The Story (continued)
After
demonstrating his competence as a private detective, Marlowe has
Vivian take Carmen home. Brody "put the B" (blackmailed)
on Mrs. Rutledge and not on General Sternwood because the "old
man" had already been pressed for $5,000 in an earlier blackmail
scheme. Brody assumed Mrs. Rutledge wouldn't tell her father about
new ransom demands because of her own dirty dealings with Eddie Mars:
Well, I tapped the old man once six or seven months
ago. I figured it might not work twice...Well, she gets around.
I figured she might have a thing or two she wouldn't want the old
man to know.
Marlowe asks Agnes about her bruised arm - she is beginning
to dislike Brody and crassly calls him a "half-smart guy" -
the most recent loser she has happened to associate herself with
(using a metaphoric, horse-racing analogy that is frequently evoked
in the film):
Agnes: That's what I always draw. Never once a man
who's smart all the way around the course. Never once.
Marlowe: Did I hurt you much, sugar?
Agnes: You and every other man I've ever met.
Marlowe persists - he asks Brody where he got the picture(s)
or film taken the night of Geiger's murder:
Brody: (sarcastically) It fell out of somebody's
pocket.
Marlowe: You got an alibi for last night?
Brody: I was right here, with Agnes.
Agnes: Huh!
Marlowe: That's a great witness. OK Joe, you can only die once even
for a couple of murders.
Brody: Wait a minute. What do you mean - a couple of murders? [Geiger's
and Taylor's murders.]
Marlowe: I mean two murders. Where were you about seven thirty last
night?...
Brody: All right, I was watching Geiger's place...to get something
on him.
Marlowe: Try looking at me while you're talking.
Brody: Well, it was raining hard, and I was sitting in my car. There
was a car parked out front [Geiger's car] and another part way down
the hill [Carmen's car]. I was in back.
Marlowe: Who else was back there?
Brody: Nobody. There was a big Packard [Owen Taylor's car] near where
I was so I took a look at it and it was registered to the Sternwoods...Well,
then nothing happens so I got tired of waiting and I went home.
Marlowe: Hmm, hmm. You know where that Packard is now?...It's in
the Sheriff's garage. It was fished out of twelve feet of water off
Lido pier early this morning. There was a dead man in it. He'd been
sapped [knocked out with a blackjack]. The car was pointed toward
the end of the pier and the hand throttle pulled out.
Brody: Well, you can't pin that on me.
Marlowe: I could make an awful good try...You see, the dead man was
Owen Taylor, Sternwood's chauffeur. He went up to Geiger's place
'cause he was sweet on Carmen. He didn't like the kind of games Geiger
was playing. He got himself in the back way with a jimmy and he had
a gun. And the gun went off as guns will, and Geiger fell down dead.
Owen ran away taking the film with him. You went after him and got
it - how else would you get it?
Brody: All right, you're right. I heard the shots and saw him run
down the back steps and into the Packard and away. I followed him.
He turned west on Sunset and beyond Beverly he, uh, skidded off the
road, and uh, came to a stop. So I came up and played copper. He
had a gun, he was rattled, so I sapped him down. I figured the film
might be worth something so I took it. That's the last I saw of him.
Marlowe: So you left an unconscious man in a car way out near Beverly
someplace and you want me to believe that somebody conveniently came
along, ran that car all the way down to the ocean, pushed it off
the pier, and then came back and hid Geiger's body.
Brody: Well I didn't.
Marlowe: Somebody did. You wanted time to take over.
Brody: You can't prove I did it.
Marlowe: I don't particularly want to. All I want to do is find out
what Geiger had on the Sternwoods.
Brody: Well, uh, maybe you and I can make a little deal?
[Note: Now, Marlowe has finally forced Brody to admit
that he was watching the back of Geiger's place in a station wagon
the night of Geiger's death, pursued Taylor's Packard after the
gunshots, and acquired the film when he caught up to him. But Marlowe
is unable to get Brody to admit that he throttled and killed Taylor
with a blackjack, and then ran Taylor's car off the Lido pier to
drown him.]
Before anything more is revealed, another murder is
committed.
(3)
Joe Brody is killed by an unknown gunman at his door when he
answers it.
