The Story (continued)
Upon
the train's arrival in Chicago, Roger is disguised as a uniformed
Red Cap porter and he carries Eve's luggage so that he can pass waiting
police. On the platform, she is detained and questioned by the police
but is not considered a suspect. She offers to phone Kaplan and arrange
an urgent meeting with him as soon as they get inside the station.
She suggests that Roger change his clothes in the men's room while
she phones to make arrangements to rendezvous with Kaplan. Roger
remarks:
You're the smartest girl I ever spent the night with
on the train.
When they are almost inside the station, a Red Cap
in his underwear alerts police, sending detectives racing through
La Salle Street Station grabbing Red Caps everywhere. Meanwhile,
Roger is changing and shaving in the restroom with Eve's miniature
razor. Eve makes a call from a phone booth - the camera pans down
the length of booths - she actually calls Leonard at the far end
of the block of booths and receives instructions. When Roger returns,
the treacherous Eve lies to him about a conversation with Kaplan
[in fact, she has arranged for an attempt on his life]. The mysterious
Kaplan has agreed to a meeting with Thornhill at the Prairie bus
stop at a Highway 41 crossroads about 1 1/2 hours Greyhound Bus ride
from Chicago. When they part at the Chicago station, he places his
hand on her hand with the luggage as they say goodbye.
In the film's most-renowned and brilliant sequence,
the crop-dusting sequence, Roger is lured into the flat countryside
(of neighboring Indiana) by enemy spies on the pretext of meeting
and connecting with the fabled Kaplan - his non-existent double.
The dapper businessman arrives by bus at a barren road-crossing out
in wide-open farm country surrounded by plowed-up dirt and cornfields,
incongruously dressed in a neat suit in bright sunlight. [The actual
filming site was located north of Bakersfield, CA, outside the towns
of Wasco and Delano, just east of the intersection of Corcoran Road
and Garces Highway (155).] He is entirely exposed and vulnerable
- a modern, urban individual without any amenities or artificial
resources - there isn't even background music on the soundtrack until
the climax of the set-piece. Surrealistically, suspense slowly builds
as cars pass through the desolate area. A truck sprays him with road
dust. A car drops a man on the other side of the road from him to
wait for a bus - is this man Kaplan? A buzzing crop-dusting plane
is engaged in dusting a nearby field. The man remarks that it is
odd to have a small plane crop-dusting a crop on a field devoid of
crops:
That's funny...That plane's dustin' crops where there
ain't no crops.
After the man boards a bus (a symbol of civilization)
and it drives away (leaving Thornhill defenseless), the distant,
innocent and harmless crop-spraying plane immediately and without
warning terrorizes him, swooping down like a bird of prey out of
a clear blue sky. It flies almost at ground level as it sprays machine-gun
fire. Thornhill ducks for cover from the strafing attack, but there
is nowhere to hide and no way to defend himself in the vast expanse
of the setting - it is the third vicious attack on his life. The
plane circles and returns a few times as he fails to flag down and
stop a car.
Thornhill runs for cover in an open cornfield, but
the bi-plane showers him with a load of poisonous, white powdery
pesticide to flush him out. He returns to the road and runs in front
of an approaching semi-trailer Magnum Oil truck - flagging it down
and forcing it to stop. He falls under the gasoline truck's front
bumper as the plane uncontrollably crashes into the truck's gas tank.
After a terrific explosion, the two truck drivers shout that they
should run away to avoid harm from more explosions. Other drivers
in pickup trucks stop to watch the fireball, giving Roger an opportunity
to jump into one of the onlookers' vacated trucks and head back to
Chicago.
The police find the abandoned truck on a Chicago street.
Roger enters the Ambassador Hotel and at the desk asks for Mr. Kaplan's
room. He is shocked to learn that Kaplan checked out early that morning
on his way to Rapid City, South Dakota - almost two hours before Eve
allegedly claimed to have talked to him. Suddenly, he is doubly surprised
when he notices Eve in a dark red gown crossing the lobby - she is
also checked into the hotel. Wise to her duplicity, he follows her
to her fourth floor room and walks coldly by her when she lets him
in:
Roger: Surprised?
Eve: Yes.
Roger: No getting rid of me, is there?
She runs and hugs him, happily relieved to see him
knowing that he could have been killed by her treachery. But he doesn't
reciprocate - this time, he holds his hands around her head (the
same way he held her in the seduction scene on the train), but he
doesn't quite touch her. As she mixes drinks for them, he confronts
her with the set-up she prepared for him in the attack in the open
field. Ambiguously and deceptively, Eve cooly avoids his questions
without confessing to any complicity. Roger sarcastically toasts
their "togetherness"
and their relationship:
Roger: To a long and lasting friendship, meaning
from now on, I'm not going to let you out of my sight, sweetheart.
