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Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964)
In producer/director Robert Aldrich's follow-up film
(and a sequel of sorts) to Whatever Happened
to Baby Jane? (1962) - a gory, suspenseful Southern Gothic
crime-horror drama and psychological thriller:
- the film's pre-credits prologue set in 1927, regarding
the Hollis family who lived in an ante-bellum mansion located in
Ascension Parish, Hollisport, Louisiana; patriarchal father Samuel
Eugene 'Big Sam' Hollis (Victor Buono) was chastising John Mayhew
(Bruce Dern), the philandering husband of Mrs. Jewel Mayhew (Mary
Astor in her last film), for wanting to elope with his young Southern
belle daughter Charlotte Hollis (Bette Davis) during a dance the
next evening; he vehemently objected to their affair: "This
house, this plantation, this whole damned parish belonged to my
family before your people stepped aboard the stinkin' cattle
boats that brought 'em to this country. Don't you dare talk back
to me, boy! My family's seen this state crawlin' with lousy carpetbaggers
that knew more about behavin' like a gentleman than you do! I can't
even look at Charlotte without ugly thoughts rip my guts. I'd sooner
it had been one of my field boys. I could have killed him. Do you
know what it's costin' me not to kill you? My daughter and Jewel
Mayhew's husband. You gutless, soft, sucklin' swine! My daddy sat
out there on that veranda, and let the whole place slide to dust.
When he died, there was nothin' but debts and dirt. I touched that
dirt and made it blossom. I fought to keep this house and to bring
it back up. I don't have a son to give it to. Only Charlotte. And
she ain't gonna give it to you. You ain't gonna have my home or
my child. I created both and I'm gonna keep 'em. I ain't watched
over my girl all these years to have some, to have some, to have
some creature like you take her away"
- in the opening scene set the next night during the
dance, married lover John broke the news to Charlotte that they had
to break up ("I made a mistake, Charlotte, that's all. Don't
cry. Look, I know it's no consolation to you, but I really loved
you at one time. Try and understand that. I really loved you");
she was devastated by the news, and stomped off:
"I could kill you!'; then, in a graphic and brutal murder scene,
John's right hand was severed by a meat cleaver (wielded by an unseen
figure seen in dark shadows), and then he was beheaded - blood splattered
on a white marble statue of a cherub (or cupid)
John Mayhew's Murder by an Unseen Assailant
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- the sight of Charlotte, who returned to the party
in progress and walked in with a huge blood stain on the front
of her white dress; her father approached and solemnly told her: "Charlotte,
honey, you come with me now....Come with me, baby" before
a fadeout
- later, newspaper headlines from 1927 exclaimed: "GRUESOME
MUTILATION MURDER - Parts of Body Missing", and "SOCIALITE
LOVE TRIANGLE BARED"; Charlotte claimed that she had discovered
John's decapitated body in the summer-house gazebo; although she
was the prime murderess suspect and assumed to be the guilty one,
she was acquitted; Charlotte feared that her father had killed John
(and subsequently he had committed suicide)
- flashforward to 1964: the aging Charlotte was still
residing in her childhood bayou home, having turned demented, eccentric,
reclusive and sheltered; she was known to fire her shotgun at road
construction crew workers led by a foreman (George Kennedy) - due
to ongoing efforts of the Louisiana Highway Commission to evict her
and tear the home down in order to build a road and bridge
- the deranged Charlotte was cared for by longtime,
loyal, 'white trash' housekeeper Velma Cruther (Agnes Moorehead);
Charlotte's close childhood cousin Miriam Deering (Olivia de Havilland)
was also called to the decaying plantation home to help; meanwhile,
she rekindled a relationship with longtime local family doctor Dr.
Drew Bayliss (Joseph Cotten)
- visiting Englishman Harry Willis (Cecil Kellaway),
curious about the decades-old murder, conducted an insurance investigation;
he was invited to tea on the outdoor veranda of ailing, tired widow
Mrs. Jewel Mayhew, Charlotte's cynical age-old rival; she admitted
her imminent death: "I'm not a well woman. You can see that
much for yourself. Who was it said, 'This long disease, my life'?
