Plot Synopsis (continued)
In a billowing bathrobe, an insecure, nagging, cloying,
and jealous Charlotte comes searching for Humbert. She discovers
that he has locked himself in the bathroom, where he scribbles in
his diary about the wedding. Possessive of his personal thoughts
and behaviors, she solicits him to open up the door to her and questions
him about his pre-marital love life:
Charlotte: Dear, the door is locked. Sweetheart,
I don't want any secrets between us. It makes me feel insecure.
Humbert: Can't this wait 'til I come out of here?
Charlotte: I suppose. Hum, what do you do in there so long? I want
to talk to you.
Humbert: I haven't been here long. In point of fact, I only just
came in.
Charlotte: Were there a lot of women in your life before me?
Humbert: I've told you about them already.
Charlotte: Well, you didn't tell me about all of them.
Humbert: Charlotte, if it would make you any happier, I will sit
right down and I will make out a complete list of every woman I have
ever known. Will that satisfy you?
Charlotte: (groaning off-key in a miserable way) Ohh, I'm lonesome...I
think it's healthy for me to be jealous. It means that I love you.
You know how happy I can make you. (He answers her with a low-toned
acknowledgment)
She bursts in on him after he has escaped from the
bathroom and attempted to return the diary to his desk in the study
(his lodger's bedroom).
Charlotte: (proclaiming dramatically for the most
effect) Darling, I don't care about any other woman. I know that
our love is sacred. The others were profane. (She hugs him)
Humbert: Yeah, sacred. That's right. That's what it is, hmmm.
Charlotte: Oh Hum, hum-baby, you know, I love the way you smell.
(They return to the bedroom) You do arouse the pagan in me. Hum,
you just touch me, and I-I go as limp as a noodle. It scares me.
Humbert: Yes, I know the feeling.
Charlotte: Do you believe in God?
Humbert: The question is, 'does God believe in me?'
[Humbert's line: "Yes, I know the feeling" about
going limp after being touched was intended as a dirty joke, and
caused some concern with the Production Code.] She reaches into the
dresser beneath the urn in their bedroom and shows him her dead husband's
black pistol, mentioning: "But if I ever found out that you
didn't believe in God, I think I would commit suicide."
Assuring Humbert that it isn't loaded, she fondles the phallic-like
object, whining unhappily: "This is a Sacred Weapon, it's a tragic
treasure. Mr. Haze purchased it when he found out he was ill. He wanted
to spare me the sight of his suffering. Happily or unhappily, he, he
was hospitalized before he could use it." He embraces and kisses
her on the bed - they roll over and Humbert looks adoringly over his
wife's shoulder at a framed, bedside photograph of Lolita smiling back
- his fantasy love-object:
Charlotte: (confiding) Darling, you know, I have
a most ambitious fantasy.
Humbert: What's yours?
Charlotte: (looking upward and fantasizing) I would love to get hold
of a real French servant girl (Humbert looks again at the photo),
you know...and have her come live in the house...We could put her
in Lo's room. I've been meanin' to make a guest room out of that
hole, anyway.
Humbert: And where, pray, will you put your daughter, when you get
your guest or your maid?
Charlotte: You know, I've decided to send her straight from camp
to a good boarding school, you know, with strict religious training,
and then on to college. It's going to be you and me, alone forever.
Charlotte's designs on her daughter's life sound like
a death knell for Humbert - he looks over at the distant, out of
reach photograph again - this time with a haunted, desperate look
- she senses his reaction: "Darling, you've gone away." Thunder
sounds again as he rolls away from her and turns to his other side.
There, he glances at the gun, entertaining a fleeting thought to
kill her.
Lolita calls long-distance on the phone from camp at
another inopportune time. Charlotte scolds Humbert for sending Lolita
some candy without her approval, and he snaps back at his over-bearing,
unwanted spouse for treating him like a lap dog:
Even in the most harmonious households such as ours,
not all the decisions are taken by the female. Especially when
the male partner has fulfilled his obligations beyond the line
of duty. When you wanted me to spend one afternoon sun-bathing
by the lake, I was glad to become the bronze, glamour boy for your
sake, instead of remaining the scholar. Even there, I'd scoot along
after you like an obliging little lap dog -- oh yes, I'm happy,
I'm delighted to be bossed by you, but -- every game has its rules.
