Plot Synopsis (continued)
After
leaving the police department, Holly visits a late-night, very empty
sleazy cabaret bar, where he buys a drink while watching the floor
show of a lone stripper with pasties twirling around. Female hostesses
at the bar watch him suspiciously. He purchases two huge bunches
of chrysanthemums from an old flower peddler as he leaves.
The scene
dissolves to Anna's face as she hears a knock on her apartment door.
In the shadows, she mournfully wears Harry's striped pajamas in bed
- monogrammed with HL on the left front. She opens her flat's door
to a drunken Holly still holding the bunches of flowers. The worldly
actress thought he was going to keep away, but he wants to "say
goodbye"
before he suddenly pushes off to return home:
Anna: Why?
Holly: (sadly resigned) That's what you've always wanted, all of
you.
Holly dangles the flower strings to tease Anna's cat,
who jumps off the bed unsociably. Anna explains how the cat was only
responsive and purred for Harry: "He only liked Harry." [Note:
The repeated use of the independent-minded cat is a symbol of the
sinister Harry Lime - the film's little-seen character. Also note
that in this extended scene, three different cats were used.] He
offers her the flowers, and she notices the bandage on a finger
of his right hand. Both of them now know from Major Calloway "about
Harry" and
his sordid blackmarketing activities. Then,
Holly calls out to Anna's cat, but the cat ignores him and jumps
out the window.
In
a memorable series of images, the camera moves through the plants
at the window sill and out to a view of the darkened, wet street.
A man looks up at the window and then ducks into a darkened, night-shrouded
doorway. Anna's cat has run from her apartment to the cobble-stoned
street, and into the shadows of the darkened gateway to circle and
snuggle next to the person's shoe in the doorway. The cat's nestling
against the shoe tips off the presence of a person there. The cat
meows, purrs, and strokes the shoe - prompting the thought that the
cat might have located Harry.
Although she can't bear criticism of Harry, Anna now
believes, as Holly does, that Harry is "better dead. I knew
he was mixed up, but not like that." However, she hasn't changed
her feelings or opinion of her lover Harry: ("A person doesn't change
because you find out more"). Holly is bitter that his good friend
was engaged in a deadly racket, and has also decided to give up his
intense search for who killed Harry Lime and why:
Holly: I knew him for twenty years, at least I thought
I knew him. Suppose he was laughing at fools like us all the time?
Anna: He liked to laugh.
Holly: Seventy pounds a tube. He wanted me to write for his great
medical charity...Perhaps I could have raised the price to eighty
pounds for him.
Anna: Oh please, for heaven's sakes, stop making him in your image.
Harry was real. He wasn't just your friend and my lover, he was Harry.
Holly: Well, don't preach wisdom to me. You talk about him as if
he had occasional bad manners. Oh, I don't know, I'm just a hack
writer who drinks too much and falls in love with girls - you.
Anna: Me?
Holly: Don't be such a fool, of course.
Anna: If you'd rung me up and asked me were you fair or dark or had
a moustache, I wouldn't have known.
Holly: I am leaving Vienna. I don't care whether Harry was murdered
by Kurtz or Popescu or the third man. Whoever killed him, there was
some sort of justice. Maybe I would have killed him myself.
Anna: A person doesn't change because you find out more.
By now, the doltish hack writer has hopelessly fallen
in unrequited love with the melancholy Anna, Harry's mistress, but
she is unresponsive to his clumsy advances and the feelings she has
for him are not mutual. She laughs once at him, but explains: "There
isn't enough for two laughs." He
comes close to her and offers himself to her, as teardrops well up
in Anna's eyes:
I'd make comic faces and stand on my head and grin
at you between my legs and learn all sorts of jokes. Wouldn't stand
a chance would I? Hmmm? Well, you did tell me I ought to
find myself a girl.
But Anna doesn't respond to his advances.
The scene
dissolves to the street outside Anna's apartment, where Holly walks
away. He becomes aware of a figure in a doorway on the opposite side
of the street when he hears Anna's cat meow loudly at the feet of
the silent, motionless figure obscured there. The figure's big shoes
are illuminated - is it one of Calloway's men, Popescu, Kurtz, another
thug or Intelligence agent? Holly abusively, drunkenly, and defiantly
shouts out to the figure:
What kind of a spy do you think you are, satchel-foot?
What are you tailing me for? Cat got your tongue? Come on out.
