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Mildred
Pierce (1945)
In director Michael Curtiz' classic melodramatic post-war
film-noir - it was a gritty tale of greed, mother-daughter love,
and murder. The noir was mixed
with typical soap-operish elements of the woman's melodramatic
picture or "weeper," including a strand of a typical
but intriguing murder mystery mostly told by a three-part flashback
structure. The family melodrama was significantly modified from
its original source due to pressures of the Production Code regarding
its sordidness - namely, the incestual behavior of the dissolute
playboy character named Monte.
The title character was a hard-working, neurotically-devoted,
long-suffering and determined mother who had a status-seeking, spoiled,
detestable and mean-spirited, unloving daughter. Mildred's
ruinous but noble downfall occurred as the result of poor choices
of men (including her dull, middle-class broker husband Bert) and
her caring for an ungrateful and monstrously selfish daughter.
This film, a tremendous box-office hit and critical
success, was an adaptation by Ranald MacDougall and Catherine Turney
(and William Faulkner) of James M. Cain's 1941 'hard-boiled' novel
of the same name. The gripping and cynical film with six Academy Awards nominations, but Joan Crawford
won the film's sole Academy Award Oscar (it was also her sole Academy
Award win out of three career nominations) as Best Actress for her title
role. The film was Joan Crawford's comeback film after a two-year absence.
The film's taglines described Mildred's character:
"The kind of woman most men want...
but shouldn't have!" and "Offered more in a glance than most
women give in a lifetime!"
- during the title credits sequence, oceanfront waves
washed over and wiped away each of the screens
- in the startling opening nighttime Beragon beach
house murder scene - two-timing cad playboy Monte Beragon (Zachary
Scott), Mildred's second husband, was shot to death with six shots
heard in a rhythmic tempo in a dark and shadowy beach house - by
an unidentified, unknown and unseen assailant, as he uttered the
film's first word: "Mildred!";
the gun was tossed by his side as he lay sprawled on the living room
floor, and a car took off from the scene
- in the next scene after a dissolve, the prime suspect,
fur-coated Mildred Pierce (Oscar-winning Joan Crawford) walked
on a Santa Monica, CA pier where she was saved from suicide by
a patrolling cop: ("You take a swim, I'd have to take a swim. Is that fair? Just because
you feel like bumpin' yourself off, I gotta get pneumonia? Never
thought about that, did ya? OK. Think about it. Go on, beat it now.
Go on home before we both take a swim")
- possibly seen as the film's femme
fatale, the very upset Mildred happened to meet her former
business associate and real estate entrepreneur Wally Fay (Jack
Carson) - the manager of a dingy pier restaurant; after a stiff
drink, she lured him back to the crime scene where her husband
had been murdered; after Mildred set him up and escaped from
the beach house by running along the beach, Wally searched the
house and discovered the body; as he broke out of the house, he
was spotted by a passing squad car, and he told the inquisitive
cop: "There's a stiff in there"
Wally Fay (Jack Carson) At the Beach House with
Mildred After the Shooting
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Wally's Discovery of Monte's Dead Body
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Wally Confronted by Police Outside
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- after returning home by taxi, Mildred found her distressed
19 year-old daughter Veda Pierce (Ann Blyth) with two trench-coated
detectives; she was told the official news: "It's your husband.
