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The Bribe (1949)
In Robert Z. Leonard's crime noir ("A Story of
Love and Temptation") - a dark melodrama (with scenes often
used in Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982)), about a compromised
Secret Service agent in Central America to trace stolen plane engines
- sidetracked by a suspect's femme fatale wife:
- the frequent voice-over narration during flashbacks
of chain-smoking Federal secret service agent Rigby (Robert Taylor),
a cold-hearted ex-war veteran, some of which appeared on his rain-streaked,
hotel room window in Los Trancos on the island of Carlotta in Central
America: "Well, here's the storm, right on schedule. Could
be a break at that. Gives you time. Yeah, time to think. And how
do you like your thoughts? How do you like finding out that maybe
you've got a price tag, too, after all these years? How much do
you cost, Rigby? How much for you? Or would you rather use another
word for what you're selling out, one with a fancy necktie on it,
say, honor? And what does that mean - honor? Same thing to everybody
or different things to different people? Honor, just a word. Say
it over often enough and it's not even a word anymore, just a sound
- a sound without any meaning at all"
- Rigby's objective while posing as a sports fisherman:
the pursuit of smugglers involved in missing (or stolen) WWII aircraft
engine parts, although Rigby became entranced and sidetracked by
an irresistible femme fatale - sultry torch singer Elizabeth
Hintten (Ava Gardner) after seeing her perform "Situation Wanted" in
Pedro's nightclub - she was the wife of his initial prime
suspect: ex-Air Force pilot Tugwell Hintten (John Hodiak) - first
described by Rigby in voice-over:
"Entertainer at Pedro's. Unknown quantity. Quantity unknown maybe,
but one look and you thought you knew the quality"
- Rigby later spoke to Elizabeth in her dressing room
where her drunken and dissolute husband barged in and told him that
she was off-limits before he passed out; Rigby helped Elizabeth get
her husband home; Rigby delivered a further voice-over assessment
of Elizabeth: "There was something about her, a softness. You
had to keep telling yourself it was a good routine, a very good routine...."
The Main Shady Characters
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Elizabeth Hintten
(Ava Gardner)
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Elizabeth with Drunken
Husband Tugwell Hintten
(John Hodiak)
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Playboyish Racketeer-Smuggler Carwood (Vincent
Price)
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Gang Fixer J.J. Bealer
(Charles Laughton)
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- the slovenly figure of J.J. Bealer (Charles Laughton)
(nicknamed "the Pie Shaped Man") - a scruffy, unshaven,
weasely, conniving fixer, ex-patriate, and gang emissary with sore
feet, who offered Rigby a large cash "bribe" of $12,000
to keep out of the case: "Well, Mr. Rigby, it ain't going
to be any walkover for her taking care of a sick man. She's gonna
need help, cash help. A man with cash sure could set himself up
in business with her and the man who gets there firstest - Eleven
thousand, Mr. Rigby, top dollar for the job. Say? Who are you protecting?
A bunch of dumb taxpayers who will get it in the neck anyhow? Get
smart, Mr. Rigby. Everybody grafts nowadays. That's the way people
operate. Twelve thousand, Mr. Rigby. I don't get a lot out of this.
Every cent, every red cent, I need it. Say, you ain't giving me
that business anymore, are ya? You aren't even talking to me. Why?
Why ain't you brushing me off with your fast chatter? Well, why
ain't you getting up and walking away? Something holding you? What,
Mr. Rigby?"
- the scene of the planned death of Rigby during a marlin
fishing trip on a chartered boat with suave playboyish tourist and
mine owner Carwood (Vincent Price) - in reality, a leering, diabolic
racketeer-smuggling mastermind; young native guide and boatman Emilio
Gomez (Tito Renaldo) was the one who lost his life in shark-infested
waters when he dove in to rescue Rigby - who had been deliberately
tossed into the water by Carwood at the wheel
- the romantic kissing scene on a beach after a fun
moonlight swim between Rigby and Elizabeth when they compared their
natures: Elizabeth: "I'm spoiled. You're careful. We sound like
a couple of Dick Tracy characters"; she asked about the previous
women in his life when compared to herself: "Your girls, all
plump and rosy?" - she complimented him as "a nice guy" -
and was sorry he had been unlucky in love; and then she directly
asked: "Rigby, why haven't you tried to kiss me?"; he accepted
her invitation, but then she wanted to cool him off: "No, please,
just once...maybe even that was too much. I think I'd better go home";
he grabbed her for another embrace: "Why not? Nobody's ever
thought of a better way of saying good-night"; she rationalized: "It
would just be an anti-climax. You see, you've already been kissed
goodbye"; he replied that he wished he had known their first
kiss was a 'goodbye' kiss ("When I kiss somebody goodbye, I
like to know in advance. I do better"); before leaving, she
told him: "It wouldn't have made any difference if you'd known.
It wouldn't make me see you again"; in voice-over, Rigby noted: "Which
way was it with her? Was it the way you wanted it to be, with her
on the level, not knowing about him? Or was she just trying to play
it smart? If that was it, she was making it. She got to ya. She got
to ya good. You knew you should keep away from her"
- the spectacular, visually-stunning finale - the film's
highlight included a nighttime chase scene and shootout between Carwood
and Rigby during a Fiesta de Carlotta fireworks celebration, in which
Rigby gunned down Carwood in the abdomen in self-defense (amidst
a shower of sparks)
- in the film's conclusion, Rigby arrived at the now-widowed
Elizabeth's home to romance her (and receive a kiss from her) - Carwood
had killed her husband for talking too much; the wounded Bealer on
the stairway saw the two kissing and asked Rigby: "What happened
to Carwood? When you get around to it, Mr. Rigby, you might call
a cop" - the film's final line
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Federal Secret Service Agent Rigby (Robert Taylor)
Rigby Offered A 'Bribe' by Gang Fixer Bealer
Carwood After Shark Attack on Boatman Emilio
Rigby with Elizabeth After Moonlight Swim
Climactic Shoot-out Between Rigby and Carwood During Fireworks
and Fiesta
Rigby with Elizabeth in the Finale
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