[Note: Brody's killer is Geiger's homosexual
boyfriend/lover, valet, and "shadow"
henchman Carol Lundgren, who came to believe and suspect that Brody
- who had left Geiger's place in a great hurry, was Geiger's murderer.
Of course, Lundgren's assumption was incorrect. Taylor
had killed Geiger.]
(It was highly likely that Lundgren had joined
Geiger in his home after helping him to his car.) Another possible
reason for Brody's killing is that Mars, who had by now learned of
Brody's take-over ambitions, wanted to squash the competition and
had hired Lundgren to assassinate him.]
Marlowe pursues Brody's killer in his car, captures
the alleged killer Carol Lundgren on the street, and disarms him
of his murder weapon:
Oh, and by the way, Carol, you shot the wrong guy.
Brody didn't kill Geiger.
The detective forces Lundgren to drive
to Geiger's house.
Marlowe: You got a key. Let's go in.
Lundgren: Who said I got a key?
After a brief scuffle, Marlowe knocks Lundgren out,
removes his house key from his jacket, opens Geiger's front door,
and drags the killer inside. After tying him up, Marlowe finds Geiger's
body ceremoniously laid out on his bed in the back bedroom. By phone,
Marlowe contacts police detective Bernie Ohls and subsequently has
Lundgren arrested and turned over to the authorities:
Marlowe: I've got some cold meats set out that might
interest ya.
Ohls: What are ya talkin' about?
Marlowe: Did you boys find a gun on Owen Taylor when they fished
him out of the drink last night?...If they did, it had three empty
shells in it...You come up to 7244 Laverne Terrace off Laurel Canyon
Road and I'll show you where the slugs went.
The police charge Lundgren with the murder of Joe
Brody. At this point in the film, the case appears closed. The
two blackmailers, Geiger and Brody are dead. Geiger's actual murderer,
Owen Taylor, who wished to save Carmen, is also dead. And Brody's
killer (Geiger's
"shadow" or boyfriend - Carol Lundgren) is in jail. And Carmen
has been saved further humiliation by being spared from any more publicity.
The next afternoon, Vivian, wearing a shiny, slick
jacket, enters a crowded bar-restaurant while the piano bar plays: "I
Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan." She meets Marlowe at the
bar, and they are seated at a table where they order scotches. As
a prologue to their sultry chat, they start up again:
Marlowe: How did you happen to pick out this place?
Vivian: Maybe I wanted to hold your hand.
Marlowe: Oh, that can be arranged.
She tries to pay him off with a check for $500 dollars
for a job well done (he "managed to keep the Sternwoods out
of it"). She attempts to take him off the case - but Marlowe
doesn't consider "the case closed."
They engage in a famous, slyly flirtatious, sexy horse-race
conversation. At one point, she rates him as a potential lover, using
a horse analogy to talk in a veiled way about her feelings toward
men and sexual intercourse. The dialogue is a classic of sharp-edged
wit, double entendre and sexual innuendo, communicating their real
feelings for each other in race-track and poker-game terms with outrageously-suggestive
and metaphorical language:
Vivian: Tell me: What do you usually do when you're
not working?
Marlowe: Oh, play the horses, fool around.
Vivian: No women?
Marlowe: I'm generally working on something, most of the time.
Vivian: Could that be stretched to include me?
Marlowe: Well I like you. I've told you that before.
Vivian: I like hearing you say it. But you didn't do much about it.
Marlowe: Well, neither did you.
Vivian: Well, speaking of horses, I like to play them myself. But
I like to see them work out a little first, see if they're front-runners
or come from behind, find out what their whole card is. What makes
them run.
Marlowe: Find out mine?
Vivian: I think so.
Marlowe: Go ahead.
Vivian: I'd say you don't like to be rated. You like to get out in
front, open up a lead, take a little breather in the backstretch,
and then come home free.
Marlowe: You don't like to be rated yourself.
Vivian: I haven't met anyone yet that can do it. Any suggestions?
Marlowe: Well, I can't tell till I've seen you over a distance of
ground. You've got a touch of class, but, uh...I don't know how -
how far you can go.
Vivian: A lot depends on who's in the saddle. Go ahead Marlowe, I
like the way you work. In case you don't know it, you're doing all
right.
Marlowe: There's one thing I can't figure out.
Vivian: What makes me run?
Marlowe: Uh-huh.
Vivian: I'll give you a little hint. Sugar won't work. It's been
tried.