He's been murdered"
- in the middle of the night in LA's Main Office of
the Criminal Division, Mildred was brought for
questioning by Inspector Peterson (Moroni Olsen), who assured her
that they didn't need her anymore: "Oh you're in the clear,
Mrs. Beragon. The case is on ice. You can go now"; off-screen,
Mildred's guilty-looking ex-husband Bert Pierce (Bruce Bennett)
whom she had divorced four years earlier, had confessed to the crime;
the gun that committed the murder belonged to Pierce, and he didn't
deny killing Beragon
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Mildred Was Brought to the Police Station For Questioning
by Inspector Peterson (Moroni Olsen) - Her Ex-Husband Bert Pierce
(Bruce Bennett) Took the Blame
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- there were three major flashback scenes to fill
in the details of the last four years of Mildred's life; in the
first flashback, Mildred recalled some of the unfolding events
that led to the breakup of her first marriage with Bert; she was
married, at age 17, to Bert Pierce - a real-estate broker; she
was a doting middle-class house-wife and super-mom to her children
in a clean, suburban home in Glendale; the
hardworking, dowdy mother obsessively doted
on her two daughters, especially spoiled-rotten and selfish elder
16 year-old daughter Veda
- Mildred was seen to have an obsessive mother-daughter
love as a long-suffering, sacrificial mother figure for her
ungrateful and venomous 16 year-old femme fatale daughter
Veda; she had contributed to her daughter's unappreciative and slutty
behavior for a long time; Veda had been indulgently showered with
gifts, nice clothes, and piano lessons, provided by Mildred's sacrificial
work baking pies and cakes, although Veda was embarrassed by her
mother's work and attempts to become independent
Mildred's Sacrificial and Obsessive Mother-Daughter
Love for Veda
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- Mildred's unhappy marriage
dissolved (first with a separation and then a divorce) on account
of suspicions of Bert's unfaithfulness, and their differences over
the unbalanced, smothering, obsessive, insistent maternal love
of Mildred for her spoiled daughter; she was instantly courted by
a more prosperous Wally (Bert's ex-business partner), but she regularly
fended off and repulsed his crude advances
- to earn money for her family now that Bert had exited,
Mildred took a job waiting tables in a downtown
restaurant, hired by her future wisecracking
friend Ida (Eve Arden), in addition to baking pies;
she became a proficient worker, and also established a moonlighting
side business of pie-baking for the restaurant; her work basically
supported and kept Veda well-supplied with lessons
- the embarrassed
Veda, who felt that Mildred wasn't up to supporting a more luxurious
lifestyle for her, found Mildred's hidden restaurant uniform in her
closet kept a secret from her; she judgmentally delivered harsh
words to Mildred about her lowly restaurant job: "My
mother, a waitress!"; Mildred defended herself to her ungrateful,
status-conscious daughter: ("I took
the only job I could get so you and your sister could eat and have
a place to sleep and some clothes on your backs")
- during their confrontation, Veda snapped back about
their "common" upbringing: ("Aren't
the pies bad enough? Did you have to degrade us?...l'm really not
surprised. You've never spoken of your people, where you came from,
so perhaps it's natural. Maybe that's why Father...") - Mildred
slapped her daughter, but then apologized: ("l never would
have taken the job if l hadn't wanted to keep us all together. Besides,
l wanted to learn the business the best way possible...the restaurant
business"); the aspirational Mildred explained her business
venture idea to open up a small restaurant
- through determination and will-power, Mildred opened
up her own small restaurant with the help of Ida:
("I didn't know what to do next. Suddenly,
it hit me. Why not open a restaurant?....I've found the location
I want. It's an old house that hasn't been lived in for years from
the look of it. It's right on a busy intersection, which means it's
good for drive-in trade. I clocked an average of five hundred cars
an hour...And there isn't another restaurant within five miles")
- she also acquired financial assistance from realtor/rebuffed
beau and business partner Wally, who contacted the slick, good-looking,
socially-prominent Monte Beragon to negotiate with him to purchase/lease
the restaurant property that was owned by the Beragon estate;
she also made arrangements to formally divorce her husband Bert so
there wouldn't be legal complications, although he was reluctant
to agree to a divorce; during renovations at the property
to construct "Mildred's" restaurant,
the opportunistic, scuzzy lounge lizard and playboyish Monte flirted
with his investment partner - and they began to develop a romantic
relationship
Mildred's Developing
Romance with Socially-Connected Monte
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During First Flashback
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- their romance began with a swim at Monte's beach house,
where he openly admitted he was lazy and overindulgent: ("I
do too much of everything. Too spoiled...I'm such a self-controlled
and dignified young fellow...I loaf, in a decorative and highly charming
manner...With me, loafing is a science") - but then, he spoke
of their love in front of the fireplace before kisses and love-making:
(Monte: "You take my breath away." Mildred: "Do I?