Well, it's, it's comin' to an end. Perhaps a month, a few weeks.
Who knows?...I think I'm even glad" - she handed Willis a envelope
- not to be opened until after her death: ("You'll know what
to do when the time comes, or what not to do"); she then added
wistfully: "Ruined finery. That's all I have left. I'm, uh,
stony broke - is that the phrase? It's a relief to admit it"
- the sequences of Charlotte's tormented hallucinations
and nightly hauntings - she called for "John" at night,
heard a harpsichord playing one of John's songs written for her,
and experienced sights of Mayhew's disembodied hand and meat cleaver
- and his head rolling down the stairs
- the sequence of the death of Velma, who suspected
that Miriam and Dr. Drew Bayliss were conspiring to drug Charlotte
to inherit her estate and to drive her insane; she frantically tried
to rescue Charlotte and help her escape from the house; she asked: "What's
goin' on up there that you don't want me to see?", but Miriam
smashed a chair over her head and pushed her down the spiraling staircase
to silence Velma's suspicions and interference forever
Murder of Housekeeper Velma by Miriam
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- the scene of the two-faced conspirators who tricked
Charlotte into shooting and 'killing' Drew (the gun had blanks
in it); the two drove off with the body in the back seat, as Charlotte
complained: "Miriam, I can't touch him. Don't make me do it,
Miriam"; Miriam berated and snarled back at Charlotte:
"Get out. Do what I say!"; the two rolled the corpse down
a hill to bury it in muddy swamp water; as they drove back to the
mansion, and Charlotte was wimpering - claiming that she couldn't
lie to authorities if they found the body and asked her questions,
Miriam scolded: "Will you stop that?"; then, Miriam abruptly
stopped the car, and repeatedly slapped the cowering Charlotte across
the face: "Damn you! Now will you shut your mouth? You'll do
as I tell you. And if I tell you to lie, you'll do that too. I'm
never going to suffer for you again. Not ever. Do you understand?"
- the scene of Drew's 'return from the dead' in a muddy
suit; at the top of the stairs, his muddy feet and trousers had left
a trail of footprints - to her horror, Charlotte crawled backwards
down the stairs, emitting feral sounds and screams
- the film's major plot twist: Miriam's revelation to
Drew that in 1927, she had witnessed Jewel Mayhew murder her own
husband John, and had been using it as blackmail against Mrs. Mayhew
(and Charlotte) for many years
- the great climactic sequence when Charlotte overheard
Miriam and Drew's plotting, embracing and kissing; she crushed both
of them to death by dropping a huge stone urn with a potted plant
onto their heads from the balcony above them
Charlotte's Murder of Miriam and Drew as They
Embraced
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- in the conclusion, as Charlotte was driven away
(possibly to be a suspect and charged with murder for a second
time), Willis handed her Mrs. Mayhew's envelope: ("Miss Hollis,
this letter's for you. I think you've been waiting a long time
for it") with the written confession that Mrs. Mayhew had
murdered her husband John; upon hearing of Miriam's and Drew's
deaths the night before, Mrs. Mayhew had suffered her third stroke
and died that morning
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'Big Sam' Chastising John Mayhew For Elopement Plans with
His Daughter Charlotte
Charlotte Implicated in Murder of John Mayhew
Years Later, the Deranged Charlotte
Family Doctor Dr. Drew Bayliss and Charlotte's Childhood
Cousin Miriam
During an Investigation, Mrs. Jewel Mayhew's Prediction
of Her Coming Death
Charlotte's Hauntings Regarding John's Murder
Conspiracy of Miriam and Drew to 'Murder" Dr.
Bayliss and Blame Charlotte
Dr. Drew Bayliss' 'Return from the Dead'
Concluding Scene - Charlotte Received Mrs. Mayhew's
Confession in Envelope
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