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Lady in the Lake (1947)
In director/star Robert Montgomery's film-noir murder
mystery - his directorial debut film - it was a Christmas-themed
classic crime noir adapted from Raymond Chandler 1944 novel of the
same name by Chandler himself. It featured a unique and unusual gimmick - an experimental and revolutionary
perspective known as "subjective camera"; the
main hard-boiled detective protagonist was off-camera for most of
the film, although sometimes viewed in mirrors. Everything was seen
or viewed from his first-person POV or perspective.
The mystery plot was very convoluted and twisting -
difficult to follow at times. It basically involved a search for
a missing, promiscuous wife who had allegedly run off to Mexico with
a handsome, gigolo boyfriend named Chris Lavery. The quest for the
missing woman ("Chrystal Kingsby") was instigated by a gold-digging femme fatale who
had ulterior motives to marry Chrystal's rich husband - her own boss Derace Kingsby.
[Note: Astute viewers would have noted a crucial
clue - the on-screen credit for Ellay Mort as murder victim "Chrystal
Kingsby" who was never seen on-screen, was a French pun: "Elle
est mort" translated: 'She is dead.']
The detective's search discovered that the wife might
be responsible for the murder of a mysterious "lady in the lake" found
near a summer cabin near Little Fawn Lake owned by Kingsby. The victim
was initially identified as 'Muriel Chess' - the wife of Kingsby's
cabin caretaker Bill Chess, and he was charged with the crime. A
key discovery was that Muriel had another name - Mildred Havelend.
Soon after, Lavery's suspicious landlord 'Mrs. Falbrook' was seen
just before Lavery's shower murder. It was up to Marlowe to fit the
pieces together and discover who was behind the murders (involving
switched identities, a deadly love-triangle, and a double-cross)
- and to discover the deadly motives of 'Mrs. Falbrook' (with her
many aliases).
- after the title credits (with a choir singing 'Jingle
Bells'), in the film's opening prologue set in private detective Phillip Marlowe's
(Robert Montgomery) office in 1940s Hollywood, he spoke directly
to the audience - smashing the 4th wall. Fed up with his low-paying
profession as a PI, he decided he wanted to write and publish his
own script for a murder story. It was titled "If
I Should Die Before I Live" - the story was "based on an
authentic case" that he had investigated, in retrospect. He planned
to sell it for a profit to a lurid, horror-story pulp magazine:
- "...Right
now, you're reading in newspapers and hearing over your radios
about a murder. They call it "The Case of the Lady in
the Lake." It's
a good title. It fits. What you've read and what you've heard
is one thing. The real thing is something else. There's only
one guy who knows that. I know it. This "Lady in the Lake" business
started just three days before Christmas. I was tired of being
pushed around for nickels and dimes so I decided I'd write about
murder. It's safer. And besides, they tell me the profits are
good. So I pounded out a story - on that - and I sent it up
to the Kingsby Publications, Incorporated, specialists in gore."
- he cautioned and also challenged
the viewing audience to look for clues,
to try and solve the who-dun-it, step-by-step:
- "You'll see
it just as I saw it. You'll meet the people, you'll find the
clues and maybe you'll solve it quick, and maybe you won't.
You think you will? Okay, you're smart. But let me give you
a tip. You've got to watch them. You've got to watch them all
the time. Because things happen when you least expect them"
- the intriguing, twisting plot began in the office
of Kingsby Publications, Incorporated, where Marlowe met with the
pulp magazine publisher's conniving, self-interested, tough-girl
and witchy career woman Adrienne Fromsett (Audrey Totter)
- the film's manipulative femme
fatale; the female editor-assistant had contacted him on false pretenses
- she was less interested in his manuscript than in hiring him
to investigate a case of a missing wife ("without his knowing you're
looking for her"), the
promiscuous, month-long estranged Chrystal Kingsby (Ellay
Mort); Chrystal had been married for 10 years to Adrienne's own
boss - millionaire editor-in-chief Derace Kingsby (Leon Ames); Adrienne
was eager for Kingsby to begin divorce proceedings against Chrystal,
or to find Chrystal dead, so that she could marry her boss
- Adrienne viciously pre-judged Chrystal: "She's
run off with another man. She's a vicious woman. A liar, a cheat,
and a thief. She may even end up in the hands of the police."
- [Note:
Early on, Marlowe considered Adrienne "cold-blooded." He
suspected that the self-interested, gold-digging Adrienne had her
own romantic sights set on marrying the wealthy Kingsby: "I
have an allergy against getting mixed up with tricky females who
want to knock off the boss's wife and marry him for themselves."]