l like you, Monte. You make me feel, oh, l don't know, warm." Monte:
"Wanted? Beautiful?" Mildred: "Yes." Monte: "When
I'm close to you like this, there's a sound in the air like the beating
of wings. Do you know what it is?...My heart beating like a schoolboy's" Mildred:
"ls it? l thought it was mine")
- during Mildred's time away with Monte, sweet-natured
younger daughter Kay suffered a severe case of pneumonia
and expired - inevitably the result of Mildred's excesses and neglect;
Mildred began to clutch on to Veda even more so with increased
affection, devotion, and gifts
- Mildred was able to develop her restaurant into a
very successful and profitable chain; while Mildred was working hard on her new ventures, Veda was
making her own advantageous play toward Monte; meanwhile, Bert assented
to the divorce while also expressing jealous rage toward Mildred's
association with Monte
More Questions in the Police Station About Mildred's
Strange Behavior
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Mildred's Admission: "I did it, I killed him"
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Between the First and Second Flashbacks - In the Police Station
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- as the first flashback ended and returned to the
police station, Mildred basically admitted to being at the beach
house and seeing Monte dead on the floor, and that she had suspiciously
lured Wally back to the house to pin the murder on him; and then
she bold-facedly blurted out: "I did it, I killed him";
Peterson didn't really believe Mildred, and thought she was only
taking the blame
- during the film's second flashback, Mildred described
how her restaurants were a great success, but that spend-thrift
Monte spent much of her hard-earned money for extravagant
purchases, and Veda's bad habits (smoking) and growing expenses
(including a brand-new car) were also becoming a major financial
burden
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Veda's Expensive Tastes - A New Car
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- Mildred was forced to give Monte an ultimatum
warning to stay away from her pretentious daughter Veda for good:
("Stay away from Veda...And it isn't funny. She's only seventeen
years old and spoiled rotten"); Mildred's concern was that she
would lose her self-indulgent daughter to him: "Look, Monte,
I've worked long and hard trying to give Veda the things I never
had. I've done without a lot of things, including happiness sometimes,
because I wanted her to have everything. And now I'm losing her.
She's drifting away from me. She hardly speaks to me anymore except
to ask for money, or poke fun at me in French because I work for
a living...I blame it on the way she's been living. I blame it on
you...You look down on me because I work for a living, don't you?
You always have. All right, I work. I cook food and sell it and make
a profit on it - which I might point out you're not too proud to share with me"
- then, the profligate Monte insulted Mildred for the
'smell of grease' surrounding her: "Yes, I take money from you,
Mildred. But not enough to make me like kitchens or cooks. They smell
of grease"; she decided to personally dump the ungrateful Monte
- and fire him with an added rebuttal: "I don't notice you shrinking
away from a $50 dollar bill because it happens to smell of grease....There's
no point in going on like this. You're interfering with my life and
my business. And worst of all, you're interfering with my plans for
Veda and I won't stand for it"; Monte summarized their breakup:
("l always knew that someday we'd come to this particular moment
in the scheme of things. You want Veda and your business and a nice,
quiet life. And the price of all that is me. You can go back to making
your pies now, Mildred. We're through"); to clear the books,
Mildred wrote a substantial check to cover Monte's expenses (marked
'paid in full')
- the petulant, selfishly-ungrateful, money-hungry
and predatory Veda, estranged from Mildred and whose greed also helped
to contribute to the restaurant's financial ruin, schemed to marry a
young, innocent boy whom she didn't love - Ted Forrester (John Compton),
the son of a wealthy family in Southern California; she
faked a pregnancy to extort money from her boyfriend's wealthy family;
she admitted to a fraudulent marriage (and baby) to receive a blackmailing
pay-off check of $10,000 to end the 'marriage'; Veda callously
admitted to Mildred that the whole thing about the baby was a fraudulent sham
- with the $10,000 check in her possession,
Mildred could see through her daughter's greed: "Money
- that's what you live for, isn't it? You'd do anything for money,
wouldn't you?"; Veda revealed her true motivation
- to get away from her mother: ("With this money, I can get away
from you")
- during a second major confrontation between the
two on a staircase, Veda delivered a brutal, humiliating and insulting
tirade against her mother regarding her low-rent, lower-class birth:
("....From you and your chickens and your pies and your kitchens and everything that
smells of grease. I can get away from this shack with its cheap furniture,
and this town and its dollar days, and its women that wear uniforms
and its men that wear overalls.... You think just because you've
made a little money you can get a new hairdo and some expensive clothes
and turn yourself into a lady. But you can't, because you'll never
be anything but a common frump, whose father lived over a grocery
store and whose mother took in washing. With this money, I can get
away from every rotten, stinking thing that makes me think of this
place or you!")
