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Scarlet Street (1945)
In Fritz Lang's fatalistic film noir - one of the
moodiest, blackest thrillers ever made, its three main actors, Edward
G. Robinson, Joan Bennett and Dan Duryea, had all appeared together
in Lang's The Woman in the Window (1944):
- it was the tragic story of a meek, middle-aged cashier
and unhappily-married, hen-pecked husband and amateur painter named
Christopher Cross (Edward G. Robinson)
- Cross unwittingly fell into a cruel trap set up by
cold-hearted, amoral femme fatale gold-digger and Greenwich
Village streetwalker Katherine "Kitty" March (Joan Bennett);
he first met Kitty on a rainy night when she was being beaten up
by her own abusive, slick and mercenary boyfriend-pimp Johnny (Dan
Duryea); she enticingly asked: "Would you take me home?";
they got to know each other in a bar for a late-night drink - he
was immediately entranced by the clear plastic raincoat-wearing sexy
dame, while she inaccurately believed that he was a
wealthy painter
- Kitty's evil deceptions and extortions -- she led
Cross to commit embezzlement (of his wife's and employer's funds)
in order to rent an expensive apartment for her (to serve as an art
studio); she also impersonated him in order to sell his paintings
(along with Johnny), and was deceitful and cruel to Cross
- in the middle of all the deceptive proceedings, there
was an amazing and contrived plot-twist; the previous husband of
Cross' wife Adele (Rosalind Ivan), corrupt policeman Patch-eye Homer
Higgins (Charles Kemper) suddenly appeared - he had been presumed
drowned during the rescue of a suicidal woman; he
had originally disappeared to cover up the fact that he had stolen
$2,700 from the purse of the suicidal woman
- Cross now assumed
that his marriage to Adele was invalidated, and that he was free
to marry Kitty; he was suspicious that "Kitty" and Johnny
were romantically-involved, but still believed he had a chance to
marry her
- the scene of Cross' pitiful and pathetic proposal
of marriage to Kitty: ("I haven't any wife, that's finished...Her
husband turned up, I'm free...I can marry you now, I want you to
be my wife. We'll go away together, way far off so you can forget
this other man. Don't cry, Kitty, please don't cry"); she responded
by humiliating him and revealing
her true feelings for him - she called Cross an "idiot":
("I
am not crying, you fool, I'm laughing!...Oh, you idiot! How can a
man be so dumb?...I've wanted to laugh in your face ever since I
first met you. You're old and ugly and I'm sick of you. Sick, sick,
sick!")
- after she ordered him out ("You
want to marry me? You? Get out of here! Get out! Get away from me!")
-- he lost control of his feelings, leading him to commit murder in
a jealous rage by stabbing her with an ice-pick through her bed covers
when she hid
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Cross' Brutal Stabbing of "Kitty"
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- the film's ending - Johnny was accused of the crime
(convicted and executed), while Cross was only fired from his job for
embezzling funds from his employer. However, he suffered
humiliating disgrace, psychological torment and mental anguish due
to his guilt (i.e., on the night of Johnny's execution, Cross attempted
suicide by hanging and failed, and in abject homelessness, he wandered
the streets)
- the final image was his shuffling by a 5th Avenue
gallery when he passed the 'self-portrait' he had drawn of Kitty;
after Kitty's death, she was immortalized as a great painter; Cross
overheard its sale to an elderly matron for $10,000; the art dealer
Mr. Dellarowe (Arthur Loft) commented: "Well, there
goes her masterpiece. I really hate to part with it" - the buyer
replied: "For $10,000 dollars, I shouldn't think you'd mind,
Mr. Dellarowe"
- the last lines of dialogue were heard as the tormented
and haunted Cross slowly ambled down the deserted street under a
movie marquee - he thought of Kitty and Johnny together, with echoing
words of love spoken (off-screen) between them: Kitty: "Johnny.
Oh Johnny." Johnny: "Lazy Legs." Kitty: "Jeepers,
I love you, Johnny."
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Tormented and Haunted Cross Thinking of Kitty and
Johnny
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Rainy Night Meeting: Cross and "Kitty"
Femme Fatale "Kitty"
"Kitty's" Pimp Johnny (Dan Duryea)
"Kitty" With Cross
Patch-eyed Homer Higgins
Newspaper Headline for "Kitty's" Ice-Pick Murder
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