She tosses the phone to him and storms out of the room
- Lolita has already hung up on the other end of the line. He sits
on the edge of the bed with his hairy legs protruding from his silky
dressing gown, drinks more whiskey straight from the bottle, and
looks down the muzzle of the pistol and notices bullets in the barrel
of his predecessor's weapon - it IS loaded! He opens the pistol's
cylinder and accidentally drops the bullets out onto the floor while
contemplating with murderous instincts how to rid himself of her
and
"bring about the perfect murder."
Meanwhile, Charlotte has fled to the bathroom, where
the door stands slightly ajar. Hot, steaming water fills the bathtub.
After stealthily advancing there, he points the gun barrel directly
toward the camera into the bathroom:
She splashed in the tub, a trustful, clumsy seal.
And oh, the logic of passion screamed in my ear. Now is the time,
but...what d'ya know, folks? I just couldn't make myself do it!
The scream grew more and more remote, and I realized the melancholy
fact that neither tomorrow nor Friday nor any other day or night
could I make myself put her to death.
Helplessly unable to kill her, he lowers the gun and
slowly pushes the door open - but she is NOT in the bathroom. She
is in his study, discovering his secret imaginary passion for Lolita,
and busily prying into his diary with intense interest. She hits
him with it and hisses hysterically at him, repeating what she has
read:
The Haze woman...the cow...the obnoxious Mama...the
brainless baba...Well, the stupid Haze is no longer your dupe....You're
a monster. You're a disgusting, despicable, loathsome...fraud.
Get out of my way...I'm leaving here today. You can have all of
it. But you are never gonna see that miserable brat again!
Brought back to earth from her own imaginary world,
Charlotte stumbles back to her bedroom and locks herself in, while
Humbert beseechingly pleads outside. Unsteadily, she holds up the
diary to her husband's picture and urn and blubbers to him in a moving
soliloquy. She praises Harold for his "soul of integrity"
and tells him about the discovery of her own monstrous stupidity:
Harold, look what happened! I was disloyal to you.
I couldn't help it, though. Seven years is a very long time. (She
screams directly at the urn) Why did you go and die on me?! I didn't
know anything about life. I was very young. If you hadn't died,
all this wouldn't have happened. (She picks up the urn and hugs
it) Oh, darling, forgive me. Forgive me. You were the soul of integrity.
How did we produce such a little beast? I promise, I promise, I
promise you that I'll know better next time. Next time, it's gonna
be somebody you'll be very proud of.
Downstairs, Humbert mixes up a pitcher-sized drink
of martinis, yelling spinned rationalizations upstairs to his distraught
wife about how his diary contained "fragments of a novel" he
was writing, with characters that had Charlotte's and Lolita's names.
When he answers the phone, he incredulously listens to what he assumes
is "a gag." He calls upstairs to Charlotte, whom he left
locking herself in her bedroom: "Charlotte, there's a man on
the line who says that you've been hit by a car." The windy
rainstorm blows open the front door, and as he runs to shut it, he
hears a wailing state police car's siren at the front of the house.
Humbert arrives at the aftermath of a bizarre, random accident scene
- Charlotte has been killed by running out of the house and into
the path of an oncoming automobile in the street. As neighbors mill
around, the driver frantically explains how it occurred. Charlotte's
corpse lies on the wet road with a blanket covering her, before she
can reveal his secret obsession.
Following Charlotte's death and all the obstacles to
Lolita seemingly removed, Humbert is delightfully lounging and submerged
in a very-full bathtub, where he sips from a martini glass that floats
on the surface of the water. The 'Lolita' theme music rises throughout
the farcical scene. The concerned and anxious neighbors, Jean and
John Farlow, rush up the stairs and begin to burst into the bathroom
- the soused Humbert pulls the tropical-fish shower curtain over
for some privacy. "Broad-minded" Jean averts her eyes when
she sees him bathing in the tub. Offering condolences, they encourage
him to "hang on,"
not knowing that he isn't really in a state of shock. Jean consoles
a seemingly-shocked but contented Humbert with unneeded words of comfort:
She was a wonderful person, Humbert. She was always
so gay, wasn't she, John?