- however, the well-known detective Marlowe accepted
Adrienne's second offer of $500 for his "authentic" manuscript that she
described as "so full of life and vigor and heart"
- in the office, one of the film's interesting camera
angles (Marlowe's eyes) followed the publisher's
receptionist - a flirtatious blonde bombshell (Lila Leeds)
- Adrienne invited Marlowe to her apartment to discuss
the matter further: (Adrienne: "I wonder
how it would be to discuss this over a couple of ice cubes. Would
you care to try?" Marlowe: "lmagine you needing ice cubes")
- at her place, Marlowe found
an obviously well-displayed copy of a recent telegram from Chrystal
to Derace (her husband) declaring that she had run off to Juarez,
Mexico two months earlier with muscle-bound, smarmy, smooth-talking
gigolo boyfriend Chris Lavery (Dick Simmons), in order to divorce
Derace and marry Lavery. Adrienne declared the telegram on her
desk as a fake or "phony" - and Marlowe agreed. She claimed she had recently spoken to Lavery
who denied the accusation: "I ran into Chris Lavery last week
and he said he hadn't seen Chrystal Kingsby for two months"
- Marlowe visited the residence of Chrystal's
gigolo lover Chris Lavery in his Bay City house,
who denied knowing anything and any accusations of wrong-doing: "I
haven't seen her in a month of Sundays...I don't hanker for any part
of her. Not for all the money in the world." Feeling insulted
by Marlowe's attitude and questioning, Lavery abruptly punched him
in the face - rendering him unconscious
Chris Lavery (Dick Simmons)
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Lavery's Punch to Marlowe's Face
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- Marlowe awoke in a police jail cell with a black
right eye, and was briefly questioned by two Bay City police detectives:
tough and belligerent Lieutenant DeGarmot (Lloyd Nolan) and Captain
Fergus K. Kane (Tom Tully). He was charged with being found drunk
in his car (a DUI) that had run over the curb (Lavery's set-up),
before his release by Captain Kane
- Marlowe again spoke to Adriennne in her office (during
a 2nd visit), who gave him a tip to visit Kingsby's summer retreat
cabin near Little Fawn Lake (in the mountains beyond Arrowhead),
where Chrystal was last seen; before leaving for the lake, the case
became even more complicated when Marlowe and Adrienne learned
that a female's drowned body was found in the lake ('the lady in the
lake'); the corpse was suspected to belong to Muriel Chess, the
wife of Kingsby's caretaker Bill Chess; Chess was charged with
murdering his wife Muriel; Adrienne suspected that the caretaker's
wife was murdered by Kingsby's wife Chrystal (who hated Muriel)
- after visiting the summer
resort area, Marlowe reported back to Adrienne at four in the morning
in her apartment - he told her that the body (submerged for almost
a month) was not Chrystal's; his main discovery was that the victim
Muriel Chess had another name - Mildred Havelend. She had recently
married Bill Chess because she was a fugitive from unknown circumstances
involving a "tough cop" ("She married Chess because
she wanted a place to hide. It seems that a tough cop was after
her") - was the "tough cop" DeGarmot?
- Marlowe also surmised that Mildred/Muriel had squabbled
with Chrystal over Chris Lavery's affections, and that Lavery was
a key figure in their disappearances ("That
ties him up with two missing women, Chrystal and Muriel"); as
Marlowe left, Adrienne warned him: "You'd be crazy to fall in
love with me, Marlowe"
- during a second visit to Lavery's unlocked house,
Marlowe encountered fast-talking Mrs. Fallbrook (Jayne Meadows),
the alleged landlady; she was coming down the stairs and
holding a gun in her hand (she said she found it on the stairs).
She claimed she was there to collect the overdue three months rent
check; after Mrs. Fallbrook left, upstairs, Marlowe searched and
discovered a handkerchief with Adrienne's monogram: "AF",
running water in Lavery's bathroom sink, bullet holes in the shower
door glass, and Lavery's corpse slumped on the shower floor (the
killer was presumably Mrs. Fallbrook who had come in through the
upstairs porch and surprised him)
- a private Christmas-Eve gift
party was in progress in the publishing office when Marlowe barged
in to speak privately to Adrienne, and informed her that
Lavery was shot dead with a gun that he produced; he was suspicious
that Adrienne's handkerchief was found on Lavery's dresser. When
Mr. Kingsby interrupted their conversation, he denounced Adrienne
for scheming and meddling in his private affairs regarding Chrystal,
and for using Marlowe to find her: "You had no right to meddle.