- after Mildred ripped up Veda's $10,000 pay-off 'blackmail'
check, Veda slapped Mildred across the face and knocked her down
onto the stairs; Mildred rose and stood face to face in front of
Veda and commanded: ("Get out, Veda. Get your things out of
this house right now before I throw them into the street and you
with them. Get out before I kill you"); Mildred went away
for a while, and began to drink regularly to calm her nerves
Second Flashback: Staircase Argument Between Mildred
and Veda - Mildred: "Get out, Veda...Get out before I kill you"
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- over time, Mildred began to have second thoughts about tossing Veda out
and was willing to be a 'mother-sacrifice' again; however, words
of warning were issued by her wise-cracking friend Ida about Mildred's
beloved but spoiled, condescending and monstrous daughter Veda: ("Personally, Veda's
convinced me that alligators have the right idea. They eat their young")
- in an attempt to rekindle their relationship, Bert
(now well-employed and no longer under the spell of another woman)
and Mildred met for dinner at Wally's cheap and tawdry pier restaurant;
they watched as the outrageous Veda (who had been hired a month
earlier) performed on stage as a singer/dancer in front of them;
in a backstage dressing room, the cold-hearted, haughty and rebellious
Veda rejected Mildred's request to return home to a sub-standard
life and find happiness, but hinted that she might reconsider if
Mildred could provide the luxurious life she demanded - the life
that she had with Monte Beragon
- the now-affluent Mildred negotiated
with cash-poor Monte to purchase his "antiquated,"
run-down Beragon mansion, and she also proposed a marriage of convenience;
Beragon accepted if she would offer him a one-third share of Mildred's
successful business; Mildred married Monte Beragon - a heartless
and loveless marriage - for his social status and family name, and
to provide the kind of social background that Veda craved; shortly
later, Veda returned home to the renovated Beragon mansion
Veda Returned Home - Greeted by Monte Beragon
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Mildred's Anger That Monte Was Selling Out His One-Third
of Mildred's Business
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Mildred Retrieved Her Gun Before Driving to the Beach House
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- as Veda celebrated her 19th birthday, she was romancing her own step-father
(a semi-incestuous relationship) behind the restaurateur's long-suffering
back; meanwhile, Mildred was in her office, learning
that she was facing bankruptcy when Monte demanded to sell out
his one-third interest in Mildred's business; she took a gun and
placed it in her pocket before driving to the beach house at around
midnight (presuming that Monte would be there); was she
planning to kill Monte for his business or personal betrayal? -
the second flashback ended
- just before the film's third and final flashback, Inspector Peterson again
declared to Mildred that he knew she was innocent when she claimed
she had murdered Monte; Mildred looked on as Veda was brought in;
she had been picked up at the airport on a plane bound for Arizona;
she incriminated herself and confessed to the killing
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Veda Brought Into Police Station - She Was Caught Fleeing, and
Incriminated Herself
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- the concluding third flashback
revealed the answer to the murder mystery; in a complete replay
of the night of the murder, Mildred was seen coming into the beach
house ("I didn't know Veda
was there when I came in. I expected Monte to be alone"); as she
walked forward out of the shadows, she came
upon Monte kissing Veda over the bar in the darkness; the promiscuous
Veda was in the midst of a semi-incestuous affair with her step-father
Monte; Monte sheepishly spoke: "We
weren't expecting you, Mildred, uh, obviously." Veda then
bluntly bragged and confessed that she had been having a long-term,
surreptitious affair with her own mother's husband, and would replace
Mildred: "It's just as well you know. I'm glad you
know...Since I came home, and even
before. He never loved you. It's always been me. I've got what I
wanted. Monte's going to divorce you and marry me...And there's nothing
you can do about it"
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Third Flashback: At the Beach House, Mildred Discovered
Veda's Secret Affair with Her Own Husband Monte
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- although Mildred pulled
a gun from her coat pocket, she dropped it to the floor when Monte
grabbed her arm and cautioned her: ("Mildred, use your head"); then after Mildred fled
outside to her car, Monte rebuffed, rejected and scorned Veda;
Veda became enraged when Monte denied her request to get married
(he denied loving her and claimed he must have been drunk), and
when he called her a promiscuous "rotten
little tramp": ("Just where did
you get the idea I'm going to marry you?... I'm not joking. If
you think I'm going to marry you, you're very much mistaken....
Look. You don't really think I could be in love with a rotten little
tramp like you, do you?")
- to retaliate,
Veda pulled Mildred's gun on Monte and shot him to death; Veda was
shown aiming and firing the gun at Monte - he collapsed onto the
floor as he repeated his dying word: "Mildred." Outside
in her car, Mildred heard six shots - and when she came back inside,
she found her crazed, impassioned daughter standing over the dead body
of Monte
- to Mildred, Veda claimed she wasn't
really responsible: "He's dead. He said horrible things. He
didn't want me around anymore. He told me to get out. And then he
laughed at me. He wouldn't stop laughing. I told him I'd kill him.