Marlowe is still interested in the connection between
Eddie Mars (Geiger's landlord) and the Sternwoods. He wonders why
the case is being closed prematurely, and he is being 'sugar-ed'
off:
What did you try it on me for? Who told you to sugar
me off this case? Was it Eddie Mars? All right, don't answer me,
but somebody put you up to it and it wasn't your father. He didn't
tell you to pay me off, did he?
Vivian admits that she used her own judgment to pay
him off. The investigator is suspicious of Eddie Mars and the spreading
web of corruption. Knowing that she is in collusion with Mars, Marlowe
asks the openly nervous and shaking Vivian about her "hole-card":
Marlowe: What's Eddie Mars got to do with this case?
Vivian: Nothing. He runs a gambling house. I play horses. I play
the wheel.
Marlowe: Playing something else too...Never mind talking. Let me
do it. Do you know it was Eddie Mars' blonde wife Sean Regan was
supposed to run off with?
Vivian: Who doesn't?
Marlowe: Did you know he [Mars] owned the house Geiger operated in
and he was mixed up in that racket too?
Vivian: No, I don't believe it.
Marlowe: Then why does it bother you so much? What's Eddie Mars got
on you? Oh come now, angel, stop shaking. I don't want to hurt you.
I'm trying to help ya. Well, you'd better run along, 'cause you made
a deal and you're gonna stick to it, right or wrong. We'll take up
the question of you and I when the race is over.
Marlowe ignores Vivian's earlier suggestion to drop
the case, and is unwilling to be bought (or 'sugared') off.
[Note: Vivian
is apprehensive that Marlowe will dig deeper and find another subversive
blackmail scheme involving her sister. Vivian has been protective
of Carmen's guilty secret - the murder of Sean Regan, the missing
chauffeur. The 'real' blackmailer that rich General Sternwood needs
to eliminate is not Geiger or Brody but racketeer Mars, who is behind
the blackmailing of both sisters - he knows that Carmen killed Regan
and is using that knowledge against Vivian.]
Marlowe phones Mars' casino to plan a visit to the
plush gaming club that evening and set up an appointment with the
racketeer. Upon his arrival, one of the pert Playboy bunny-type
hatcheck girls (Lorraine Miller) catches his eye as she leaves to
notify Mars that Marlowe is there. He discovers that
Vivian is a frequent patron and gambler there. She is provocatively
singing a sexy sing-along-song with other patrons: "And Her
Tears Flowed Like Wine" in
one of the rooms off the lobby. After Vivian gives an approving up
and down look at his perky brunette escort from across the room,
Marlowe is taken to Mars' inner sanctum. There, he asks some direct
questions about Sean Regan's whereabouts. Mars wants Marlowe to believe
the whole blackmail issue has been put to rest with the deaths of
Geiger and Brody:
Marlowe: I want some information - about Sean Regan.
Mars: (His profile matches the dog picture on the wall.) I heard
you got that already from the Bureau of Missing Persons.
Marlowe: You get around.
Mars: My boys do.
Marlowe: Where is he?
Mars: I haven't any idea.
Marlowe: You didn't bump him off, did ya?
Mars: No. You think I did?
Marlowe: Well, that's what I came up here to ask ya.
Mars: You're kidding.
Marlowe: All right. I'm kidding. You didn't do it yourself and none
of your boys are good enough to do it. I used to know Regan.
Mars: I thought you told me you weren't looking for Regan?
Marlowe: I wasn't then. Maybe I just got curious. You see, I finally
got it through my thick skull that half the General's worries were
that Regan might be mixed up in this blackmail business.
Mars: Well, Sternwood can turn over now and go back to sleep. It
was Geiger's own racket. I did some inquiring myself today. When
Geiger and Brody got gunned, that washed the whole thing up - that,
I'm sure of it.
Marlowe: It's finished then.
To bolster up Vivian's false claim about "gambling
debts" to Mars rather than other seamier kinds of obligations,
the casino owner tells Marlowe that Vivian is a poor gambler who
accumulates IOU's:
Mars: She's not very popular around here. When she
loses, she doubles, and I wind up with a fistful of paper. If she
wins, she takes my money home with her.
Marlowe: You get it back next time, don't you?
Mars: She'll spend it somewhere else by then.