(He gestures.) Come out, come out, whoever you are. Step out in
the light. Let's have a look at ya. (The cat licks its paw.) Who's
your boss?
A light from an irritated neighbor's upstairs window
briefly illuminates the figure's face - shining straight across the
street. Holly momentarily and suddenly sees Harry - the 'third man'
himself. [Harry's dramatic, introductory entrance occurs over one
hour into the film's story. The third man, whom Holly suspected was
responsible for Harry's "accidental" death, is found to
be both a fictional murderer and the actual murderer of thousands
of penicillin-dependent war victims.]
Amazed to see Harry still alive, Holly is startled
by the flirtatious, mocking sight of the smiling, smug face of his
friend staring back at him, with a raised eyebrow.
[Harry stage-managed
his own death to throw the authorities off his trail so he could
continue his illicit black market trade/racketeering in the shadowy
narrow streets of the dislocated society. Holly's discovery, finding
Lime cast in a light, demonstrates he has been more successful in
finding out about Harry's 'demise' than his goal of impressing Anna.]
The light
is extinguished, and before Holly can reach his friend, a car approaches
and blocks his path by coming between them. The figure makes off
and vanishes to the sound of retreating footsteps in the dark as
Holly finds the doorway empty by the time he crosses the street.
Holly immediately informs Calloway and the Sergeant
who are brought to the scene where Harry had vanished in the empty
moonlit square. Assuming that Holly is drunk, Calloway realizes that
Holly is telling the truth when he finds that the kiosk or booth
in the middle of the square has a door that leads down a dark curling
staircase into the vast underground network of Viennese sewers -
a strange world into which Harry vanished. They move through the
passageways and next to a cavernous waterfall fed by rushing streams
- the Sergeant identifies their location:
"It's the main sewer. Runs right into the blue Danube. Smells
sweet, doesn't it?" The scene dissolves as Calloway mutters: "We
should have dug deeper than a grave."
That night in the cemetery, Lime's coffin is disinterred,
the lid is removed, and the body is found to be that of police informant
Joseph Harbin, the medical orderly who had acted as a police informer
against Lime: "He used to work for Harry Lime." Calloway
tells Holly: "He's the man I told you was missing. Next time,
we'll have a fool-proof coffin."
Anna is brought from her apartment (where she is still
crying in bed wearing Harry's PJs) to the International
Police Headquarters by Russian officers in the middle of the night.
She assumes she is being charged for having a forged passport. As
she is brought up the steps of the police headquarters, Holly shouts
out to her that he's seen Lime: "I've
just seen a dead man walking. I saw him buried, but now I've seen
him alive." In Calloway's office, she is visibly stunned and
seeks confirmation that Harry is still alive. She is asked when she
last saw Lime and to divulge information regarding Lime and his whereabouts
in exchange for her own freedom from deportation to the Russians
("If you help me, I am prepared to help you"). Her rejoicing over
the news about Harry is suddenly gone: "Poor
Harry. I wish he was dead. He would be safe from all of you
then."
Confronting Kurtz and Dr. Winkel, the other two at
the scene of Harry's accident, Holly tells them to arrange a meeting
between himself and the elusive Harry at an almost-deserted, dejected,
once-bustling Prater amusement park in Vienna, next to the big Ferris
Wheel (a place of childish self-indulgence). And then he sarcastically
taunts them: "Or do ghosts only rise by night, Dr. Winkel? Do
you got an opinion on that?"
The next, most famous legendary scene in the film is
the gripping confrontation between the suave, unrepentant and evil
Harry and Holly high above the Russian sector on a ferris wheel.
[This is the first of two times when Holly comes face-to-face with
Harry in symbolic settings.] In the light of the day, Lime emerges
and greets Holly with a bemused look: "Hello, old man, how are
you?"
They both ride high above the ground on the ferris wheel that is still
operating in the midst of the dark city - it is the last ride
of Holly's symbolic childhood.
As they rise higher in the car which
they have all to themselves, Holly explains how he has already informed
the police and Anna about Harry's charade and disappearance. Harry
shows how uncaring he can be about Anna's predicament after betraying
her to the Russians: "What
can I do, old man? I'm dead, aren't I?" Harry explains how he
doesn't wish to be a hero:
What did you want me to do? Be reasonable. You didn't
expect me to give myself up...'It's a far, far better thing that
I do.' The old limelight. The fall of the curtain. Oh, Holly, you
and I aren't heroes. The world doesn't make any heroes outside
of your stories.