He said I didn't have guts enough. I didn't mean to do it. I didn't
mean to, I tell you. But the gun kept going off, over and over again.
Then he was lying there, looking at me, just looking at me. You've
got to help me. Give me money to get away - and time. I've got to
get away before they find him"
- Mildred finally told Veda:
"I can't get you out of this," although Veda was desperately
and vehemently pleading with her mother to not report Monte's murder
to police, to be sympathetic, and to help her: ("Think what
will happen if they find me. Think what will happen...Give
me another chance. It's your fault as much as mine. You've got to
help me. Help me, Mother! Just this once. I'll change, I promise
I will. I'll be different. Just give me another chance. It's your
fault I'm the way I am. Help me"). Mildred phoned the
Santa Monica police department to report the murder, but then hung up
- the third short flashback ended, and the
film returned to the present, where Mildred was admitting to Peterson: "I
thought maybe, in a way, it was my fault. So I tried to help her.
I wanted to take the blame for it"; as Veda was about to
be booked and led away by an officer, Peterson spoke: "Not
this time, Mrs. Beragon. This time, your daughter pays for her own mistake. OK, book her!"
- in the final scene,
as Veda and Mildred hugged and spoke one last time, Mildred apologized
to Veda: "Darling, I'm sorry. I did the best I could";
Veda's last words to her mother were: "Don't worry about me,
Mother. I'll get by", as Inspector
Peterson mused to Mildred, the film's final line: ("You
know, Mrs. Beragon, there are times when I regret being a policeman")
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Film's Conclusion: Mildred's Reconciliation
with Estranged Ex-Husband Bert Pierce (Bruce Bennett)
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- in the hallway as Mildred exited to get some "fresh
air", estranged ex-husband Bert Pierce was waiting
for her and greeted her, and they walked into the approaching dawn.
Now that Veda had been purged and could no longer poison their
relationship, they were restored to each other for a reconciliation
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Opening Beach House Murder Scene of Mildred's Cad Playboy
Husband Monte Beragon by an Unidentified Assailant
After the Murder of Monte Beragon at the Beach House,
Mildred Pierce Was Saved From Suicide on a Santa Monica Pier
Mildred in Her Home - With 19 Year-Old Daughter Veda - Notified
by Detectives of Monte's Murder
First Flashback: Homemaker Mildred with First Husband Bert Pierce
(Bruce Bennett)
The Pierce's Two Daughters Veda and Kay (Jo Ann Marlowe)
Kay and Spoiled 16 Year Old Veda (Ann Blythe)
Wally's Persistent Romantic Interest in Mildred After
She Separated From Bert
Mildred's Supportive Friend Ida (Eve Arden) at Restaurant
Daughter Veda's Insult to Her
Mother About Her Lowly Occupation: "My
mother, a waitress!"
Mildred's Plan to Purchase Property From Slick Playboy Monte Beragon
With Veda at the Time of Kay's Death
Mildred's Highly-Successful Restaurant "Mildred's"
Second Flashback: Mildred's Ultimatum to The Profligate
Monte: "Stay
away from Veda"
Mildred's and Monte's Breakup: (Monte: "We're
through")
Veda's Scheming to Fake a Pregnancy and 'Marry' A
Rich Boy and Then Blackmail His Family For $10,000
Mildred to Veda: "Money - that's what you live for, isn't
it? You'd do anything for money, wouldn't you?"
Veda to Mildred: "With this money,
I can get away from you"
Veda Working as A Singer/Dancer in Wally's Tawdry Pier Restaurant
Veda Hinting She Would Return Home to Mildred If She Could Provide a
More Luxurious Life
Mildred's Business Proposition to Marry Monte Beragon
At the Beach House After Mildred Departed, Monte
Retorted to Veda: "You
don't really think I could be in love with a rotten little tramp
like you"
The Retaliatory and Rejected Lover-Killer - Veda
Firing All Six Bullets
Monte - Dead on Floor From a Gunshot Wound
After the Murder of Monte by Veda - She Told Her
Returning Mother: "I
Told Him I'd Kill Him"
After Monte's Murder, Veda Pleaded With Her Mother
to Not Turn Her In As She Phoned the Police
Final Scene in the Present: Veda Was Charged With
The Crime: "OK,
book her!"
Final Words Between Mildred and Veda
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