Plot Synopsis (continued)
Governmental
relations between Freedonia and Sylvania are governed by the tense
relationship between Firefly and Ambassador Trentino and their rivalry
for Mrs. Teasdale. The Sylvanian ambassador fears Firefly's influence
because it has averted a revolution in Freedonia. When Firefly arrives
at the tea party, greeted by the guests with the national anthem "Hail,
Hail Freedonia," he dunks an invited guest's doughnut into a
cup of coffee. He immediately competes with Trentino to charm Mrs.
Teasdale with his attention:
Firefly: I can't give you wealth, but, uh, we can
have a little family of our own (his eyebrows dance up and down)
Mrs. Teasdale: Oh Rufus!
Firefly: All I can offer you is a Rufus over your head.
Mrs. Teasdale: Your Excellency. I really don't know what to say.
Firefly: I wouldn't know what to say either if I was in your place.
(To Trentino) Maybe you can suggest something. As a matter of fact,
you do suggest something. To me you suggest a baboon.
Trentino: What!
Firefly: I'm sorry I said that. It isn't fair to the rest of the
baboons.
Trentino, acting imperially, believes Firefly's conduct
is inexcusable, and angrily walks away, insulting him: "You
Swine!...You Worm!...You Upstart!"
The third name-calling insult provokes Firefly to slap him with his
gloves. Trentino fears the incident may plunge the two countries into
war:
Trentino: Mrs. Teasdale. I'm afraid this regrettable
occurrence may plunge our countries into war.
Mrs. Teasdale: Oh, this is terrible!
Trentino: I've said enough. I'm a man of few words.
Firefly: I'm a man of one word: scram!
As Trentino leaves and a rivalry between the two countries
is sparked, Firefly boasts of his blue-blood heritage: "Why
the Mayflower was full of Fireflys. And a few horseflies too. The
Fireflys were on the upper deck, and the horseflies were on the Fireflys." Firefly
calls for his car and to avoid being fooled again, insists on switching
places with the chauffeur. So Firefly gets on the motorcycle and
roars the engine, but remains frozen as Pinkie and the sidecar take
off. Firefly quips again: "This is the only way to travel."
The next scene parallels the inevitable rivalry looming
between the two countries. It is a silent, classic visual sight gag
- a battle of rival concessions. The two street vendors (peanut vendor
and lemonade vendor) clash again in a memorable pantomime encounter.
The Lemonade Seller (with a new white straw hat) helps himself to
a bag of peanuts and refuses to pay. When Pinkie, who is watching
the stand for Chicolini, holds out his hand to be paid, the Seller
paints his palm with mustard. Pinkie wipes his hand clean on the
Seller's apron, cuts off the soiled portion with a big pair of scissors
and throws it away. Pinkie knocks the bag of peanuts to the ground.
The Lemonade Seller then grabs another bag of peanuts.
Pinkie immediately knocks it to the ground too. As he bends down,
his new hat is taken and slowly roasted on the hot dog spit. The
Seller is so aggravated that he overturns the peanut stand and then
returns to his own lemonade vending stand to sell drinks to a long
line of customers. Suddenly, everyone in the line disperses in shock.
Pinkie has rolled up his trousers, perched himself on the edge of
the clear glass lemonade tank, and is seen happily paddling and splashing
with his bare feet in his opponent's lemonade tank.
Mrs. Teasdale tries to act as troubleshooter by entering
into the conflict between Trentino and Firefly to bring reconciliation.
She telephones from her place and urges Firefly to come over at once.
Lounging in his bed and eating soda crackers, an image to mock the
Idle Rich, Firefly takes the phone call from Mrs. Teasdale. On the
verge of war, Firefly brings his plans for war to Mrs. Teasdale for
safe-keeping. In her home, he shamelessly flirts with her and imagines
them married: "Married. I can see you right now in the kitchen,
bending over a hot stove, but I can't see the stove." He puts
his arm around her as they sit on the sofa and shares his thoughts: "Oh,
I was thinking of all the years I've wasted collecting stamps." He
asks for a lock of her hair, after amending his request: "I'm
letting you off easy - I was gonna ask for the whole wig."
