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The Blue Dahlia
(1946)
In director George Marshall's classic
hard-boiled, well-made Alan Ladd/Veronica Lake noirish crime film - it
featured an Oscar-nominated Raymond Chandler screenplay (his first
original script) that provided the who-dun-it plot for the third
and final film noir starring both Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake (following This
Gun for Hire (1942) and The Glass Key (1942)).
In the plot, with themes of
murder, marital infidelity and unfaithfulness, a "wrong man" accused
of a crime, multiple identities and mental imbalance, a hard-nosed
Navy bomber GI soldier returned from service and found himself 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 Naval
Department - from a soldier returning from service who was
suffering from blackouts and a serious head injury, 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 and decommissioned from service
in the South Pacific; his two Navy buddies included a slightly-crazy,
medically-discharged and aggressive Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix)
(literally shell-shocked and with a serious mental health disability,
amnesia and lapses in memory, due to shell fragments embedded in
his head) and ex-lawyer George Copeland (Hugh Beaumont) with bad
eyesight
- back in Southern California
(Hollywood), the threesome briefly shared bourbon drinks together
at Gus' Bar after being dropped off by a bus; Buzz complained about
the loud "monkey music" playing on the jukebox in the bar and instigated
a brief fight with a Marine Corporal (Anthony Caruso) over the
noise; soon after, George and Buzz began to share an apartment
together, where George used to live, while Johnny wanted to surprise
his wife Helen (Doris Dowling) by not announcing his return home
- Johnny's wife Helen was completely blind-sided
by his unannounced return to her Cavendish Court Hotel's Bungalow
(# 93) on Wilshire Blvd, in the midst of a wild house party; he
had to put up with the forward advances of an overly-friendly,
drunken blonde (Vera Marshe); he soon realized that his boozing
wife had been promiscuous and unfaithful during his absence with
LA's Sunset Strip The Blue
Dahlia nightclub owner Eddie Harwood (Howard Da Silva), a married
man
- when Johnny 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!"; Harwood apologized and
then departed
Unfaithful Helen Morrison (Doris Dowling) with
'Boyfriend' - Nightclub Owner Eddie Harwood (Howard Da Silva)
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Johnny Confronting Them Kissing at His Front Door
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- clad in a slinky trouser suit
and drunk, the trampish party-girl Helen seemed unapologetic to
Johnny, mentioning to the other guests as she ended the party and
dismissed them: "He
probably wants to beat me up"
- in their back bedroom, Johnny longingly looked at
a double-paneled picture frame, of himself (in uniform), and their
young son Dickie - an important plot point later
- afterwards Helen asserted her promiscuous
independence from him when he asked her to stop drinking: ("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 and physically abusive
after serving in the military when he continued to try to get her
to stop drinking, and she told him to mind his own business: "Take
your paws off me! Maybe you've learned to like hurting people?"
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Drunken and Angry Helen
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- the nosy and meddlesome, 57 year-old bungalow motel
house detective "Dad" Newell (Will Wright) briefly interrupted,
and mentioned he knew they were
fighting: "Noisy in here, aren't you?...Maybe you'd better pull the
blinds down, too, if you're gonna push your wife around"
- during the persistent, fierce and intense altercation between them, Johnny
shook her, demanding to know more about teasing remarks she had
made about their young son Dickie; she then admitted
to him that Dickie had been killed in a DUI car-crash accident
while she was driving - drunk; Johnny 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")
- and then she laughed wildly
- the news caused Johnny to angrily pull out his gun on her and threateningly
approach (he hinted: "That's
what I oughta do, but you're not worth it"), and then he walked
out on her as he tossed his gun into an armchair (next to blue
dahlia flowers from the nightclub), carrying
his suitcase into the rain
- later that night, Johnny's disoriented wartime-friend
Buzz, who had been called by an upset Helen and told that Johnny
had walked out on her, impulsively went out to locate Mrs. Morrison
and Johnny; while he awaited their return home to their hotel,
he entered the crowded hotel bungalow's bar, at the same time as
the distraught Helen was there drinking heavily; she met up with
Buzz, who was unaware of her identity, and he joined her back in
her private bungalow for more drinks
Harwood's The Blue Dahlia Club on the Sunset Strip
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Harwood's Shady Gangster-Club Partner Leo (Don Costello)
