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The Blue Dahlia
(1946)
An Oscar-nominated Raymond Chandler
screenplay provided the who-dun-it script for this classic hard-boiled
Alan Ladd/Veronica Lake noirish crime film. It was the third of four
screen pairings between Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake. Director George
Marshall combined various elements to produce a well-made noir, about
a hard-nosed GI soldier returning from service who became entangled
with a mysterious blonde when they were both faced with unraveling
a murder. Its tagline was: "Tamed by a brunette - framed by a blonde
- blamed by the cops!"
The film
had a different, unsatisfying conclusion than the one offered in
the original script regarding
the identity of the murderer - the murderer was changed by demands
from the military - from a soldier returning from service who was
suffering from blackouts, to a less politically-sensitive killer.
- returning 28 year-old WWII
veteran and naval flier Lt. Cmdr. Johnny Morrison (Alan Ladd) was
one of three soldiers discharged from service and in Southern California.
His buddies included Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix) (with a serious
mental health disability) and George Copeland (Hugh Beaumont).
Johnny soon discovered that his boozing, unfaithful estranged wife
Helen (Doris Dowling) had been promiscuous with LA's The
Blue Dahlia nightclub owner Eddie Harwood (Howard Da Silva)
during his absence
- trampish Helen was surprised
by Johnny's unannounced return to her Wilshire Boulevard Cavendish
Court Hotel and Bungalow (# 93), in the midst of a wild house party.
When he confronted the couple kissing as Eddie was leaving by the
front door, he quipped to Harwood before punching him in the chin: "You've
got the wrong lipstick on, Mister!"
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Helen Morrison with Eddie Harwood (Howard Da Silva)
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Johnny Confronting Them Kissing at Front Door
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Drunken and Angry Helen
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- clad in a slinky trouser suit
and drunk, she seemed unapologetic to Johnny, mentioning to the
other guests as she dismissed them: "He probably wants to
beat me up." Helen asserted
her promiscuous independence from him: ("Don't start preaching.
I take all the drinks I like, any time, any place. I go where I want
to with anybody I want. I just happen to be that kind of a girl"),
and then hinted that Johnny might now be violent after serving in
the military when he tried to get her to stop drinking: "Take
your paws off me! Maybe you've learned to like hurting people?"
- she
then laughingly admitted to him that their young son Dickie had been
killed in a DUI car-crash accident while she was driving - drunk.
He had earlier been led to believe that Dickie had died of diptheria:
("I was drunk. I was in a car smash.
Dickey was killed. I wrote you he died of diphtheria because I was
afraid to tell you the truth"). The news caused him to angrily
pull out his gun on her (he hinted: "That's what I oughta do,
but you're not worth it"), but then he walked out on her while
throwing his gun into an armchair before leaving the bungalow
- in The Blue Dahlia club, Harwood was informed that
his wife had just separated from him for a few days, presumably
because of his on-going affair with Helen (Harwood: "If you
think my wife left me because of another woman, it was something
else entirely"),
and also because of his criminal ties and past. [Note: Much later,
Harwood was revealed to be using a fake name. His real name was Bauer
- and he was a wanted fugitive-murderer in Passaic, New Jersey fifteen
years earlier for killing a bank messenger.] Feeling miffed and rejected,
Helen called Harwood and used pressure and blackmail to prevent him
from ending their affair: "Supposing I don't want to call it
a day? Two walkouts in one evening would be just a little too much
for me, Eddie. Ever think of that? And if I don't want to call it
a day, I'm quite sure you won't for a very good reason."
