The Story (continued)
Unable
to sleep in the middle of the night, Alex arises from his bed early
and learns that he has been fooled when he notices that the missing
key has been replaced on his key ring. He begins to suspect that
Alicia is spying on him. Exploring in the wine cellar, he also discovers
the tampered 1940 wine bottle, the metal ore on the floor and glass
shards from a broken 1934 wine bottle. Thinking that he has been
double-crossed by Alicia in his own home - with the help of Devlin,
his shadow is elongated on the checkboard floor of the main entry
hall. Unsure of his next move, he slowly ascends the staircase and
walks into his mother's bedroom. Guiltily crouched over next to her
bedside "like a stupid schoolboy," he falls back on his
mother's advice and consultation. He wakes her, pleads for her help,
and confesses to her - with a most-famous line:
Sebastian: Mother, Mother.
Mme. Sebastian: Why are you up so early?
Sebastian: I need your help.
Mme. Sebastian: Something is wrong?
Sebastian: A great deal - Alicia.
Mme. Sebastian: I have expected it. I knew. I knew. What is it? Mr.
Devlin?
Sebastian: [a high overhead shot] No. I am married to an
American agent.
Alicia sleeps, completely unaware of her unmasking.
Alex is anguished and hysterical with worry after discovering his
wife's betrayal and fearing retaliation by his Nazi partners/conspirators.
He is also personally distraught over how he was fooled by Alicia's "clinging
kisses." With her suspicions now confirmed, the exultant Mme.
Sebastian finds some consolation in her son's stupidity and convinces
him to play along with Alicia's counter-espionage plan:
Mme. Sebastian: Yes, it is easy to see now. I knew
but I didn't see. They picked her because of her father.
Alex: I must have been insane, mad. Behaved like an idiot, to believe
in her with her clinging kisses.
Mme. Sebastian: Stop wallowing in your foul memories.
Alex: Then what do I do? There's nothing to do. I'm done, finished.
They'll find out.
Mme. Sebastian: They won't find out.
Alex: They'll find out what I'm married to. Look what they did to
Emil Hupka, Emil who did nothing. And I've betrayed them, I've bungled
and there's no excuse. I'd do the same myself - kill the fool that
betrayed them.
Mme. Sebastian: There's no need for them to find out.
Alex: Mathis is very sharp.
Mme. Sebastian: Yes. He dislikes you. But his criticism of your talents
wouldn't go that far to imagine that you are married to an American
agent. You are protected by the enormity of your stupidity - for
a time.
Alex: Alicia, I'll take care of her myself.
Mme. Sebastian: No, not that way.
Shifting the villainous blame to herself, his autocratic
mother proposes:
"Let me arrange this one." Alex's steel-willed, authoritarian
mother brutally proposes to liquidate agent Alicia by slowly, unsuspiciously,
poisoning her to death [invading and violating her body with a foreign
agent!], causing her to first become ill and then supposedly to die
of natural causes:
Listen to me. No one must know what she is. There
must be no suspicion of her, of you or me. She must be allowed
to move about freely. But she will be on a leash. She will learn
nothing further to inform. She must go, but it must happen slowly.
If she could become ill and remain ill for a time, until... [The
screen fades to black.]
In a number of scenes, Alicia drinks cups of coffee,
slowly poisoned in small doses. Later in Prescott's company, she
complains of light, painful headaches and dizziness. He proudly compliments
her on their successful subterfuge - the sample that Devlin found
was not sand but uranium: "That sand that Devlin brought in
shows uranium ore so now we know what we're driving at. And your
job from now on will be to try to help us find out where that sand
comes from."
She is also informed that her contact will change in a week's time,
and that Devlin is being transferred to Spain - at his own request.
With tears welling up in her eyes, Alicia interprets his change of
locale as a personal affront (she has become "stale," uninteresting,
and "routine" to him) and as an emotional desertion:
Mr. Devlin's been transferred to Spain...Well I guess
he thought he was going stale here...I guess he thought he'd find
Spain more interesting...Well, of course, it is more or less routine
now.
As time passes after more emptied cups of coffee, she
becomes weaker and weaker, barely able to punctually keep a rendezvous
with Devlin in Rio at a park bench. During what she believes is their
last meeting, she is exceptionally distant. He suspects that she
is ill and "all mashed up," while she defiantly excuses
her condition as another hangover from drinking [her thirsting for
love turns to a thirsting for alcohol to escape the "dull" life
he has commissioned her to have].
Devlin: It gets a bit lonely squatting on
a bench all day.
Alicia: Yes, Rio can be a very dull town.