Trentino and Vera enter from Mrs. Teasdale's porch.
Trentino wants to avoid all-out war and attempts to reconcile their
differences by being willing to do anything, but Firefly explains
why war is inevitable:
Mrs. Teasdale: Your Excellency, the Ambassador's
here on a friendly visit. He's had a change of heart.
Firefly: A lot of good that'll do him. He's still got the same face.
Trentino: I'm sorry we lost our tempers. I'm willing to forget if
you are.
Firefly: Forget? You ask me to forget? A Firefly never forgets. Why,
my ancestors would rise from their graves, and I'd only have to bury
them again. Nothing doing. I'm going back and clean the crackers
out of my bed. I'm expecting company.
Mrs. Teasdale: Please wait.
Firefly: Let go of me, you bully!
Mrs. Teasdale: Oh!
Trentino: I am willing to do anything to prevent this war.
Firefly: It's too late. I've already paid a month's rent on the battlefield.
Both Vera and Mrs. Teasdale beg Firefly - is there
anything they can do to get him to reconsider and relent? Firefly
replies: "Well, maybe I am a little headstrong, but I come by
it honestly. My father was a little headstrong, my mother was a little
armstrong. The headstrongs married the armstrongs and that's why
darkies were born."
Firefly laughs away their silly conflict, but then
prompts and even encourages Trentino to repeat the offending word
from their previous encounter, causing their conflict to continue:
Trentino: Do you mean Worm?
Firefly: No, that wasn't it.
Trentino: I know Swine!
Firefly: ...No, it was a seven letter word.
Trentino: Oh yes, Upstart?
Firefly: That's it! Upstart.
Firefly slaps Trentino across the face with his gloves.
Trentino departs, vowing Sylvania's declaration of war on Freedonia: "This
means WAR!" Firefly adds:
Go, and never darken my towels again!
Trentino schemes to steal into Mrs. Teasdale's house
to acquire the Freedonian war plans. Vera Marcal is a "weekend
guest" in the Teasdale house - she is to act as an accomplice
to help his hired spies, Pinkie and Chicolini. The same evening,
Mrs. Teasdale has summoned Firefly to spend the night in her house
for protection.
Attempting to break and enter into the Teasdale mansion
to steal Freedonia's battle plans, Pinkie and Chicolini engage in
an extended routine of being locked out. In the doorbell sequence,
first the servant is locked out, then each of them are separately
locked out, and finally, both of them are left on the outside.
They ring a large bell and then the front doorbell and hide behind
a hedge as a servant comes out to look around. Pinkie dashes inside
the front door, but shuts the door on his partner. The servant is
also locked out. Then Chicolini rings the bell, and Pinkie comes
out to look. Chicolini slips inside and shuts the door on him. Pinkie
is locked out. (The servant is still wandering about outside.) Then,
when Pinkie rings the bell, Chicolini comes out and the servant comes
back, goes in, shuts the door and locks both of them out.
They are successfully brought in another door by Trentino's
accomplice Vera Marcal. She cautions them to be careful and absolutely
quiet so they won't be detected: "If you are found, you are
lost." Chicolini asks: "How can I be lost if-a found?" Although
they are compelled to be as quiet as possible, Pinkie unavoidably
makes loud noises with whatever he touches. Pinkie lights a loud
hissing blowtorch for a flashlight. He also creates a virtual symphony
of sound: the clock in the living room chimes, he triggers another
music box playing "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf," and
as he dances to the music, he plucks the piano strings like a harp.
Chicolini finally stops the music by smashing Pinkie's hands with
the piano top.
By phone, Firefly is awakened by Mrs. Teasdale who
is worried about the security of the war plans. As Firefly prepares
to go retrieve the plans from her, Chicolini locks him in his bedroom's
toilet. Firefly helplessly screams:
"Let me out of here. Hey, let me out of here, or throw me a magazine!" Pinkie
and Chicolini both decide (independently and coincidentally of each
other) to dress up in white nightshirts and nightcaps and masquerade
as Firefly - adding his distinctive moustache, glasses, eyebrows, and
cigar to their disguises. Chicolini then heads for Mrs. Teasdale's
upstairs bedroom to ask her for the plans.