When they spot the pistol in the bathroom, John concludes
that the widower is suicidal and nervously advises: "Now see
here, old man. You mustn't think of doing anything rash." Jean
pipes up with more support: "You have everything to live for,
hasn't he, John?..." And then Humbert is told that Charlotte
hadn't long to live anyway - she was born with only one kidney, and
it was
"distressed" with nephritis. Blearily, Humbert concurs with
Jean's next statement:
Try to think of your poor little Lolita, all alone
in the world. You must live for her sake.
The father of the driver of the car that killed Charlotte
also arrives to tactlessly defend his son: "It was the pedestrian's
fault, not the driver."
Humbert graciously agrees without argument: "I have no quarrel
with you."
Impressed by Humbert's attitude, the father generously offers: "Well,
I must say you're wonderfully sympathetic - in fact, you've been so
generous about the whole matter, I was about to suggest that maybe
you would allow me to pay the funeral expenses...That's the least I
can do."
Humbert, now Lolita's official guardian, drives the
Haze station wagon to pick her up from summer camp. The aptly-named
camp sign welcomes him: "CAMP CLIMAX FOR GIRLS - Drive Carefully." Humbert
chats with one of the few males at the camp, a smug teenaged guy
named Charlie (Colin Maitland) who lives on the campgrounds and works
there.
Wanting to avoid telling gum-chewing Lolita the truth
about her deceased mother as they drive along the highway, Humbert
explains instead that Charlotte
"hasn't been feeling very well...she's sick...the doctors don't
seem to know quite what the trouble is. She's been moved to a hospital
in the country, near Lepingsville." They will have to "bide" their
time until Charlotte gets well by going to the mountains for a while,
but first, they will have to spend the night in a "comfortable
hotel" in Briceland.
Humbert confesses his love for the not-so-naive Lolita:
Humbert: You know, I've missed you terribly.
Lolita: I haven't missed you. In fact, I've been revoltingly unfaithful
to you.
Humbert: Oh.
Lolita: But it doesn't matter a bit, because you've stopped caring
anyway.
Humbert: What makes you say I've stopped caring for you?
Lolita: Well, you haven't even kissed me yet, have you?
The roaring zoom of their car passing accentuates her
forthright, come-hither line.
At the Enchanted Hunters Hotel, Quilty crosses the
lobby with the unsmiling, dark-haired woman. He jokes and meaninglessly
kids around with the night manager Mr. Swine (William E. Greene)
about their perverse love of painful judo - it's a conversation filled
with sexual innuendo:
Quilty: She's a yellow belt. I'm a green belt. That's
the way nature made it. What happens is, she throws me all over
the place.
Mr. Swine: She throws you all over the place?
Quilty: Yes. What she does, she gets me in a, sort of, thing called
a sweeping ankle throw. She sweeps my ankles away from under me.
I go down with one helluva bang.
Mr. Swine: Doesn't it hurt?
Quilty: Well, I sort of lay there in pain, but I love it. I really
love it. I lay there hovering between consciousness and unconsciousness.
It's really the greatest.
Humbert and Lolita enter the lobby, which Lolita immediately
takes in: "Wow, this looks swank!" The sinister Quilty
and the woman move to the other end of the registration desk to spy
on them. Humbert converses with the desk clerk to sign in, but without
a reservation during a busy convention, he willingly accepts the
only room available for his planned 'seduction' - Room # 242 -
"it's only got one bed." Quilty inconspicuously overhears
their dilemma. To maintain an aura of propriety, Humbert asks for a
folding cot or camp bed, but there are none available. When he is told
that the hotel is proud to entertain the "overflow of the state
police convention," [a banner ominously announces:
"Annual State Police Convention"] Humbert takes a slight
pause.
After they are brought to their room with the luggage,
Lolita turns to Humbert and asks in a disarming tone:
Lolita: Is, uh, this it?