Devlin: What's new?
Alicia: Nothing. What's new with you?
Devlin: Nothing. Any domestic troubles about the other night?
Alicia: No.
Devlin: Any footprints in that sand yet?
Alicia: No, nothing yet.
Devlin: Just a social visit, huh?
Alicia: A little fresh air helps.
Devlin: You don't look so hot...Sick?
Alicia: No. Hangover.
Devlin: That's news! Back to the bottle again, huh?
Alicia: It sort of lightens my chores.
Devlin: Big party?
Alicia: Just the family circle.
Devlin: Sounds quite jolly.
Alicia: It helps life in a dull town.
Devlin: You ought to take it easy on that liquor.
Alicia: Don't you find Rio a little hard to take too?
Devlin: Not a bad town. You look all mashed up. It must have been
quite an evening.
Alicia: It was.
Devlin: OK, if you want to play that way, go on and have fun. No
reason why you shouldn't.
Alicia: That's right, Dev.
They each disguise their true feelings and concerns
for each other, as Devlin pursues another official line of questioning.
Despondent about his departure, she tries to get Devlin to express
his bottled-up emotions, but he cannot see anything but an unrepentant
alcoholic lush before him. She is annoyed when he doesn't mention
his leaving, so she returns the midriff scarf he lent her when they
first met in Miami. He quips: "Cleaning house, hmm?" Although
still wobbly and "tight," she says "goodbye" (with
an air of finality) to go "back home."
In a beautifully-orchestrated scene in Sebastian's
living room, Alicia becomes aware of the plot against her - that
she is being drugged with poison stirred into cups of coffee. In
their company, when Dr. Anderson mistakenly picks up her coffee cup,
she notices that both Sebastians jump up to tell him that he has
the wrong cup in his hands. Alicia's face turns toward the poisoned
cup and back to the faces of the Sebastian conspirators. She abruptly
rises and excuses herself to go to bed. In distorted, point-of-view
shots, Alicia's vision becomes totally blurred and hallucinogenic
as she walks toward the silhouetted, shadowy figures of Alex and
his mother. She collapses at the foot of the stairs onto the checkboard
floor and is helplessly dragged upstairs and confined/imprisoned
in her room to await the silence of death - Sebastian orders that
the phone be disconnected and removed: "Disconnect the telephone.
Mme. must have absolute quiet."
After waiting alone on the park bench and failing to
rendezvous with Alicia after five days, Devlin meets with Prescott
in his hotel room - his superior lies on his bed eating crackers
and spread. He tells Prescott that he is suspicious that something
is amiss with Alicia: "She wasn't drunk, she was sick. Maybe
that's why she hasn't shown up. She looked like the ragged end of
nowhere."
Although Prescott argues that she may be drinking again, Devlin insists
on seeing Alicia with a "social call" at Sebastian's estate
as "a friend of the family".
In a memorable sequence, Devlin attempts to rescue
a lifeless Alicia at the moment of her greatest suffering and weakness
when he pays a call on the Sebastians. The enigmatic male lead cannot
give himself up to her love and only reveals his own emotional needs
in this final scene when he saves her from imminent death (from poisoned
coffee). At the door, Joseph the butler hesitates when Devlin asks: "Family
home tonight?" Devlin is admitted into the mansion's entry hall
after learning that Mrs. Sebastian has been "very ill and confined
to her bed."
As he waits there for a message to be delivered to
Mr. Sebastian in his study (where he is meeting with his fellow Nazi
conspirators), Devlin sneaks upstairs alone where he finds the semi-conscious,
incoherent, almost catatonic Alicia in bed. Moving close to her,
he whispers in her ear, asking what is wrong. She tells him that
she is being slowly poisoned [dying in the same manner as her father]
- tortured and victimized by the Sebastians (who know everything).
Convinced that he must save her and protectively rescue her, Devlin
compassionately avows his love for her and admits his own pain
and suffering over her marriage to Sebastian. He also apologizes
for acting badly and behaving cruelly toward her, and for denying
his emotional vulnerability. The scene is a re-enactment of the Rio
balcony scene as they openly reveal their love for the first time:
Devlin: Alicia, Alicia, Alicia. What's wrong with
you? (Wearily, she reaches out for his hand as he bends down to
her face on the pillow and whispers.)
Alicia: I'm so glad you came.
Devlin: I had to. I couldn't stand anymore waiting and worrying about
you. It wasn't a hang-over you had that day. You were sick then.
What is it?
Alicia: Yes, I was sick. (She caresses his face)
Devlin: What's wrong with you, Alicia?