There in Mrs. Teasdale's room, she queries his Excellency
about his "strange"
accent, so Chicolini explains: "Maybe sometime I go to Italy,
and I'm practicing the language." She writes out the combination
to the downstairs safe where the plans are stashed. Pinkie, also dressed
as Firefly, races into the bedroom - Chicolini hides under the bed,
thinking it is Firefly. He puffs on his cigar, makes faces, honks his
horn - and then abruptly leaves (with the safe's combination written
on a piece of paper) after seeing his partner under the bed. Mrs. Teasdale,
believing that she is alone, starts to undress. But Chicolini emerges
from under the bed and she is startled:
Mrs. Teasdale: I thought you left.
Chicolini: Oh no. I don't leave.
Mrs. Teasdale: But I saw you with my own eyes.
Chicolini: Well, who you gonna believe, me or your own eyes?
She faints on the bed, thinking she is hallucinating,
and Chicolini goes for water to revive her. When Chicolini hears
the real Firefly approaching (after breaking out of the bathroom),
he again hides under the bed. Firefly hears Mrs. Teasdale's question: "How
about my glass of water?" A confused Firefly replies: "I
give up. How about your glass of water?"
Sliding on the downstairs landing in stockinged feet,
Pinkie (still garbed as Firefly) approaches the wall safe and turns
the dials to unlock it. Like a radio dial, the safe begins to uncontrollably
blare out a spirited rendition of a Sousa march - "The Stars
and Stripes Forever" - and he tries desperately to turn off
the sound, first by covering the safe with a pillow and a curtain,
and then by spraying it to drown it with water.
Upstairs, Mrs. Teasdale is quizzical about all the
noise:
Mrs. Teasdale: What's that?
Firefly: Sounds to me like mice.
Mrs. Teasdale: Mice? Mice don't play music.
Firefly (punning): No? How about the old maestro?
Firefly calls for guards at his headquarters (not "hindquarters")
to surround the house. Leaving Mrs. Teasdale, he goes downstairs
to find the source of the disturbance. To quiet the safe once and
for all after smashing it, Pinkie drops the wall safe out the window.
When he sees Firefly coming to investigate, Pinkie runs headlong
directly into a large wall mirror, smashing it into pieces. The broken
glass vanishes and a room is revealed beyond the mirror.
Next follows the inspired, celebrated mirror pantomime
scene, a superlative, lyrical, artistic example of mute physical
comedy [a revival of a classic vaudeville routine]. Pinkie (disguised
like Firefly) confronts the real Firefly, and pretends to be his
mirror image, simultaneously playing back every gesture and movement.
Firefly suspects his "reflection," another white-nightgowned
figure, and tests the reflection in the perfectly-timed, ghostly-silent
pantomime to catch him.
- After peering closely at his mirror image, Firefly
cups his hand on his chin, turns away, looks back over his shoulder
(twice), bends down, and wiggles his backside. Pinkie imitates.
- Firefly nods his head up and down and moves to the
left behind the door frame. Pinkie imitates.
- Firefly peeks around the door frame with his glasses
moved down on his nose. Pinkie imitates.
- Firefly pokes his head around the lower edge of
the doorframe on his hands and knees in a crawling position - and
so does the reflection.
- Firefly tiptoes/prances by, hops back, and performs
a one-legged hop back again. Pinkie imitates.
- Firefly does a traditional Charleston dance. Pinkie
follows each step.
- Firefly then spins around completely, arms outstretched.
In the first illusionary mistake, Pinky fails to spin around, but
his image matches Firefly's after he has completed the gyration.
Both images are posed with arms slightly outstretched in a half-bow.
They both walk to the door frame, arms up and flailing.
- Firefly carries a white Panama hat hidden behind
his back. Pinkie has something behind his back.
- Firefly changes sides with the mirror view. As they
circle around one another back to their original positions, Firefly
notices that his mirror image has a black top hat behind his back
- he silently smirks triumphantly in anticipation of fooling and
exposing the mirror image.