Humbert: You mean, uh...
Lolita: Yeah.
Humbert: Well, yes. (She drapes herself over the bed crosswise.)
You see, I-I-I-I-I, I'm quite sure that they'll manage to find a
cot for us. I asked them downstairs in the lobby to find a cot.
Lolita: A cot?
Humbert: Yes.
Lolita: You're crazy.
Humbert: Why, my darling?
Lolita: (Her slim legs are raised up and crossed in mid-air behind
her. Humbert notices as she pushes her high heels off her feet -
first with one foot, then the other.) Because, my darling, when my
darling mother finds out, she's going to divorce you and strangle
me.
Humbert: Yes, now look, now. (He places his hands on hers to assure
her.) I have a great feeling of, um, tenderness for you. While your
mother is ill, I'm responsible for your welfare. We're not rich,
but while we travel, we should be obliged - we should be thrown a
good deal together - two people sharing one room inevitably enter
into a kind of, um, how should I say? A kind of, hmm...(He notices
her kicking off her shoes.)
Lolita: (in a tired, yawning voice, yet in charge of the situation)
Aren't you going to go down and see about the cot?
While she retires after having suggested that he sleep
elsewhere, he wanders around the hotel lobby where Quilty and the
woman spy on him and then freeze behind the comics section of a newspaper.
Humbert goes outside onto a shadowy, dark terrace, where a strange,
nervous, shy Quilty introduces himself as he leans on the porch's
railing with his back turned. [Quilty has sensed Humbert's guilty
secret and has decided to disturb him while pursuing the couple.]
In a jittery voice, he offers some unsettling responses:
Quilty: Hello, heh-heh, heh-heh. Hello.
Humbert: (non-chalantly) Oh, you're addressing me?...I thought there
was perhaps someone with you.
Quilty: No, I'm not really with someone. I'm with you, heh-heh.
I didn't mean that as an insult. What I really meant was that, uh,
I'm with the State Police, uh, here, and, uh, when I'm with them,
I'm with someone, but right now, I'm on my own. I mean, I'm not with
a lot of people, just you. Heh.
Humbert: Well, I wouldn't like to disturb you. I'll leave you alone
if you prefer it.
Quilty replies with an ambiguous, fast-delivered, menacing,
probing monologue that appears casual, but has a threatening, calculated,
cold edge to it. As he intrudes further into Humbert's affairs and
torments the paranoid professor with his improvised speech, his disguised
prattle implies that Humbert is abnormal and suspicious. And Quilty
incriminates himself - he could be a policeman, a concerned citizen,
a homosexual making advances, or Humbert's foil - another nymphet-o-maniac:
No, you don't really have to go at all. I like it,
you know, because, uh, I don't know what it is. I sort of get the
impression that you want to leave but you don't like to leave because
maybe you think I'd think it'd look suspicious, me being a policeman...You
don't have to think that, because, uh, I haven't really got a suspicious
mind at all. I look suspicious myself. A lot of people think I'm
suspicious, especially when I stand around on street corners. One
of our own boys picked me up the other week - he thought I was
too suspicious standing on a street corner and everything. Tell
me something, uhm, I couldn't help noticing when you checked in
tonight. It's part of my job - I notice human individuals - and
I noticed your face. I said to myself when I saw you - I said,
'That's a guy with the most normal-looking face I ever saw in my
life'...It's great to see a normal face, because I'm a normal guy.
It would be great for two normal guys like us to get together and
talk about world events - you know, in a normal sort of way...May
I say one other thing to you? It's really on my mind. I've been
thinking about it quite a lot. I noticed when you was checking
in, you had a lovely, pretty little girl with you. She was really
lovely. As a matter of fact, she wasn't so little, come to think
of it. She was fairly tall, what I mean, taller than little, you
know what I mean. But, uh, she was really lovely. I wish I had
a lovely, pretty tall, lovely little girl like that, I mean...Your
daughter? Gee, isn't it great to have a lovely, tall, pretty little,
small daughter like that, it's really wonderful. I don't have any
children, boys or little tall girls or anything. I'm not even...Heh-heh,
may I say something? I thought you was looking a little uneasy
at the desk there. Maybe I was thinking that you want to get away
from your wife for a little while. I don't blame you. If I was
married, I'd take every opportunity to get away from my wife.