Chrystal is to be left alone to do what she wants to do....I won't
have you prying into my private affairs." He believed his
wife was innocent regarding Lavery's death, and wanted Adrienne
to quit interfering: ("If you think
you're going to harm Chrystal, you're very much mistaken"). He
promised to keep his relationship with Adrienne strictly business-related
in the future
- angered, the failed gold-digger
Adrienne fired Marlowe: ("You're off the case. There isn't any
case anymore"); However, on the way out, Marlowe was re-hired
by Kingsby to find his wife and exonerate her from any murder charges:
("I'd like to keep my wife out of it"). He stressed his
continuing love for his wife, with no plans for divorce: "But
the one thing I know is, I love my wife intensely."
- Marlowe returned to the scene of Lavery's death
with the gun; Lieutenant DeGarmot, one of the Bay City cops, had been called to the scene.
Marlowe suspected that he was the "tough cop" who had been asking
questions about Mildred/Muriel a few weeks earlier at the lake:
- "There was a fellow there a few weeks ago looking for Mildred Havelend.
He acted like a cop, I was told. A tough cop with bad manners, like
you...She and Muriel Chess were the same girl. She changed her name
because she was hiding out from this tough cop. Does it add up?...I
think this female had a shady past, and you knew something about
it"
- Marlowe was extremely suspicious of DeGarmot, who
knew both Mildred and Lavery - and both were now dead; after
a brief scuffle with DeGarmot, the cops unsuccessfully attempted
to charge Marlowe with Lavery's murder. Marlowe was brought downtown
by Capt. Kane, but was soon dismissed
- [Note: The key to the whole plot was the identity
of 'landlady' Mrs. Fallbrook. She was actually the supposedly-drowned
Muriel Chess/Mildred Havelend who had married Bill Chess, Kingsby's
caretaker, and then assumed the married name of Muriel Chess, in
order to hide her real identity as Mildred Havelend from the "tough
cop." It was now also more than likely that Chrystal was the
corpse in the lake, not Muriel.]
- later that evening, Adrienne visited Marlowe's hotel room,
hoping to encourage him to see her
more positively ("I thought you liked me"), although he was sarcastic toward her: "The
girl I like won't be editing a string of crime magazines, or looking
for a quick million bucks, or trying to hang a murder on another
woman"
- Marlowe dismissed Adrienne
when he received a phone call from an LA Chronicle reporter
with damaging information about Mildred's/Muriel's background.
Marlowe sought further information from some victim's parents,
the Graysons (Morris Ankrum and Kathleen Lockhart), in Bay City:
- Mildred was a nurse for a doctor in Bay City named
Almore
- the doctor's wife, Florence Almore, was found
dead
- the cop investigating the case was named DeGarmot,
who ruled the death was a suicide; it was a probable cover-up
to protect Mildred's guilt; Florence's parents - the Graysons
- disagreed with the ruling and thought it was murder, but
then were pressured, presumably by an intimidating DeGarmot,
to keep quiet
- afterwards, Mildred disappeared
- as Marlowe was driving off from the Graysons' home,
DeGarmot pursued him and ran Marlowe's car off the road, and he was
knocked unconscious. Although drenched in alcohol to appear DUI,
Marlowe was able to stagger to a gas station phone booth to call
Adrienne to rescue him and help him recover. She gladly cared for
the injured Marlowe in her apartment, when she admitted her love
for him (with the camera on her for a lengthy time) - on Christmas
Day. She vowed to abandon her evil ways to show her romantic affection for
the private detective:
- "We'd be fine together. In everything,
we'd be fine together if only you - just...I don't know. You don't
think I'm honest. I want you to know that I am...I want to take care
of you. Maybe it isn't glamorous, I don't know, but I want to be your
girl. That's what I want for Christmas. Don't laugh at me... (She kissed
him) It's just like you said that day. We're both alike. In everything
we're alike. We'll be fine together. We will, won't we? This is what
the world is really like, isn't it?"
Adrienne Taking in Marlowe to Help Him Recover
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Injured Marlowe Reflected in a Mirror
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Adrienne: "I want to take care of you"
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Leaning Forward With Her Eyes Closed For a Kiss
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- a frantic Kingsby arrived to find Marlowe. He reported
on an alleged demand by Chrystal (a telegram from Bay City) asking
for money. Although he suspected a trap, Marlowe volunteered to deliver
the $500 cash funds to her near a cocktail bar called The Peacock
Room
- a dark-haired woman led Marlowe
to her apartment - to his surprise, she was the 'landlady' Mrs. Fallbrook
- or Mildred, holding a gun on him. Marlowe explained his reasoning
about how Mildred had been involved in murdering Florence Almore,
the wife of her previous employer (a Bay City doctor) by asphyxiation
in her car. And that the missing Chrystal Kingsby was the corpse in
the lake:
- Marlowe: "The lady
in the lake, instead of being you, is Chrystal Kingsby. Is that
an accident?"