Eve: I'm afraid you'll have to.
Roger: Oh no.
Eve: I do have plans of my own, you know, and you do have problems.
Roger: Well, wouldn't it be nice if my problems and your plans were
somehow connected? Then we could always stay close to each other
and not have to go off in separate directions. Togetherness,
you know what I mean?
Eve receives a phone call and takes down an address
for a later business meeting. She calmly asks a big "favor" of
him - she pleads for him to leave immediately and never to see her
again:
I want you to leave right now. Stay far away from
me and don't come near me again. We're not going to get involved.
Last night was last night and it's all there was and that's all
there is. There isn't going to be anything more between us. So
please, goodbye, good luck, no conversation, just leave.
Then she relents and accepts his invitation for a final
dinner together - if the hotel valet will clean his dusty
suit. He calls for valet service (and removes his clothing for re-pressing):
Roger: Now, what can a man do with his clothes off
for twenty minutes? Couldn't he have taken an hour?
Eve: You could always take a cold shower. (She helps him remove his
suit jacket.)
Thornhill: That's right. When I was a little boy, I wouldn't even
let my mother undress me.
Eve: You're a big boy now.
Thornhill: Yes, tell me. How does a girl like you get to be a girl
like you?
Eve: Lucky, I guess.
Thornhill: No, not lucky. Naughty, wicked, up to no good. Ever kill
anyone? Because I bet you could tease a man to death without half
trying. So stop trying, huh.
He pretends to take a shower (whistling 'Singin'
in the Rain') as she sneaks out of the room, then manages to
get her destination's address by rubbing a pencil over the impression
left on the next sheet of notepad paper. He follows Eve to a chic,
1212 North Michigan Avenue address - the site of a crowded art
auction. There, he finds her with her supposed lover, the fake
'Townsend' (Vandamm) and his henchman Leonard. Vandamm stands in
the front row, with Eve seated at his side. He caresses the back
of her neck with his hand (a reminder of Thornhill's own touching
of her head). After walking up the middle aisle during the bidding
session, Roger confronts the trio:
The three of you together. Now, that's a picture
only Charles Addams could draw.
[Charles Addams was a famous cartoonist for the New
Yorker magazine, famous for his macabre drawings and his witty
- but bizarre - sense of humor. His most popular characters were
spun-off and became the basis for both a TV sitcom series, The
Addams Family, and related feature films.]
Thornhill sarcastically tells them that his art specialty
is the "art of survival." When the phony 'Townsend' (Vandamm)
learns that Thornhill was in Eve's hotel room and followed her to
the auction, he removes his loving hand from her neck and shoulder.
With biting sarcasm toward Eve as the bidding for a Pre-Columbian
art object commences, Roger refers to both the "sculpture"
and to Eve (and her betrayal):
I didn't realize you were an art collector. I thought
you just collected corpses...I'll bet you paid plenty for this
little piece of sculpture...She's worth every dollar of it, take
it from me. She puts her heart into her work. In fact, her whole
body.
The auctioneer identifies Mr. Vandamm as the successful
bidder for the art object [to be used later to hide microfilmed secrets
- director Hitchcock's typical MacGuffin]. Vandamm then criticizes
Roger for his unconvincing overacting - Vandamm is still convinced
that Thornhill is Mr. Kaplan:
Vandamm: Has anyone ever told you that you overplay
your various roles rather severely, Mr. Kaplan. First, you're the
outraged Madison Avenue man who claims he's been mistaken for someone
else. Then you play the fugitive from justice, supposedly trying
to clear his name of a crime he knows he didn't commit. And now,
you play the peevish lover, stung by jealousy and betrayal. It
seems to me you fellows could stand a little less training from
the FBI and a little more from the Actor's Studio.
Roger: Apparently, the only performance that will satisfy you is
when I play dead. [Ironically, Thornhill's next acting role will be
to "play dead."]
Vandamm: Your very next role. You'll be quite convincing, I assure
you.
Roger: I wonder what subtle form of manslaughter is next on the program.
Am I to be dropped into a vat of molten steel and become part of
a new skyscraper, or are you going to ask this female to kiss me
again and poison me to death?
Eve rises in anger to strike him, but sits down after
Roger describes her unfeeling act: "Who are you kidding? You have no
feelings to hurt."
(Roger doesn't notice that she has tears in her eyes.) The Professor
is in the audience observing their discussion. Roger threatens Vandamm
with giving himself up to the police: "Something seems to tell
me I've got a much better chance of survival if I go to the police."
