The Story (continued)
Anna
accompanies Holly to Harry's apartment, where the porter, an actual
eye-witness, describes the accident from the upstairs window:
Porter: It happened right down there.
Holly: You saw it?
Porter: Well not saw, heard, heard. I heard the brakes and I got
to the window and saw them carry the body to the other side of the
Emperor Josef statue.
Holly: Why didn't they bring him in the house?
While they discuss the accident, Anna wanders into
Harry's adjoining bedroom that she knows intimately. She combs her
hair in front of the mirror and looks at an old photograph of herself
-
Holly: Could he have been conscious?...Was he still
alive?
Porter: Alive? He couldn't have been alive. Not with his head in
the way it was.
Holly: I was told that he did not die at once.
Porter: He was quite dead.
Holly: But this sounds crazy. If he was killed at once, how could
he have talked about me and this lady here after he was dead? Why
didn't you say all this at the inquest?
Porter: It's better not to be mixed up in things like this.
Holly: Things like what?
Porter: (He shrugs). I was not the only one who did not give evidence.
Holly: Who else?
Porter: Three men helped to carry your friend to the statue.
Holly: Kurtz, the Rumanian, and -
Porter: There was a third man. He didn't give evidence.
Holly: You don't mean the doctor?
Porter: No, no, no. He came later, after they carried him to the
Josef statue.
Holly: What did this man look like?
Porter: I didn't see his face. He didn't look up. He was quite ordinary.
He might have been just anybody.
Holly: Just anybody.
After Holly discovers more contradictory information
- that there were three men who carried the body across the road
after the accident (Kurtz, Popescu, and a mysterious 'third man'
- not the doctor), he looks down at the pavement through the
upstairs window where people walk in the harsh shadows of the night.
A child's ball bounces into the room, followed by a
little child Hansel (Herbert Halbik), as Holly pursues his line of
questioning and insists that the Porter tell his story to the police.
The Porter wants to end the discussion and protect himself: "I
should have listened to my wife. She said you were up to no good.
Gossip...I have no evidence. I saw nothing. I said nothing. It's
not my business." The Porter tells Anna that they must go, and
she must not bring the gentleman again - he points towards the door.
As Holly walks Anna home, she suggests: "You shouldn't
get mixed up in this...Why don't you leave this town - go home?" And
then she is told outside her own apartment that the Police are searching
her own room. In Anna's apartment, Calloway and other police are
looking through her personal effects and private letters. After Calloway
asks to see her papers, Anna is found with identification papers
forged by Harry. Martins is annoyed by the police harrassment and
tells the hard-bitten Calloway:
Holly: I suppose it wouldn't interest you to know
that Harry Lime was murdered? You're too busy. You haven't even
bothered to get the complete evidence...And there was a third man
there. I suppose that doesn't sound peculiar to you.
Calloway: I'm not interested in whether a racketeer like Lime was
killed by his friends or by an accident. The only important thing
is that he's dead.
Calloway warns Holly about playing amateur detective,
but the Western author is already gathering plot lines for his next
novel:
Calloway: Go home, Martins, like a sensible chap.
You don't know what you're mixing in. Get the next plane.
Holly: As soon as I get to the bottom of this, I'll get the next
plane.
Calloway: Death's at the bottom of everything, Martins. Leave death
to the professionals.
Holly: Mind if I use that line in my next Western?
Anna is detained by the British police for having forged
papers. She tells Holly why she needed them: "The Russians would
claim me. I come from Czechoslovakia."
After he reassures her that he will straighten out all the nonsense
about Harry, Anna replies: "Sometimes he said I laughed too much." She
is taken away to International Police Headquarters as her letters are
read in detail.
Holly immediately locates Dr. Winkel's residence and
questions him about the accident. Winkel, Lime's "medical adviser," explains
how Lime was dead when he arrived and attended by only two friends.
Lime was conscious for only a short time while they carried him into
the house:
Holly: Was it possible that his death might have
been not accidental?...Could he have been pushed, Dr. Winkel?
Winkel: I cannot give an opinion. The injuries to the head and skull
would have been the same.
After Anna is released from policy custody that evening,
she accompanies Holly to the Casanova Club, where Kurtz makes a living
playing the violin in a small ensemble. Kurtz approaches, curious
about Holly's investigation to prove the police wrong. Kurtz suggests
he speak to Popescu who is now back in town. When Kurtz goes to bring
Popescu to speak to him, Holly tells a worn-out Anna about more discrepancies
in the accident anecdotes: "That porter said three men carried
the body and two of them are here." But Anna is tired of being
reminded about Harry.
Popescu, the man who helped Harry fix Anna's papers,
explains his version of the car accident:
It was a terrible thing. I was just crossing the
road to go to Harry. He and the Baron were on the sidewalk. Maybe
if I hadn't started across the road, it wouldn't have happened.
I can't help blaming myself and wishing things had been different.
Anyway, he saw me and stepped off the sidewalk to meet me, and
the truck...it was terrible, Mr. Martins, terrible. I've never
seen a man killed before...It was so terribly stupid for a man
like Harry to be killed in an ordinary street accident.
Popescu denies knowing of a 'third man' who helped
him and Baron Kurtz carry the body - contradicting the Porter's eyewitness
account of "three men carrying the body." Holly surmises
that "somebody's lying" and his curiosity is again aroused
in his investigation of the 'death' of Harry Lime.
Four quick scenes follow. Popescu finishes a phone
call: "He will meet us at the bridge, good." At dawn, Kurtz
leaves his house surreptitiously. At the same time, Dr. Winkel wheels
out his old bicycle and rides away. And Popescu dressed in an overcoat,
steps out of his front door. The three men (and another unidentified
man) meet in the middle of a bridge to talk together without being
overheard.