Harry claims he only has immunity in the neutral
Russian zone of Vienna. Harry also admits that he was the one who
informed the Russian police about Anna’s forged passport as
payment for them letting him hide out in the Russian sector. Holly
confronts Harry with disgust for betraying Anna: "So that's how they
found out about Anna. You told them, didn't you?" Lime
expresses his continuing concern that Holly is speaking to the police:
"Old man, you never should have gone to the police, you know.
You ought to leave this thing alone."
Knowing
of his cynical dealings on the black market, Holly
mentions Harry's involvement in racketeering and corruption
(the light side exposing the dark side). Holly asks if he has ever
seen any of his victims - children who populate the hospital wards
[in a city and amusement park desolate of playful, happy children].
With little remorse, Harry looks contemptuously down from the ferris
wheel at the scuttling mortals below, cheerfully calling the people
unrecognizable "dots" from
the height of the ride:
Harry: Victims? Don't be melodramatic. (He opens
the door to the car.) Look down there. Would you really feel any
pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered
you 20,000 pounds for every dot that stopped, would you really,
old man, tell me to keep my money? Or would you calculate how many
dots you could afford to spare? Free of income tax, old man, free
of income tax. The only way you can save money nowadays.
Holly: A lot of good your money will do you in jail.
Harry: That jail's in another zone. There's no proof against me, besides
you.
They reach the very top of their ride on a child-oriented
attraction, and for a few ominous moments [in a very different kind
of amusement-thrill ride], Harry threatens Holly. He contemplates
executing his uncooperative friend and making him one of the "dots" below
because he is the only one with living proof of his existence: "There's
no proof against me, besides you."
Harry suggests that he could easily shoot him - a bullet hole in a
corpse that had fallen from so high up in the wheel would not be found.
Holly wraps his arm around a door frame and clutches it for protection:
Holly (looking out the window): I should be pretty
easy to get rid of.
Harry: Pretty easy.
Holly: I wouldn't be too sure.
Harry: I carry a gun. You don't think they'd look for a bullet wound
after you hit that ground.
But Holly counters the threat by mentioning that the
police are already on Harry's trail - they have dug up the corpse
and discovered it wasn't him but Harbin. Harry is startled that the
body of his cohort has been disinterred and his voice suddenly drops.
As the car journeys downward, Lime closes the door, discards
his deadly plan to dispose of Holly by tossing him out of the car,
and then compares himself to governments:
Harry: Nobody thinks in terms of human beings. Governments
don't. Why should we? They talk about the people and the proletariat,
I talk about the suckers and the mugs - it's the same thing. They
have their five-year plans, so have I.
Holly: You used to believe in God.
Harry: Oh, I still do believe in God, old man. I believe in
God and Mercy and all that. But the dead are happier dead. They don't
miss much here, poor devils. (He traces Anna's name and the image
of a heart with an arrow through it on the window of the car.) What
do you believe in? Oh if you ever get Anna out of this mess, be kind
to her. You'll find she's worth it.
When they reach the end of their ride and exit the
ferris wheel on the ground, Lime offers his boyhood pal a partnership
in his illicit business:
Holly, I'd like to cut you in, old man. There's nobody
left in Vienna I can really trust, and we've always done everything
together. When you make up your mind, send me a message - I'll
meet you any place, any time, and when we do meet old man, it's
you I want to see, not the police. Remember that, won't ya? Don't
be so gloomy. After all, it's not that awful. Remember what the
fellow says:
Then, he smugly delivers his famous, perverse monologue
about Switzerland and cuckoo clocks [penned by Welles himself]. With
murderous fluency, he contemplates the greater productivity of a
warring, strife-ridden culture and civilization that is plagued by
warfare and violence, versus a peaceful one. The corruptible Lime
cynically justifies his black market criminal activities by recognizing
that despite appearances, good and evil (black and white, peace and
war, up and down, etc.) are complementary concepts. [Indeed, black
marketing becomes a real necessity in an economy that faces severe
shortages.] The monstrous Lime, with a charming and beguiling smile,
equates the corrupt political intrigues of the Borgias to the artistic
triumphs of Michelangelo and da Vinci:
In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias,
they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed - but they produced
Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland
they had brotherly love. And in 500 years of democracy and peace,
and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. So long, Holly.