- Firefly claps the hat on his head as fast as he
can to trick his mirror image. Miraculously, the mirror image claps
an identical white hat on his head! Both make faces to try to send
their mirror image into hysterics. Firefly then takes his hat off
and bows. So does Pinkie.
- Pinkie drops his hat, and Firefly retrieves it and
hands it back to him through the mirror frame.
When a third character - Chicolini - enters the scene's
frame, the routine ends - the game of disguise is over, although
it was over much earlier. Firefly grabs Chicolini by his nightshirt
as Pinkie escapes.
After his arrest, Chicolini is brought to trial for
high treason (for selling Freedonia's secret war code and plans),
a capital offense - "CHICOLINI UNDER ARREST; FACES TRIAL FOR
TREASON." "Spy Trapped Attempting to Steal War Plans at
Gloria Teasdale Home. Firefly to Prosecute, Quick Conviction is Promised."
The trial scene dialogue in the classic scene is entirely composed
of outrageous, excruciatingly-shameless puns delivered in a sideshow
atmosphere. Presiding prosecutor Firefly both attacks and defends him
in the trial. Another stony-faced prosecutor (Charles B. Middleton)
tells Chicolini that if found guilty, he will be shot:
Prosecutor: Chicolini, you're charged with high treason.
And if found guilty, you'll be shot.
Chicolini: I object.
Prosecutor: You object. On what grounds?
Chicolini: I couldn't think of anything else to say.
Firefly: Objection sustained.
Prosecutor: Your Excellency? You sustained the objection?
Firefly: Sure. I couldn't think of anything else to say either. Why
don't you object?
Prosecutor: Chicolini, when were you born?
Chicolini: I don't remember. I was just a little baby.
Feeling sorry for the defendant, Firefly takes over
his defense after jumping over the judge's bench:
Firefly: (melodramatically) Look at Chicolini. He
sits there alone. An abject figure.
Chicolini: I abject.
Firefly: (frowning) (To the court) I say, look at Chicolini, he sits
there alone. A pitiable object. (To Chicolini) Let's see you
get out of that one. (To the court) Surrounded by a sea of unfriendly
faces.
To confuse the prosecutor, he begins another quiz game:
Firefly: Chicolini, give me a number from one to
ten.
Chicolini: Eleven.
Firefly: Right.
Chicolini: Now I aska you one. What is it has a trunk, but no key,
weighs 2,000 pounds and lives in the circus?
Prosecutor (unwittingly supplying the correct answer): That's ir-relevant.
Chicolini: Irr-elephant? Hey, that'sa the answer! There's a whole
lotta irr-elephants in the circus.
Minister/Judge: That sort of testimony we can eliminate.
Chicolini: Thats-a fine. I'll take some.
Minister/Judge: You'll take what?
Chicolini: Eliminate. A nice, cool glass eliminate.
A defense, of sorts, is given for the defendant by
Firefly:
Gentlemen, Chicolini here may talk like an idiot
and look like an idiot, but don't let that fool you. He really
is an idiot. I implore you, send him back to his father and brothers
who are waiting for him with open arms in the penitentiary. I suggest
that we give him ten years in Leavenworth or eleven years in Twelveworth.
Chicolini would rather take a different sentence: "I
tell you what I'll do. I'll take five and ten in Woolworth." Before
Chicolini is sentenced, a messenger interrupts and announces the
news that Sylvanian troops are about to land on Freedonian soil for
war. There is debate over the disastrous effects of an impending
war:
Minister of Finance: Something must be done! War
would mean a prohibitive increase in our taxes.
Chicolini: Hey, I got an uncle lives in Taxes.
Minister of Finance: No, I'm talking about taxes - money,
dollars.
Chicolini: Dollars! There's-a where my uncle lives! Dollars, Taxes!
Minister of Finance: Aww!
"More bad news" arrives. Mrs. Teasdale enters
to make one more final effort to prevent war. She brings Firefly
the good news: "I've talked to Ambassador Trentino and he says
Sylvania doesn't want war either." Without responding to the
real issue, Firefly questions the way she has pronounced the word "either."
She announces that Trentino has forgotten his quarrel with Firefly
and is calling for a peaceful conference. Firefly compliments her for
her noble deed:
I'll be only too happy to meet Ambassador Trentino
and offer him on behalf of my country the right hand of good fellowship......But
suppose he doesn't?
