Mistress Paula (Jennifer Warren)
Delilah "Delly" Grastner (Melanie Griffith) First Seen Behind
Clothesline
Arlene's Ex Second Husband Tom Iverson (John Crawford)
- Delly's Stepfather
Harry's Musings on A Famous Chess Game Defeat
Delly: "I'm not going back to that bitch!"
Uninhibited and "Liberated" Delly - Arlene's
Daughter: "I'm not going back...!!"
Paula's Background Explained During Boat-Dive Trip
Paula Distracting Harry With Sex While Tom Went Back to the Sunken
Plane
Harry's Story About Locating His Lost Father to Ellen
Delly's Mother Arlene: "So I'm not grief-stricken"
Quentin's Dead Body Floating in the Dolphin Pen Area
Harry Questioning Tom Iverson, Who Admitted Killing Quentin
Paula Preparing to Dive at the Plane Crash Site
Harry Awaiting Paula's Return
The Mayan Artifact-Statue Retrieved From Downed
Plane by Paula
Death of Paula - Deliberately Hit in Open Water by
Plane Piloted by Ziegler
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