Mildred: "Yes. Chrystal and I traded clothes one night.
She had on my things, and I had on hers. We went across the lake to see if we
could fool my husband, Bill Chess, that was my husband."
Marlowe (deducing): "And Chrystal fell in the lake
and sank to the bottom."
- Mildred had made it look like
the corpse in the lake was her alter-ego Muriel Chess. Marlowe believed
that Mildred/Muriel and Chrystal had jealously fought over handsome
male Chris Lavery. This rivalry was clearly
Mildred's motive to kill Chrystal and make it look like Muriel was
the dead body in the lake, so she could run away with Lavery. After
Chrystal's drowning/murder, Mildred fled and ran away to El Paso -
and Lavery "was
the only one who knew the real identity of the lady in the lake" -
the reason that Mildred also eliminated him and killed him in the shower
- Marlowe also knew about love-struck
Lieutenant DeGarmot's romantic involvement with Mildred. Earlier,
the cop had partnered with Mildred to hide and cover up the murder
of Florence Almore. His covered-up investigation ruled that Almore's
death was a suicide. After the case closed, Mildred fled. She "double-crossed" DeGarmot
by abandoning him and changing her name to Muriel Chess (after marrying
Bill Chess, Kingsby's caretaker) with the intent to hide and get
away from the "tough cop"
- the final resolution came when
Lieut. DeGarmot unexpectedly arrived and knocked Marlowe to the floor.
He described his feelings of double-cross and betrayal by Mildred
after he had helped her to cover up the Almore murder. DeGarmot had
relentlessly tracked her down - and he now was finally able to
confront her face-to-face in her apartment. DeGarmot chastized her:
- "People
aren't safe with a woman like you in the world and people have
to be protected. I never expected to find you here tonight. I
thought you were dead. I wish you were, because you're a murderess.
And this time, dead's the way I'm gonna leave you....Yes I was
out of my mind the night that Florence Almore died (and) you
made a sucker out of me. Even after you ran away, I still loved
you. You made a clown outta me, a bad cop. But tonight's the
end of it, and of you."
- Marlowe attempted to dissuade DeGarmot: ("The
Almore case won't come up. They'll convict her for Chrystal's murder
or Lavery's. You'll be clear"), but DeGarmot's intention was
to kill both Marlowe and the deceitful Mildred with her gun and stage
it to look like she and Marlowe had shot each other, in order to
frame them for the other murders. DeGarmot shot her
multiple times - point-blank - in view of Marlowe, as she begged for
her life - to no avail: ("No. Please, please wait. Don't, honey.
Honey, we were gonna, we were gonna be a guy and his girl, that's
the way you said it, I remember those very words, I remember...All
our dreams can come true if you'll only just. Please! I love you,
remember, I'm your girl.")
- the crooked cop DeGarmot was then gunned down by Capt.
Kane and another officer through a window, before he could kill Marlowe
- at the end of the film after the case was solved,
Adrienne and Marlowe left NYC together to begin a serious romance
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Introduction of the Plot by Phillip Marlowe (Robert Montgomery)
Adrienne Fromsett (Audrey Totter) in the Publishing Office
The Camera's POV Following a Flirtatious Blond
Office Receptionist
Adrienne with Her Wealthy Boss Derace Kingsby (Leon Ames)
Adrienne Speaking to Marlowe in the Publishing Office (Mirror Reflection)
Fake Telegram in Chrystal's Apartment - About Chrystal's Divorce, and Her Planned
Marriage in Mexico to Chris Lavery
Tough Cop Lt. DeGarmot (Lloyd Nolan)
(l to r): Capt. Kane (Tom Tully) and Lt. DeGarmot
Adrienne in Her Office - During 2nd Visit From Marlowe
Marlowe
Visiting Adrienne at Her Apartment After a Trip to Little Fawn Lake
to Report on His Discoveries
The Deadly Landlady 'Mrs. Fallbrook' (Jayne Meadows)
(aka Mildred Havelend, or Muriel Chess) - Who Was Eventually Unmasked
as the Killer of Both Chrystal and Chris Lavery
Lavery Shot Dead in Shower
Private Christmas Party - Marlowe Confronted by Adrienne and Mr. Kingsby
Adrienne in Marlowe's Hotel Room
Marlowe's Conversation With The Graysons - A Crucial Piece
of the Puzzle
The Lady Demanding $500 Was Not Chrystal, but Mildred!
Lieut. DeGarmot's Anger at Mildred for Being Double-Crossed - He Shot
Her to Death, and then Died Himself
Marlowe and Adrienne Together in the Conclusion
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