Marlowe: ...Keep her out of here then.
Marlowe questions why Mars isn't anxious about the
disappearance of his wife. Mars bristles over the sensitive subject
of the two missing persons - his own wife and Sean Regan:
Marlowe: You don't seem in much of a hurry to find
that wife of yours. From what I hear, she's not the kind of a wife
a guy wants to lose. Could it be you know where she is - and maybe
Regan too?
Mars: Better stop being curious, soldier. What's between me and my
wife is between us.
Marlowe: Sorry. Oh Eddie, uh, you don't have anybody watching me,
do ya? Tailing me in a gray Plymouth coupe maybe? [Harry Jones, a
down-at-the-heel hood who is not associated with Mars, is tailing
Marlowe.]
Mars: No, why should I?
Marlowe: Well I can't imagine unless you're worried about where I
am all the time.
Mars: I don't like you that well.
Mars uses the same alibi that Vivian has already given
Marlowe - that his pretty wife is missing and has presumably run
off with Regan.
[Note: Mrs. Mona Mars is located out of town, hiding
at Art Huck's garage/house with hit-man Canino. She disappeared
about the same time as Regan so that it would be surmised that
she had run away with the missing Sean Regan. That would take the
heat off any suspicion that Regan was dead or that Mars might have
killed him. Also, Mona's presumed relationship with Regan would
account for Eddie Mars' lackadaisical attitude toward finding her,
and his interest in Vivian instead.]
In the lobby, Marlowe is caught between the attentions
of the hatcheck girl and a cigarette girl (Shelby Payne) who step
over each other's lines to pass along a message to him: "Mrs.
Rutledge asked that you would look her up before you went." He
is helpfully directed to the center table roulette wheel to see how
Vivian has won "eight bets in a row." She luckily wins
a spin that beats $28,000 from Mars' casino - a public display that
demonstrates that she has a considerable amount of money. Marlowe
leaves the casino first - as he goes out to his car, he notices one
of Mars' thugs preparing to rob Vivian. When she leaves (wearing
a three-quarter length fur coat over her long dress) with her cash,
she is accosted outside the casino by one of Mars' men attempting
to steal his money back - an apparent robbery attempt to prove that
there is nothing between her and Mars. Disarming the thug with a
single punch, Marlowe foils the robbery and wryly adds:
Somebody's always giving me guns. You can turn around
now. I don't like people who play games. Tell your boss. (He knocks
the gunman out.)
Fearing a setup, Marlowe knows the entire act ('hijack')
was faked for his benefit - the failed strategy proves there is a
crooked association between Vivian and Mars:
Vivian: Well, I'm glad I asked you to take me home.
Marlowe: So am I....What are you trembling for? Don't tell me you
were scared because I won't believe that.
Vivian: I'm not used to being hijacked. Give me a little time.
Marlowe: Hijacked? Is that what it was?
Vivian: What else?
Marlowe drives away with Vivian half-reclining in
the passenger seat of his coupe car. Alone in the car with her, he
continues to question her about her connection to Mars - after pulling
over and parking:
Marlowe: Let's begin with what Eddie Mars has on
you.
Vivian: If he had anything, would it be any of your business? You've
already been paid, haven't you?
Marlowe: Yeah, by you.
Vivian: Are you after more money?
Marlowe: Well, I guess you've got a right to ask that. No, I'm not
after more money. I've already been well paid. I've got another reason.
Vivian: You like my father, don't you?
Marlowe: Hmm, hmm.
Vivian: Then why don't you stop?
Marlowe: Remember I told you I was beginning to like another one
of the Sternwoods?
Vivian: I wish you'd show it.
Marlowe: That should be awful easy. (He kisses her.)
Vivian: (breathily) I liked that. I'd like more. (They
kiss a second time.) That's even better.
After the brief romantic sequence and interlude, Marlowe
again asks her his oft-repeated question: "What's Eddie Mars
got on you?"
Marlowe: All right, now that's settled. What's Eddie
Mars got on you?
Vivian: So that's the way...
Marlowe: That's the way it is. Kissing is all right. It's nice. I'd
like to do more of it. But first, I want to find out what Eddie Mars
has on you.
He suspects that she was playing "an act" with
Mars at the casino, especially when he asks Vivian to open her purse
and show him the $28,000 - the purse has been empty all along. |