Roger stalks away, but all of the exits are covered
by Vandamm's henchmen. Sitting down in the audience, he watches Eve
leave with Vandamm. Thornhill deliberately calls attention to himself
with erratic bidding, questioning the authenticity of the art works,
and heckling the auctioneer - a means of escape by disrupting the
auction. [Again, Roger uses a crowd as a temporary means of cover
and escape.] Finally, he bids an enormous sum for an antique, provokes
a fight when asked to leave, and is arrested by summoned police.
He tells one of Vandamm's henchmen as he is dragged away: "Sorry,
old man. Too bad. Keep trying."
In the police car, (taking him first North on
Michigan Avenue and then West to the airport), Roger identifies
himself as Roger Thornhill - the UN killer. Feeling that he will
be safest in police custody, he demands to be taken to police headquarters.
He claims he is "a dangerous assassin - a mad killer on the
loose." Instead of taking him to jail, the police are instructed
by carphone to take him to Chicago's Midway Airport, where he is
met by the Professor in the Northwest terminal. The Professor identifies
himself as a government agent - who is forced to help him because
the CIA's plans have become endangered:
FBI, CIA, ONI, we're all in the same alphabet soup.
The Professor explains that Thornhill has a plane to
catch to Rapid City, South Dakota, to follow Vandamm and his mistress
(Roger labels her a "treacherous little tramp"). Thornhill
learns that Vandamm is trying to take microfilmed government secrets
out of the country:
The Professor: Oh, you could say he is a sort of
importer/exporter.
Roger: Of what?
The Professor: Oh, government secrets perhaps.
Vandamm has a mountaintop retreat there near the Mount
Rushmore monument - often referred to as a "Frank Lloyd Wright" structure
(actually a modernistic, MGM studio-created design since it would
have been impossible for a structure of this size to hang on the
cliff-edge within the Park) - his jumping off point to leave the
country the next evening. Thornhill is told that George Kaplan never
existed - he is only a decoy created by the American intelligence
agency to divert attention away from a real CIA agent. Roger is asked
to play out the character of Kaplan for another 24 hours - to 'become'
the person he has inadvertently given flesh-and-blood status to -
in order to help save the life of the endangered agent. (The plane's
engines drown out some of their conversation.) Roger insists that
he will no longer be a decoy. He lists his priorities for the Professor:
I'm an advertising man, not a red herring. I've got
a job, a secretary, a mother, two ex-wives and several bartenders
dependent upon me. And I don't intend to disappoint them all by
getting myself slightly killed.
But then the Professor reveals the identity of the
endangered US government's double agent working undercover - Eve
Kendall:
The Professor (referring to Eve): If I thought there
was any chance of changing your mind, I'd talk about Miss Kendall,
of whom you so obviously disapprove.
Thornhill: Yes, for using sex like some people use a fly swatter.
Eve is also Vandamm's moll/mistress, now threatened
with being exposed and having her cover blown by his actions. Horrified
by the thought, Thornhill reluctantly agrees to go to Rapid City,
follow Vandamm, and pretend to be Kaplan in order to save Eve's life.
He thereby shows his acceptance of responsibility and commitment
in his relationship with her. The light of the plane suddenly illuminates
his face - to symbolically indicate his enlightenment, his connection
to her, and his emotional empathy for her.
The impressive carved-stone mountainside of Mount Rushmore
(a proud symbol of democracy and order - but in this context a setting
for betrayal) fills the screen the next morning. There, Vandamm (with
Eve) has agreed to meet Thornhill, finally accepting himself as George
Kaplan, at the Mount Rushmore Monument cafeteria (at the base of
the monument) where Roger has purchased a cup of coffee. With the
goal of preventing Eve from leaving the country with Vandamm and
to "restore her to Vandamm's good graces," Roger offers
to let Vandamm leave the country without interference (without reporting
Vandamm's location to his superiors) in exchange for Eve:
I want the girl to get what's coming to her. You
turn her over to me and I'll see there's enough pinned on her to
keep her uncomfortable for the rest of her life. You do that and
I'll look the other way tonight.
Vandamm refuses - and acting outraged, Roger grabs
Eve and pulls her toward him. In order to prevent a suspicious and
jealous Vandamm from suspecting that she is on the side of the government,
Eve pulls out a gun (loaded with blanks) from her handbag and fires
two shots at him in the cafeteria. [One of the film's most obvious faux
pas is in this scene - a young boy in the background covers his
ears before the loud gunshot.] She then rushes alone from
the building and drives away. When Thornhill collapses, apparently
critically wounded, both a stunned Vandamm and Leonard choose to
avoid getting involved. Thornhill is quickly aided by the Professor
and carried by stretcher to a green park vehicle. |