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- the same evening, in The Blue Dahlia club
on the Sunset Strip, Harwood had returned to his office and was informed
by his club assistant-manager and gangster-partner Leo (Don Costello)
that his wife Joyce had just separated from him for a few days
and was going out of town, presumably because of his on-going affair
with Helen (Harwood tried to deflect her motive: "If
you think my wife left me because of another woman, it was something
else entirely"); he was obliquely referring to his
criminal ties in the past and present (with Leo)
- Leo mentioned that an ex-con named Quinlan was back
in town and had talked to Harwood in the parking lot a few nights
earlier, when he was accompanied by Mrs. Morrison; and now Quinlan
had been "bumped off" - implying that Harwood was involved;
Leo advised Harwood to be careful: "Just
don't get too complicated, Eddie. When a man gets too complicated,
he's unhappy. And when he's unhappy, his luck runs out"
- [Note: Much later, Harwood
was revealed to be using a fake name. His actual 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 ("the Morrison dame...poison") - with Buzz in another room
- called Harwood in his office, and explained that Morrison had
left her; she used pressure and blackmail to prevent him from ending
their affair; she threatened to expose
information regarding Harwood's previous criminal past years earlier: "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"; he agreed to visit her in her bungalow
a half an hour later - and upon his arrival (and departure), he
was observed by the house detective; Harwood clearly had a motive
to eliminate Helen and silence her
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Joyce Harwood (Veronica Lake) - Picking
up Hitchhiker Johnny in the Rain and Driving to a Coastal Inn
Beyond Malibu
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- meanwhile, Johnny was hitchhiking
with his suitcase and picked up in the pouring rain by long blonde-haired
female named Joyce (Veronica Lake); he hesitated at first to be
picked up, 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 that they were both running
away from something (Joyce: "It all blows up in your face sometimes,
doesn't it?), the two strangers shared a drive up the coast to Malibu
and innocent chit-chat; he claimed his name was Jimmy Moore, and
while parting at a motel parking lot beyond Malibu, he told her:
"It's the end of the line...It's good-bye. And it's tough to
say good-bye"; they were not aware until the next morning that
they had both spent the night at the same beachfront motel - the
Royal Beach Inn (in separate rooms)
- the following morning, a maid found Helen dead
on the sofa-davenport in her bungalow, dying at the hand of Johnny's
gun that was left on the floor
- the same morning, the two strangers ran into
each other at breakfast in the outdoor restaurant of the Malibu-area
motel, and Joyce suggested: "Jimmy,
why don't you go back and fix it up before it's too late?";
he wasn't interested in mending his relationship with his wife: "There's
nothing to fix up. And if there was, I wouldn't want to fix it
up anyway"; as Joyce went to change her shoes to go walking
on the beach with him, there came news on the radio in the motel
lobby that Helen was found dead, and that her husband - returning
Lt. Commander Morrison - was a prime suspect; before speaking again
to Joyce, Johnny hastily left the motel, and boarded a bus returning
to Los Angeles; Johnny was immediately accused of the crime of
Helen's murder, although there were other suspects
- inside the LA Police Department's Detective Bureau,
Buzz and George were being detained for questioning by Captain
Hendrickson (Tom Powers), as well as motel
house detective "Dad" Newell, and
Eddie Harwood; a primitive audio-recording device was set up on
the Captain's desk before interviews; it had already been determined
through autopsy tests that Helen's death wasn't a suicide; Harwood's
missing wife Joyce was possibly thought to be involved, seeking
retaliation against Helen for stealing her husband; Buzz
and George were warned about trying to hide their friend Johnny
from the police; during the house-detective's questioning, he testified
- contrary to what was seen earlier, that Harwood had arrived at
Helen's bungalow door at about 7 pm, but left when she didn't answer the door
- Johnny was tailed by a suspicious thug (Frank Faylen)
from the LA bus station into the city (across from the Blue Dahlia
Club), and offered transportation to a cheap and available hotel
room 6 blocks away on Santa Monica Blvd; Johnny kept his
assumed name (Jimmy Moore) when he signed in with the hotel's
manager Corelli (Howard Freeman), and paid $10 bucks in advance for
the night; Johnny was saved from being strong-armed by the hood and
his thug-partner Heath (Walter Sande) when a policeman arrived to report
their "hot car" parked outside, handcuffed the two, and led them away [Note: The
two "cheap heist guys" (thugs) were working for Harwood's
corrupt manager-partner Leo.]