- meanwhile, Johnny was hitchhiking
with his suitcase and picked up in the rain by Harwood's wife,
long blonde-haired wife Joyce (Veronica Lake). He hesitated at
first but was convinced by her good humor: "Well, you could
get wetter if you lay down in the gutter." Remaining anonymous
to each other but realizing they were both running away from something,
the two strangers shared a drive up the coast to Malibu and beyond,
and after parting were not aware until the next morning that they
both spent the night at the same beachfront motel, the Royal Beach
Inn (in separate rooms)
- the next morning,
a maid found Helen murdered on the sofa in her bungalow, with Johnny's
gun on the floor. There came news on the radio in the motel lobby
that Helen had been murdered (it wasn't ruled a suicide after autopsy
tests), and that Johnny was a prime suspect. He returned by bus
back to Los Angeles, took an assumed name (Jimmy Moore) and rented
a cheap hotel, while trying to clear his name (with some assistance
from Joyce)
- meddlesome bungalow
motel house detective "Dad" Newell (Will Wright) was questioned
by police and testified that he had heard Johnny fighting with Helen,
and that he had witnessed Harwood enter her bungalow
Johnny
was accused of the crime of Helen's murder, along with other suspects:
- Eddie
Harwood - MOTIVE: he had been in an affair with Helen, and when he
ended it after Johnny returned, Helen blackmailed him to continue
- threatening to expose information regarding Harwood's previous
criminal past years earlier; the proof regarding Harwood's past was
found by Johnny after Helen's death on the back of Johnny's military
photo:
"Johnny: If anything happens to me, Eddie Harwood's name used
to be Bauer. The New Jersey State Police would like to know. The
charge is murder. Helen"
- Joyce Harwood
- MOTIVE: she was suspected of retaliating against Helen for
stealing her husband; however, she felt that after meeting Johnny,
she should help him clear his name because she felt he was innocent:
("I know you didn't kill your wife,
Johnny....Just from knowing you")
- Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix), Johnny's slightly
crazy, medically-discharged war buddy who had amnesia and a steel
plate in his head -
MOTIVE: he might have killed Helen because she had two-timed his
pal Johnny, and he confessed: "The things she said. What she
was. What she did to Johnny. She didn't even care"; however,
he recalled that the night he was invited back to her place from
the bar, he decided to leave instead: "Who says I killed her?
You can't hand me that stuff....I just had to get out of there. I
couldn't take it anymore. She called me back, but I just kept right
on going"
[Note: Buzz was the screenplay's killer.]
In the conclusion, most of the suspects were assembled
in The Blue Dahlia nightclub as the police authorities pressured
Buzz to confess. But as it turned out, all of the suspects were eliminated
one-by-one.
- the surprise killer was revealed to be disgruntled
house detective 'Dad' Newell. He had attempted to blackmail Helen
about her affair with Eddie, but when she refused to comply, he killed
her. Captain Hendrickson (Tom Powers) questioned him to the breaking
point:
Hendrickson: "How much did you up the ante on
her when her husband came home? What did she threaten to do, get
you fired? Or was she going to have Harwood's friends give you
the treatment? Maybe she was going to blow a hole in you herself,
only she wouldn't know how to handle that kind of a gun. All you
had to do was grab it out of her hand. I guess even a very cheap
blackmailer could do that."
Newell: "Cheap, huh? Sure, a cigar and a drink and a couple
of dirty bucks. That's all it costs to buy me. That's what she thought.
Found out a little different, didn't she? Maybe I could get tired
of being pushed around by cops and hotel managers and ritzy dames
in bungalows. Maybe I could cause a little something just for once.
And if I do end up in the slab..." (gunfire)
- when Newell pulled out a gun after incriminating
himself, he was startled when a door opened behind him, and he
was shot by Hendrickson. The film concluded as Johnny suggested
continuing his relationship with Joyce, even though he neglected
to tell her that her husband was dead or
critically wounded:
Johnny: "Last night when I made myself walk
out on you, remember? I said every guy had seen you before. Somewhere."
Joyce:
"I remember."
Johnny: "But the trick was to find you."
Joyce: "I remember that, too. Do you think I'd ever forget it?"
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Returning Veterans (l to r): Buzz, George, Johnny
Johnny's Arrival in His Home to Greet His Wife Helen (Doris
Dowling)
Johnny Threatening Helen with a Gun ("You're not worth it!")
Joyce Harwood (Veronica Lake) - Picking up Hitchhiker Johnny in
Rain
Helen - Found Murdered in Bungalow, with Johnny's Gun on Floor
Joyce With Estranged Husband Eddie Harwood
Joyce - She Aided Johnny and Believed He Was Innocent - Before
Revealing She Was Eddie's Wife
Incriminating Clue About Harwood's Criminal Past, Written by Helen
Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix) - Remembering the Night With Helen
When He Ran Off
The Killer: House Detective 'Dad' Newell (Will Wright)
- Confessing His Guilt
Johnny and Joyce Finding Each Other
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