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Notorious
(1946)
In this vintage Alfred Hitchcock, noirish suspense
thriller and spy-story concerning international intrigue and a passionate
yet perverse romance:
- the opening sequence of the trial and conviction
(for the war crime of treason) of traitorous Nazi Germany spy John
Huberman (Fred Nurney) in April of 1946 in Miami, Florida; the
sentence was 20 years in prison (and soon after, the German-American
Huberman committed suicide by taking a poisoned capsule in his
jail cell); his daughter exited from the proceedings - a promiscuous,
alcoholic, play-girl socialite Alicia Huberman (Ingrid Bergman),
who was quickly hounded and questioned by reporters
- the developing romantic relationship between manipulative
and shady American CIA agent T.R. Devlin (Cary Grant) and Alicia
(wearing a horizontally-striped top with a bare waist); uninvited,
he gatecrashed her decadent party, and witnessed her self-destructiveness
from overdrinking: ("The important drinking hasn't started yet")
- early the next morning, the
two had survived the party - she suggested a joy-ride, a drunken
80 mph challenge with Devlin as her captive passenger: ("I want
to make it 80 and wipe that grin off your face. I don't like gentlemen
who grin at me") before being chased and stopped by a motorcycle
cop, when he had to reveal himself as a US government agent; she
was furious with him for being deceptive as a "double-crossing
buzzard - you're a cop!...a federal cop crashing my party...you're
trailing me to get something on me"; he took over the wheel
by knocking her out with a punch
- the next morning after she awoke with an intense hang-over,
Devlin explained his ploy: he was an American intelligence officer
with a secret mission to enlist the promiscuous Alicia to infiltrate
and spy on the Rio de Janeiro home of her father's old associates
("German gentry"); a number of Brazil-based Nazi Germans
had moved to Rio de Janiero after WWII; she refused to be involved
in Devlin's "rotten schemes": ("Go away and leave
me alone. I have my own life to lead. Good times. That's what I want,
and laughs with people I like. And no underhanded cops who want to
put me up in a shooting gallery, but people of my own kind, who treat
me right and like me and understand me")
- once they arrived together in Rio de Janiero, they
played a cat-and-mouse romantic game; although he had a growing interest
in her, he was hesitant about her alcoholism and her loose reputation;
she teased and berated the cool, indifferent, distant, and sometimes
nasty Devlin about his unflappable, repressed romantic emotions;
she told him: "Poor Dev, in love with a no-good gal. It must
be awful. I'm sorry"
- the longest kiss in film history (to date) - in order
to bypass the Production Code's restriction on a screen clinch beyond
three seconds long - there was a passionate three-minute kissing
scene in her apartment between Devlin and Alicia that began on her
Rio de Janeiro balcony, moved inside to the telephone where Devlin
took a call, and ended at the front door -- with them all the while
talking and kissing; during part of their conversation when he was
dialing the telephone (calling his hotel for his messages), Alicia
told him: "This is a very strange love affair" - and he
asked why as she kissed him. Then she replied: "Maybe the
fact that you don't love me"; after connecting with the hotel,
he responded as he kissed her: "When I don't love you, I'll
let you know"; when she further stated: "You haven't said
anything," he told her: "Actions speak louder than words"
- specifically, Alicia's assignment was to serve as
sexual bait to fool lead neo-Nazi scientist-agent Alexander Sebastian
(Claude Rains) (one of the colleagues of Alicia's father, and Alicia's
former rejected suitor), in order to marry him and learn the Nazi's
secrets - ("Sebastian's house is a cover-up, for whatever this
Farben group's up to here in Rio. We've got to get Miss Huberman
inside that house and find out what's going on there"); after
agreeing to the mission, she spitefully told Devlin her attitude
about being used and whoring herself for him (to get married) in
the dangerous espionage plot: "You can add Sebastian's name
to my list of playmates"
- the incredible, long and unbroken crane shot beginning
on the second floor balcony (above the guests mingling below), in
Sebastian's Rio de Janeiro mansion during a tense formal champagne
party given in the new bride's honor -- the camera swooped down and
zeroed in on the purloined key (from Alex's key ring) clenched in
Alicia's hand (in closeup) that could unlock the wine cellar - where
the film's MacGuffin (secret uranium supplies) was located; shortly
later, when Devlin arrived, she passed the key to him when he kissed
her hand
Crane Shot - to Key in Alicia's Hand
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- the furtive search by Devlin and Alicia in the wine
cellar (tension was created when the champagne supply ran out upstairs
in the party), where uranium ore dust (looking like black sand)
was found in one of the broken wine bottles - Devlin took a sample
of the sandy substance, to confirm a dastardly conspiracy by the
Nazis to stockpile the material for future use in atom bombs; when
they were discovered kissing in the unauthorized location by Alex,
Devlin and Alicia pretended to be having a love tryst, and Alicia
blamed their romance on the drunken Devlin: ("Alex, don't
be foolish. I-I came down because he threatened to make a scene...I
couldn't stop him. I tried"), and Devlin also added: "For
what it's worth as an apology, your wife is telling the truth.
I knew her before you, loved her before you, only I'm not as lucky
as you"
- after Alex discovered the broken wine bottle (when
he realized the wine cellar key had been returned to his key ring
overnight), the scene of his humiliating confession shot from a top-angle
to his domineering and authoritarian mother Mme. Konstantin (Leopoldine
Konstantin in her sole US film) in her bedroom: ("I am married
to an American agent"), and his mother's curt reaction: "We
are protected by the enormity of your stupidity - for a time";
and her plot to silence and eliminate Alicia by slowly poisoning
her to death with arsenic-tainted coffee - and later, the scene when
Alicia suddenly realized that she was being drugged (visiting Nazi
conspirator Dr. Anderson (Reinhold Schünzel) reached for Alicia's
poisoned cup and was simultaneously and hesitantly warned not to
drink by both Madame and Alex)
- the exciting and nerve-wracking finale - Alicia's
rescue scene - with Devlin's ascent of the stairs to the weakened
and sedated Alicia on her deathbed; after they confessed their love
for each other and he admitted: "I was a fatheaded guy full
of pain. It tore me up not having you", he carried her down
the staircase in full view of a number of Nazi enemies and out to
a car - reportedly to take her to the hospital; he locked the car
door on Sebastian, telling him: "No room, Sebastian"
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Alicia Carried Down Stairs by Devlin
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Alicia Exiting Alex's Home with Devlin
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Alex's Final Summons
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- the conclusion - Alex received a final summons,
the final line of dialogue, by one of his sinister, renegade Nazi
agent superiors inside the front door: Eric Mathis (Ivan Triesault):
"Alex, will you come in, please? I wish to talk to you"
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Alicia Huberman (Ingrid Bergman) at Father's Trial
Drunken 80 mph Drive with Devlin (Cary Grant)
Rio de Janeiro Kisses on Balcony and During Phone Call
At Champagne Party
Kissing - to Avoid Detection in Wine Cellar
Alex's Confession to His Mother, and Her Reproach
Alicia's Arsenic-Tainted Coffee
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