- in the next scene in Harwood's Grenada Towers hotel-apartment
on Wilshire, "Dad" Newell
had entered via the fire escape, and while smoking a cigar and
enjoying a drink, he informed Harwood that he had told the detectives
"a good straight story" - obviously in cahoots with Harwood,
he admitted that he had lied about witnessing Harwood's late-night
meeting with Helen, and he was handsomely paid off by Harwood
- as "Dad" left, Joyce entered; after he
apologized for cheating on her with Helen, she responded: "It's
too late, Eddie"; he tried to excuse his adulterous behavior: "Helen
Morrison didn't mean anything to me alive....And she doesn't mean
anything to me dead"; she remained cold to him, but she was
curious about the identity of the killer: "Who did kill her,
Eddie?"
- as Joyce was leaving Harwood's hotel-building,
she spotted Johnny arriving, and as he spoke to the front desk
clerk about seeing Harwood, she phoned him (out of sight) from
the mezzanine, to warn him to get out: "Please don't ask any
questions. Get out of the hotel right away"; he promptly complied
when he overheard Captain Hendrickson arriving at the desk to also
see Harwood; outside, Joyce ran after Johnny and saw him sitting
in her car; she jumped in, knowing he was on the run from the
police, and she wanted to help him; he told her to use his real
name, but she had already deduced he was fugitive Johnny Morrison
- as they drove and then parked to view the city
lights, she said she was unafraid of him; she wished to help him
clear his name because she felt he was innocent: ("I
know you didn't kill your wife, Johnny... Just from knowing you");
he told her he was on the hunt for the killer: "And the man
who killed her isn't gonna get away with it"; she wasn't ready
yet to divulge her name: "Johnny, you'll have to trust me.
I have something to settle, too"
- snooping house-detective "Dad" spoke briefly
to Buzz and George in their apartment, hoping to "put the
bite" on them to pay him for inside information; they were told Harwood
could be found at his nightclub most nights; "Dad" also
mentioned how he had seen Buzz before at the bungalow: ("Haven't
I seen you before?...Seems to me last night in the rain")
- in Johnny's cheap hotel room, he
was blackmailed by Corelli after he saw the double-paneled photo
frame of Johnny with his son Dickie, and threatened to report him
to the police; Johnny confronted Corelli, grabbed his gun and knocked
him out with the pistol - and then discovered that Helen had written
an incriminating clue about Harwood's criminal past on the back
of Dickie's photo: ("Johnny: If anything happens to you, Eddie
Harwood's name used to be Bauer. The New Jersey State Police would
like to know the charge is murder")
- soon after, Corelli - for a price - informed Harwood's
club partner-gangster Leo by phone about Johnny's identity; Johnny
visited Harwood in his hotel-apartment and directly accused him
of murdering his wife Helen: ("I think you killed her");
Johnny began to bring up Harwood's dark past in New Jersey, but
was interrupted by Joyce's arrival; when she revealed that she
was Eddie's estranged wife; Johnny acted upset and said goodbye
to her: "So long, baby";
(off-screen, Harwood probably contacted Leo to send two men to
apprehend Johnny)
- after briefly visiting with his two military pals,
Johnny was 'arrested' on the street by two "plainsclothesmen" (cop
impersonators, one of whom was Leo) and driven to Leo's remote
two-story ranch-house; although he realized he had been kidnapped
by Leo and his men (ordered by Harwood), and he valiantly fought
to free himself, he was knocked out; however, shortly later, he
semi-asphyxiated Leo (the other thug had been knocked out), and
freed himself, just as Harwood arrived; Johnny
was able to finish his earlier confrontation with Harwood about
committing murder 15 years earlier in New Jersey under his real
name - Mr. Bauer
- Harwood regretfully described his criminal past:
"I'm not much of a hotshot after all. Such a nice clean start I