After their dark ride together, Holly is still reluctant
to set up Lime for an arrest by Calloway: "Don't ask me to tie
the rope." But he does decide to set up Lime (by agreeing to
a meeting with him at a little cafe in the International Zone) in
exchange for Anna's freedom from deportation to the Russians (because
of her forged passport) after Calloway asks him to name his "price."
Anna is brought by Sgt. Paine
to the Vienna Railway station, where she boards a train to
take her away, to be saved from the Russian authorities. Before
leaving, she sees Holly in the track-side cafe, and learns
from him that he is betraying their mutual friend to the police
in return for helping to get her out of Vienna safely - she
is disgusted and furious. She remains faithful to Harry no matter
what she knows about him, even if her own freedom is at stake.
Out of ignorance and her dedication to her role as the doomed man's
mistress, Anna doesn't want to betray or sell out Harry, because
she loves him for what he is:
Anna: What are you doing here?
Holly: l wanted to see you off....
Anna: How did you know l'd be here?
Holly: Why, l heard something about it at police headquarters.
Anna: Have you been seeing Major Calloway again?... What's on your
mind? Why did you hide here?...What's going to happen? Where is Harry?
Holly: He's safe in the Russian zone....
Anna: Did you tell Calloway about me to Harry?....Why are you lying?
Holly: We're getting you out of here, aren't we?
Anna: I'm not going!
Holly: Anna, don't you recognize a good turn when
you see one?
Anna: You have seen Calloway! What are you two doing?
Holly: Well, they, they asked me to help take him. I'm helping.
Anna: Poor Harry.
Holly: Poor Harry? Poor Harry wouldn't even lift a finger to help
you.
Anna: Oh, you've got your precious honesty and don't want anything
else.
Holly: You still want him.
Anna: I don't want him anymore. I don't want to see him, hear him.
But he's still a part of me, that's a fact. I couldn't do a thing
to harm him. (The train whistle sounds as the train leaves the station.)
Holly: Oh Anna, why do we always have to quarrel?
Anna: If you want to sell your services, I'm not willing to be the
price. I loved him. You loved him. What good have we done him? For
love! Look at yourself. They have a name for faces like that?
Anna has angrily ripped up her
ticket and new passport and allows the train to depart with her luggage and belongings.
Back at Calloway's headquarters, Holly asks for the
first plane out of Vienna that night and returns Anna's ripped up
passport. Calloway deduces: "So
she talked you out of it." Holly returns
Anna's ripped up passport, and asks Calloway and Paine to take him
to the airport, but on the way, Calloway detours and takes the unsuspecting
writer on a tour of a children's hospital, where he sees the victims
of pusher Lime's penicillin racket - there are many cases of sick,
dying children who were treated for meningitis with diluted, faulty
penicillin - a discarded teddy bear signifies another result of Lime's
destructiveness.
On their ride away from the hospital, Holly admits
sullenly: "All right, Calloway, you win...I'll be your dumb decoy duck." At
last, Holly (who had always been Lime's friend for what he imagined
him to be) sees the dark side of his friend and is willing to betray
him - his American innocence, illusions, and blindness to Harry's
crime are dying. Holly arranges to meet Lime with police staked out
to entrap and arrest the black marketeer.
At Cafe Marc Aurel, Holly sits drinking coffee while
waiting for his friend to arrive. The streets surrounding the cafe
are filled with police and guards, surreptitiously prepared to capture
Harry. The inconspicuous presence of the police
officers is betrayed by an old, nighttime balloon-seller who pesters
them for a sale of a child's balloon (the balloon-seller casts a gigantic
shadow on a wall's surface when he first wanders onto the scene). Harry
appears next to a crumbling chimney stack on a rooftop where he looks
down at the deserted square and cafe window (where Holly waits for
him).
Anna joins Holly at the Cafe (after learning about
his location from Kurtz as he is being arrested). Holly is upset
when Anna appears in the Cafe:
Holly: You should have gone. How did you know I was
here anyway?
Anna: From Kurtz. They've just been arrested. But Harry won't come.
He's not a fool...Don't tell me you are doing all this for nothing.
What's your price this time?
Holly: No price, Anna.
Anna: Honest, sensible, sober, harmless Holly
Martins. Holly - what a silly name. You must feel very proud to
be a police informer.
As she speaks, Harry has quietly entered the back
door of the Cafe, and after hearing the word informer, he frowns.
Anna turns and sees Harry, and warns the fugitive to flee: "Harry,
get away. The police are outside. Quick." Harry has drawn his
gun and signals Anna to move out of the line of fire between himself
and Holly. But the Sergeant enters the front door of the Cafe before
he can shoot and scares Harry out the back door.