Alicia: Oh Dev.
Devlin: What is it, dear? What's wrong with you?
Alicia: They're poisoning me. I couldn't get away from them. I tried
but I was too weak.
Devlin: How long?
Alicia: Since the party. Alex and his mother found out.
Devlin: Come on, try to sit up. Sit up. I've got to get you out of
here. (He struggles to pull her up from the bed.)
Alicia: I thought you had gone.
Devlin: No. I had to see you once and speak my peace. I was getting
out because I love you. I couldn't bear seeing you and him together.
(They hug each other)
Alicia: Oh, you love me. Why didn't you tell me this before?
Devlin: I know. But I couldn't see straight or think straight. I
was a fatheaded guy full of pain. It tore me up not having you.
Alicia: Oh you love me. You love me.
Devlin: Long ago. All the time. Since the beginning...Come on, try
to sit up.
Alicia: Oh Dev. I'm afraid I-I can't make it because they gave me
pills to sleep.
Devlin: Keep awake. Keep talking...
Alicia: They didn't want the others to know about me.
Devlin: Keep talking. Come on, what happened? What happened?
Alicia: Alex found out.
Devlin: And the others haven't?
Alicia: They'd kill him if they knew. They killed Emil.
Devlin: Are you in pain?
Alicia: I don't know - the pills...(asking him to keep her alive):
Say it again, it keeps me awake.
Devlin: I love you. Stand up. Stand up. Come on, wake up. Talk!
Draping her in her robe and mink coat, Devlin decides
to pick her up and carry her lifeless, near-death body toward the
front door to safety. She tells him that they killed Emil and that
she knows where the "sand" comes from. Alicia is fearful
that they will be discovered by everyone in the house and they won't
be able to escape. Dazed as she leans on his shoulder, he takes her
out of the second floor bedroom, struggling to keep her alive and
talking. She begs: "Don't ever leave me." He vows: "You'll
never get rid of me again."
She asserts: "I never tried to." At the top of the stairs,
they are discovered by Alex and Mme. Sebastian.
Devlin lets Sebastian know what he is doing with Alicia
in his arms. He whispers what he knows to them, taunting them and
bribing them to keep quiet. He warns Sebastian to not raise an alarm.
He promises Sebastian that if he is allowed to get Alicia to a hospital,
he won't disclose Alex's mistake about helping the American government
to his colleagues:
I'm taking her to the hospital to get the poison
out of her...How'd you like your friends downstairs to know? They've
yet to be told...You haven't forgotten what they did to Emil, have
you Sebastian?...You've got your chance [to die] here and now.
Tell them [the Nazis] who she is.
As Devlin slowly descends the grand staircase toward
the front door, half-carrying Alicia in his protective arms, the
camera cuts back and forth from their slow movement to reaction shots
of Alex, his mother, and the other Nazis downstairs. The Sebastians
are rendered powerless to stop their departure. Humiliated and scared
that his Nazi compatriots will be alerted to the fact that his wife
is an American agent, Sebastian pretends to help Devlin and Alicia
out of the house. To save himself from exposure to his Nazi friends,
he tells them that Alicia must be rushed immediately to the hospital: "She
collapsed. Mr. Devlin heard her scream when he was waiting for me." Devlin
inadvertently condemns Alex with one contradictory detail: "Yes,
I telephoned the hospital as soon as I saw how she was."
In the final memorable sequence, Devlin carries Alicia
outside to his car - the open door behind them illuminates Alex's
suspicious fellow-conspirators in the entryway. Alex follows them
to the car to complete the masquerade. When he has Alicia and himself
in the car, Devlin locks the car door and responds:
"No room Sebastian." Alex pleads to escape with them to the
hospital: "But you must take me, they're watching me." Devlin
knows what Alex's fate will be when he returns to the house. He tells
him as they prepare to drive off:
"That's your headache."
In the entryway, one of the Nazis speaks out of the
side of his mouth: "There is no telephone in her room to call
the hospital." In the final image, Alex turns from the car and
hears Eric Mathis, a renegade Nazi leader and one of his suspicious
superiors, call him into the front door for an accounting [meaning
his death]. He realizes that Alex has betrayed his confidence. With
the film's last words, Eric requests:
Alex, will you come in, please? I wish to talk to
you.
The door closes behind Sebastian as he enters, eliminating
the light. Devlin has successfully liquidated an enemy spy as well
as Alicia's husband - his rival to Alicia's love.
The film abruptly ends without a resolution to the
couple's romantic union, or even without revealing whether Alicia's
life will be saved at the hospital. |