Humbert's face shows consternation, taken somewhat
aback by the muddled, semi-prying, smothering nature of Quilty's
innuendo-laden statements. Humbert explains that his wife may not
join him, because when he left home, she had just "had an accident."
Quilty: That's really terrible. I mean, fancy a fella's
wife having, a normal guy's wife having an accident like that.
What happened to her?
Humbert: She was hit by a car.
Quilty: Gee, no wonder she's not here. Gee, you must feel pretty
bad about that. (stuttering) What's happening? Is she coming on later
or something?
Humbert: Well, that was the understanding.
Quilty: What? In an ambulance? Heh-heh. Gee, I'm sorry, I shouldn't
say that. I get sorta carried away, you know, being so normal and
everything. Tell me, umm, when you were standing there at the desk
checkin' in with the night manager, Mr. George Swine, who I happen
to know as a personal friend of mine, umm, I was wondering if, uh,
he fixed you up with, uh, sort of good accommodation here...You're
quite sure about that, because, I mean, I could really easily have
a word with George Swine. Uh, I mean, he's a really nor-normal nice
sorta guy and I've only got to have a normal word in his ear and
you'd be surprised what things could happen from a thing like that.
I mean, he-he'd probably go and turn some of the troopers out so
you could have a lovely room - a bridal suite for you and
your lovely little girl.
Humbert: No, please, I don't want you to take any trouble on my account.
We're perfectly comfortable.
Quilty: But he should do it. It's his job to fix you up with something
nice, I mean, you know, he gets paid for doing that thing (stuttering)
and when he sees a guy like you coming in, all normal and everything,
with a lovely little girl beside him, he should say to himself, 'Gee,
I've got to give that guy a lovely sorta comfortable foamy bed to
sleep in.' I mean, you know, I just don't like to hear things like
that happening because I could go over and really take a swipe at
him for not giving you a lovely, comfortable, sleepy, movie-star
bed. You know what I mean, heh, I mean, you know, what has he got
ya? On the floor or something?
Humbert: Well, the little girl is probably asleep already - in the
bed - and, uh...(laughter) I don't know why we're discussing this
because...
Quilty: Listen, why don't you let me have a look at the room - at
the accommodation that you have, now, and-and-and- really take it
in for a second - and then I could come down and have a word with
George Swine? It would be so simple.
As a result of Quilty's long-winded cross-examination,
delay tactics, and numerous intimidating references about being a
policeman, and having a suspicious nature and close connections to
the hotel staff, Humbert excuses himself from being further entangled.
He begins to return upstairs to his room. As a final harrassment,
Quilty neatly summarizes for Humbert how he has influenced him to
lay aside his plans to seduce Lolita:
You're going because you maybe think that, uh, me
being a policeman and everything, I think you're sorta suspicious.
I-I don't think that at all. I think you're really normal and everything.
You don't have to go because of that...You have a most interesting
face. Goodnight.
In the following slapstick sequence for comic relief,
Humbert tries to persuade the black hotel clerk to return the rollaway
cot. However, they decide to quietly wheel the uncooperative bed
into the room without disturbing Lolita - she is sleeping in the
room's only bed and brightly illuminated by the moonlight - her face
and hair are lovingly-photographed. They struggle with the unyielding,
disjointed apparatus for a while until it is successfully set up.
Humbert contemplates crawling in bed with Lolita - he gingerly and
carefully folds back the covers and begins climbing in with one knee.
Awakened, she stirs and sits up: "Hello. (She yawns and notices
the cot.) The cot came...Well, goodnight." She stretches out
on the entire bed, implicitly chasing him away a second time.
Humbert
resigns himself to sleeping alone on the recalcitrant cot and slowly
shuffles over to it. The creaky, unstable, anti-human rollaway collapses under
his weight after he stretches out - so has his plans to sleep with
Lolita! |