|
Casablanca
(1942)
In Michael Curtiz' definitive and popular Best Picture-winning
classic war-time romantic drama with many memorable sequences:
- the first view of Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart)
in his Cafe Americain nightclub playing chess by himself
- the unexpected entrance of former love Ilsa (Ingrid
Bergman) with her vulnerable beauty and her request of piano player
Sam (Dooley Wilson) to once again play
"As Time Goes By" - ("Play it once, Sam, for old times'
sake...Play it, Sam. Play 'As Time Goes By.'...I'll hum it for you.
Sing it, Sam")
- Sam's rendition of the song and Rick's strident interruption
and first glance at Ilsa: ("You must remember this A kiss is
just a kiss A sigh is just a sigh The fundamental things apply As
Time Goes By. And when two lovers woo They still say, 'I love you'
On that you can rely No matter what the future brings As Time Goes
By")
- the images of Rick's masculine mannerisms and the
self-pitying scene later that evening of Rick alone with a cigarette
and a bottle asking Sam to play a repeat performance of "As
Time Goes By": ("You played it for her, you can play it
for me... If she can stand it, I can. Play it!")
- the flashbacks to bittersweet memories of Paris:
("Not an easy day to forget.... I remember every detail. The
Germans wore grey. You wore blue"), and their embrace at the
window as the Germans approached: ("With the whole world crumbling
we pick this time to fall in love....Was that cannon fire or is it
my heart pounding?...I love you so much. And I hate this war so much.
Oh, it's a crazy world. Anything can happen. If you shouldn't get
away, I mean, if something should keep us apart, wherever they put
you and wherever I'll be, I want you to know that...Kiss me. Kiss
me as if it were the last time")
- the ink of Ilsa's goodbye note being washed away
in the rain - and then a return to the present, and Ilsa's unexpected
appearance in the doorway in a shaft of light
- Rick's nodding to the band leader to permit the playing
of "The Marseillaise" - the French national anthem - and
the memorable duel of national anthems with the crowd joining in
to sing and drown out the Germans' anthem "Wacht am Rhein" -
and Yvonne's (Madeleine LeBeau) proud reaction with tears in her
eyes
- the scene in which Ilsa spoke to Rick about the letters
of transit - holding a gun on him: ("You want to feel sorry
for yourself, don't you? With so much at stake, all you can think
of is your own feeling. One woman has hurt you and you take your
revenge on the rest of the world. You're a, you're a coward and a
weakling. No. Oh Richard, I'm sorry. I'm sorry, but, but you, you
are our last hope. If you don't help us, Victor Laszlo will die in
Casablanca"), and then realized she couldn't shoot Rick, and
they moved together to embrace: ("Richard, I tried to stay away.
I thought I would never see you again, that you were out of my life.
The day you left Paris, if you knew what I went through. If you knew
how much I loved you, how much I still love you"); soon after,
she confessed: ("I can't fight it anymore. I ran away from you
once. I can't do it again. Oh, I don't know what's right any longer.
You have to think for both of us. For all of us")
- corrupt police chief Capt. Louis Renault's (Claude
Rains) acceptance of his gambling winnings AFTER closing down the
cafe, and his sarcastic exclamation: ("I'm shocked, shocked to
find that gambling is going on in here")
- the final farewell scene between trench-coated Rick
and Ilsa on the rainy, foggy airstrip in North Africa with "Here's
lookin' at you, kid" and Rick's noble sacrifice to give up the
love of his life, and let Ilsa leave with her freedom-fighter husband
Victor (Paul Henreid) at the airstrip on an airplane bound for Lisbon:
("If that plane leaves the ground and you're not with him, you'll
regret it...Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow, but soon, and
for the rest of your life...We'll always have Paris. We didn't have
- we'd - we'd lost it until you came to Casablanca. We got it back
last night...I've got a job to do too. Where I'm going, you can't
follow. What I've got to do, you can't be any part of...Ilsa, I'm
no good at being noble, but it doesn't take much to see that the
problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in
this crazy world. Someday you'll understand that. Now, now. Here's
looking at you, kid")
Airport Farewell
|
|
|
- Renault's two pronouncements to protect Rick from
being blamed for the shooting murder of Major Strasser (Conrad
Veidt): "Major Strasser has been shot," and his tense
pause before ordering:
"Round up the usual suspects", and his anti-Nazi, pro-Allied
gesture in tossing a bottle of Vichy water into the trash
- the camaraderie of Renault and Rick, and Rick's closing
line to him: "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful
friendship" as the two walked off the foggy tarmac to an uncertain
and unknown future
|
Rick Blaine - Solitary Chess Game in Cafe
Entrance of Ilsa
Rick Drinking Alone
Memories of Paris
Rainy Goodbye Note
Demanding the Letters of Transit
Rick: "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a
beautiful friendship"
|