As Holly paces at the point where Harry was killed
in the street, the porter leans down from the upper window in Harry's
apartment, calling out: "I am not a bad man. I'd like to tell
you something...Come tonight. My wife goes out...Tonight." As
the porter turns around after shutting the window, he turns toward
the camera with a look of still horror on his face.
The scene dissolves to Anna's room, where she is disturbed
by loneliness and the passing of Harry:
It's always bad around this time. He used to look
in around six. I've been frightened. I've been alone, without friends
and money. But I've never known anything like this. Please talk.
Tell me about him.
Holly tells Anna about the Harry he knew and how he
idolized Harry's abilities when he was a boy:
Holly: He could fix anything.
Anna: What sort of things?
Holly: Oh, little things, how to put your temperature up before an
exam, the best crib, how to avoid this and that.
Anna: He fixed my papers for me. He heard the Russians were repatriating
people like me who came from Czechoslovakia. He knew the right person
straight away for forging stamps.
Holly: When he was fourteen, he taught me the three card trick. That
was growing up fast.
Anna: He never grew up. The world grew up round him, that's all -
and buried him.
Holly: Anna, you'll fall in love again.
Anna: Don't you see I don't want to. I don't ever want to.
As they leave her place to go talk to the porter, she
tells him: "You know, you ought to find yourself a girl." Things
turn complicated when they approach Harry's apartment and learn that
the porter has been found dead and murdered - his throat has been
cut. The small, moon-faced boy named Hansel pulls at Harry's hand
and accuses the "foreigner" of committing the crime. Anna
confirms the people's suspicions: "They think you did it." As
they hurry away from the scene, the little boy follows at a distance
after them, calling out "Papa, papa." Soon, the crowd outside
the Porter's doorway follows in close pursuit. They are provoked
to believe that Martins was responsible for the murder of the vital
witness.
To escape notice, the two buy tickets at a small cinema
house and enter the dark theater. Holly tells Anna that they'd better
not see each other again. She suggests that he report his findings
to the authorities: "Be sensible. Tell Major Calloway." After
they separate, Holly summons a taxi outside of his hotel and asks
to be taken to the International Headquarters to see Calloway, but
the driver pays no attention. As the car gathers speed through the
dark narrow streets, Holly believes the driver has orders to kidnap
and kill him as they drive toward a destination that is not the
International Police Headquarters.
Although Holly is ready to jump when the car screeches
to a halt in front of the Cultural Center, the doors open and he
is greeted by Crabbit in front of an applauding audience for his
Wednesday evening lecture. He realizes he has actually been taken
to address the cultural gathering - the members all believe that
he is a famous novelist.
Woefully unprepared to answer questions posed by his
sophisticated audience, many of them begin to leave the lecture.
Holly answers questions with ominous under-meanings posed by Popescu.
He plans to write a new novel "based on fact"
and titled 'The Third Man':
Popescu: Can I ask is Mr. Martins engaged in a new
book?
Holly: Yes, it's called 'The Third Man.'
Popescu: A novel, Mr. Martins?
Holly: It's a murder story. I've just started it. It's based on fact.
Popescu: ...Are you a slow writer, Mr. Martins?
Holly: Not when I get interested.
Popescu: I'd say you were doing something pretty dangerous this time.
Holly: Yes?
Popescu: Mixing fact and fiction.
Holly: Should I make it all fact?
Popescu: Why no, Mr. Martins. I'd say stick to fiction, straight
fiction.
Holly: I'm too far along with the book, Mr. Popescu.
Popescu: Haven't you ever scrapped a book, Mr. Martins?
Holly: Never.
In Popescu's company are two thugs who are waiting
to confront Holly after the meeting is dismissed. Holly makes a dash
up a narrow, spiraling staircase, as the two thugs follow after him.
Holly enters into a dark room off the top of the staircase where
he finds a parrot on a perch next to the window when he turns on
the light. The parrot snaps at his hand as he opens the window and
climbs out. Holly evades his pursuers through the rubble and archways
of the bombed-out city and manages to get to Calloway's office in
the International Police Headquarters. With a handkerchief wrapped
around his right hand where the parrot bit him, Holly is berated
by Calloway:
Calloway: I told you to go away, Martins. This isn't
Santa Fe. I'm not a sheriff and you aren't a cowboy. You've been
blundering around with the worst bunch of racketeers in Vienna,
your precious Harry's friends, and now you're wanted for murder.
Martins: Put down drunk and disorderly too.
Calloway: I have.
Calloway asks for Lime's file to describe his monstrous
racket - the theft of penicillin from the military hospitals, dilution
to make it go further, and the drug's sale to patients (including
children) through the black market for a profit:
Holly: Are you too busy chasing a few tubes of penicillin
to investigate a murder?
Calloway: These were murders. Men with gangrened legs, women
in childbirth. And there were children too. They used some of this
diluted penicillin against meningitis. The lucky children died. The
unlucky ones went off their heads. You can see them now in the mental
ward. That was the racket Harry Lime organized.
In a "magic lantern show" (slide show), Calloway
shows pictures of a fellow called Harbin, a medical orderly at the
General Hospital who worked for Lime and helped him steal the penicillin
from the laboratory. With information from Harbin, that led the police
as far as Kurtz and Lime. A masterfully-filmed montage of fingerprints,
photographs, and other evidence slowly convince Holly that Lime was
involved in the illicit penicillin trade, a racket that flourished
on illness and produced only destruction. |