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The Big Clock (1948)
In director John Farrow's film noirish suspenseful
thriller (later updated as the spy thriller No Way Out (1987) with
Kevin Costner) - with a screenplay by Jonathan Latimer based on Kenneth
Fearing's 1946 novel:
- in the opening scene, 1940's
New York City media executive and Crimeways weekly magazine
journalist-editor George Stroud (Ray Milland) was hiding inside
his company's gigantic $600,000 privately-owned corporate clock
in the Janoth Publications building's lobby (which synchronized
with all other clocks in the entire building and in secondary printing
plants and dozens of other foreign bureaus) - the editor-in-chief
found himself in a symbolic race against time to clear his own
name (as he narrated what had happened to him): "How'd
I get into this rat race anyway? I'm no criminal. What happened?
When did it all start? Just 36 hours ago, I was down there crossing
that lobby on my way to work, minding my own business, looking
forward to my first vacation in years. 36 hours ago, I was a decent,
respectable, law-abiding citizen with a wife and a kid and a big
job. Just 36 hours ago by the big clock"
- married man Stroud was in
the midst of planning to go on a long-postponed honeymoon trip
to Wheeling, WV with his wife Georgette (Maureen O'Sullivan) and
son, but found himself keeping late company in a bar with blonde Pauline
York (Rita Johnson), the mistress of his clock-obsessed,
ruthless and detestable homosexual boss Earl Janoth (Charles Laughton),
the powerful publishing tycoon of NYC's Crimeways Magazine; he
and Pauline (who was extorting money from Janoth) discussed how she
might blackmail Janoth; they also bought a sundial
and an abstract painting in an art shop during their evening together
- the film's opening was the prelude to a flashback
36 hours earlier when Stroud had become implicated in Pauline's
murder
- both Stroud and Pauline were
drunk when they returned to Pauline's apartment late that night; before
entering Pauline's apartment and killing her, Janoth noticed someone
else who had just left Pauline's apartment just as he arrived,
but did not see the man's face; Janoth pressured Pauline to identify
her other presumed lover - she elusively claimed that the man's
name was "Jefferson Randolph" to protect Stroud
Janoth's Murder of His
Mistress Pauline
(She Claimed Her Other Lover was "Jefferson Randolph" To Protect Stroud)
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- the jealous Janoth then killed
Pauline after accusing her of having another lover - she snapped
back that he was a "cheap imitation Napoleon" and called
him "disgusting...flabby"; he struck her in the head
with the phallic-shaped, heavy metal sundial - and there was a
contorted closeup of Janoth's grotesque face with a twitching upper
lip
- to cover up his crime, Janoth cleverly planned
to blame the murder on the other man; Janoth confessed
his crime to his right-hand man Steve Hagen (George Macready), and
had him cover up all evidence of the murder (including setting Pauline's
clock - broken at the time of her death - ahead one hour), to frame
the other man for the killing
- the bulk of the film was the
ensuing cat-and-mouse game by Stroud who was enlisted by Janoth
to investigate the case and find the killer (who was witnessed accompanying
Pauline during the evening by many individuals); Stroud feared
that his investigation would lead to only one man - himself!; he
realized that all the clues pointed to himself as the prime suspect,
so he desperately attempted to steer the manhunt away from himself,
and find information to incriminate Janoth by using a method of "irrelevant
clues"
- at the film's end in a taut confrontational scene,
the framed Stroud accused Steve Hagen of being the killer in order to smoke out Janoth - causing
a raging Janoth to shoot Hagen (after he confessed: "Janoth
killed Pauline")
- then Janoth fell to his death down his
building's empty elevator shaft during his attempted escape
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Opening Scene - Stroud's Race Against Time: A Prelude
to Flashback Going Back 36 Hours
Earl Janoth - Spotting A Silhouetted Man in
Hallway Just Before Murdering Pauline
Janoth Enlisting Stroud to Find Pauline's Killer
Janoth's Death in Elevator Shaft
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