In the exciting breathtaking closing, there is a thrilling,
extraordinary chase sequence, first through rubble and bomb-sites
and down an open manhole, and then into the subterranean dark sewers
and tunnels under Vienna that still link all the occupied sections
of the city. The climactic scenes are sharply edited for greater
impact. The sewers are the dark, unobserved haunt of Lime, symbolically
under the city [symbolic of Hades itself], where his 'underground'
evil-doings have permeated through the borders of the city's zones.
In the manhunt by an international police force composed of police
from all four nations, they climb down into every available manhole.
The filming captures the dark shadows on the ancient tunnel walls
and the cobblestone surfaces. After a long pursuit sequence, Harry
shoots the Sergeant dead with the gunshots echoing off the tunnel
walls. Lime is shot and wounded by Calloway as he scrambles away.
As Harry, the fugitive, makes another break to escape,
he is caught and cornered like a rat in the bowels of Vienna. He
crawls up a circular iron stairway to reach a grill-covered man-hole
- his fingers clutch, curl, strain and poke through the sewer grill
grating (filmed from the street level) as he desperately tries to
push it up, but he has been weakened by his wound and is unable to
move the solidly-jammed grill cover. [Note that in the previous scene,
Harry was holding a gun in one hand - and now impossibly places all
ten fingers through the grating. The fingers reaching for escape
are those of director Carol Reed.] Holly notices Harry at the top
of the iron stairway beneath the grating, and finds his old friend
struggling there, in great pain and fear. Calloway shouts out from
a distance: "Martins, don't take any chances, if you see him,
shoot."
Harry looks down and sees Holly looking up at him.
Harry wordlessly appeals to his friend, making a wink-like gesture
or nod, to shoot. Ironically, it has been left to Holly to kill his
oldest friend, a man with a name similar to his (often confused by
Anna herself). A gunshot sounds offscreen and Calloway halts. Holly's
silhouette appears at the end of the smoky tunnel - he has pulled
the trigger and shot his friend dead - an ending typical of a Western
tale. He has treacherously murdered and betrayed his oldest, closest
and trusted friend.
[As he told Popescu in the lecture question session,
Holly's next novel - "The Third Man," will be born out
of his experiences with evil, corruption, and the shadowy dark world.
His innocence changed forever, his next novel will be written with
social responsibility - unlike any of the pulp, children's Western
or "cheap novelettes" he has written before. Like Michelangelo
and da Vinci and others, Holly will produce more than just another
'cuckoo clock' story of the Wild West. Just as Harry had said, a
cultural work of art could be brought forth from darkness. The completed
film, in retrospect, is his new work of art - Holly has narrated
his own story - and next novel, The Third Man.]
The story comes full circle - Lime is buried in the
cemetery and Martins is driven off from the cemetery by Calloway
for a second time. Major Calloway, who plans to get Holly to his
afternoon plane out of Vienna after the ceremony, attempts to talk
Holly out of saying goodbye to Anna. She is ahead of them and walking
from the cemetery down the road, lined with bare autumn trees.
Holly (while looking ahead down the road at Anna's
receding figure): Calloway, can't you do something about Anna?
Calloway: I'll do what I can - if she'll let me. (They pass Anna
on the road.)
Holly: Wait a minute. Let me out.
Calloway: Well, there's not much time.
Holly: One can't just leave. Please. (Calloway stops the jeep and
Holly gets out.)
Calloway: Be sensible, Martins.
Holly: Haven't got a sensible name, Calloway.
In the famous closing sequence, a bleak and uncompromising,
unromantic ending (bookending the opening scene at the cemetery),
Holly leans on a cart and waits on one side of the tree-lined cemetery
road for Lime's loyal, former lover Anna as she leaves Harry's funeral
on foot. Off in the distance, she is walking and approaching toward
him down the empty avenue, first a dot, then a shadow, and then a
full figure - in an extremely long-held stationary shot. As he seeks
in vain for any response from her, she stoically ignores him and
continues by, passing him without paying any attention - without
a pause, a look, a word, or a gesture. Her defiant response is a
simple judgment upon his betrayal of a friend, similar to the attitude
of Harry's unsociable cat. Holly follows her with his eyes, but she
stares impassively ahead, walking out of his life and abandoning
him. He lights a cigarette as the film fades out to black. |