had, too. Helping another wild kid shoot a bank messenger back
in Passaic. And for free. Didn't have a dime on him. And I spent
the next 15 years trying to kid myself it never happened. I get
to own a war plant, a night club. I even marry a girl. A girl who
oughtn't to have given me the time of the day. This is how I end
up"; then Harwood told Johnny that both of them were no longer
suspects - Buzz had confessed to the crime
- gunfire from a revived
Leo on the floor intended for Johnny hit Harwood and probably killed
him, and Johnny shot back and injured Leo with two blasts
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the conclusion, Johnny fled back to The Blue Dahlia nightclub where
most of the suspects were assembled in Harwood's office; the police
authorities had already pressured a confused Buzz to confess to
the crime as the "fall guy"; it was confirmed that he had been
seen by "Dad" entering and leaving Helen's bungalow; Buzz appeared
to have killed Helen because she had two-timed his pal Johnny:
("The
things she said. What she was. What she did to Johnny. She didn't
even care. All she did was pick at that flower"); [Note: Buzz
was the screenplay's killer.] Johnny had
already been cleared because he was in Joyce's car driving toward
Malibu at the time of Helen's death
- Buzz finally was able to clearly recall the
night he was invited back to Helen's place from the bar; he decided
to leave because of the loud "monkey music" - which aggravated
his condition and compelled him to leave: ("Who says
I killed her? You can't hand me that stuff....I wouldn't dirty my
hands on her...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.
And I don't know where. I guess I must have gone home")
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The Killer: House Detective 'Dad'
Newell (Will Wright) - Confessing His Guilt
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- the surprise killer was revealed to be disgruntled
house detective 'Dad' Newell, who had attempted to blackmail Helen
about her affair with Eddie, but when she refused to comply, he killed
her; Captain Hendrickson 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."
"Dad" 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 dead by Hendrickson. The film concluded as Johnny suggested
continuing his relationship with Joyce, even though he neglected
to tell her that her husband was earlier critically-wounded or
possibly dead:
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 Sharing a
Goodbye Drink Together
Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix) - Johnny's Disturbed, War-time Pal - Suffering
From Headaches
Johnny's Arrival in His Home to Greet His Surprised Wife Helen (Doris
Dowling)
Double-Paneled Picture of Johnny (In Uniform) and Son Dickie
Johnny Asking About Dickie: "Talk, tell me, will ya?"
Johnny Roughing Up and Then Angrily Approaching and Threatening Helen
with a Gun, But Then Deciding: ("You're
not worth it!")
Johnny's Unused Gun Tossed onto Sofa Armchair Before Leaving
Buzz in the Crowded Hotel's Bar with Helen Drinking Scotch Before
Joining Her in Her Bungalow
Helen - Found Murdered in Her Bungalow, with Johnny's Gun on the Floor
Captain Hendrickson (Tom Powers) Questioning Suspects in the LA Police Dept.
Johnny Was Tailed by a Suspicious Individual (Frank Faylen) Upon His
Return to LA
Cheap Hotel Clerk Corelli (Howard Freeman)
Joyce With Husband Eddie Harwood in His Grenada Towers Apt.
Joyce Warning Johnny, By Phone from the Hotel-Apartment's Mezzanine,
To Get Away
Joyce - She Aided Johnny and Believed He Was Innocent
"Dad's" Visit to Buzz and George
Incriminating Clue About Harwood's Criminal Past, Written by Helen
Johnny Visiting Harwood To Accuse Him of Murdering Helen
Joyce's Revelation That She Was Eddie's Estranged Wife
Harwood - Confronted by Johnny as Mr. Bauer - a NJ Criminal
Harwood and Leo Both Shot During Johnny's Struggle for Gun
Buzz Wanchek (William Bendix) - Remembering the Night With Helen
In Her Bungalow
Johnny and Joyce Finding Each Other
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