Firefly imagines being snubbed and his anger escalates.
Firefly acts out what would happen if Trentino refuses to shake his
hand - embarrassment, public humiliation - and then it is almost
as if the rejection has taken place. Firefly cries:
Who does he think he is, that he can come here and
make a sap out of me in front of all my people?
At that moment, Trentino enters with his entourage
and his arms outstretched and willing to shake hands, but fantasy
has become reality. The last-minute attempt at peace-making fails.
Firefly greets him with another declaration of war: "So, you
refuse to shake hands with me, eh?" and slaps him in the face.
Trentino has no choice but to reply: "Mrs. Teasdale, this is
the last straw. There's no turning back now. This means WAR!"
In the spectacular musical ensemble, "The Country's
Going to War," the coming of war is celebrated by the four Marx
Bros. and the people of Freedonia. [The scene is reprised within
Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters (1986).] The call to
arms is lampooned with numerous parodies of musical styles including
a patriotic parade, a Negro spiritual ("All God's Chillun Got
Guns"), a hillbilly song ("Comin' Round the Mountain"),
and a Virginia Reel barn dance:
They got guns
We got guns
All God's Chillun got guns
In a historical parody, Pinkie is dispatched to waken
the citizenry with a bugle, in a memorable Paul Revere-like ride
scene. While alerting citizens late at night on his white steed after
seeing three lights ("they're coming by land and sea"),
he comes upon a blonde woman undressing in an upstairs window. He
gives up his Paul Revere midnight duties in the scene of exploded-expectations
and enters her room, but is forced to find a place to hide in the
bottom of a sudsy bathtub when her husband (Edgar Kennedy again)
arrives home. And then, the husband settles into the bath tub on
top of a submerged Pinkie. When Pinkie's taxi horn honk is heard
underwater, he surfaces with bugle blowing, sounds a wet reveille
and flees, leaving a startled husband in the tub.
Pinkie reaches his own house where a woman is waving
to him from a second-floor window. He enters the front door on horseback.
The next image is taken at the foot of the bed - Pinkie's discarded
boots, a pair of ladies shoes, and horseshoes are all laid out on
the floor. Perversely, Pinkie shares a bed with the horse, and the
woman sleeps in a single bed alone.
In the war room, Firefly is dressed in a strange military
uniform.
[He wears a different costume in almost every sequence
until the end of the film, including various military outfits from
the Civil War and Revolutionary War, a Boy Scout troop leader's uniform,
and even a coon-skin Davey Crockett cap. All the war costumes suggest
that the war scene symbolizes all American wars.]
He sends telegrams
to the battlefront collect and because there isn't time to dig trenches,
Firefly orders some ready-made: "Get them this high (gesturing
up to his neck) and our soldiers won't need any pants...Get them
this high (gesturing above his head) and we won't need any soldiers." Rival
Trentino is also delivering equally absurd orders to Chicolini:
Trentino: There's a machine-gun nest near hill twenty-eight.
I want it cleaned out.
Chicolini: All right. I'll tell the janitor.
Firefly is frustrated by war messages back and forth: "I'm
sick of messages from the front. Don't we ever get a message from
the side?" Firefly's secretary arrives in the besieged headquarters
to announce that one of the generals is suffering a gas attack. To
answer with more double entendres, Firefly offers an antidote:
Tell him to take a teaspoon full of bicarbonate soda
and a half a glass of water.
Firefly asks his telegraph operator about communications:
Firefly: Any answer to that message?
Operator: No, sir.
Firefly: Well, in that case, don't send it.
A large shell bursts through an open window and blasts
a large hole through the opposite wall. Firefly picks up his damaged
Panama hat: "Gentlemen, this is the last straw." He asks
for his Stradivarius - a violin case with a machine gun inside: "I'll
show them they can't fiddle around with ol' Firefly!" Firefly
picks up the machine gun and fires mistakenly on his own troops,
boasting happily:
Firefly: Look at them run. Now they know they've
been in a war.
Bob: Your Excellency!
Firefly (making the sound of rat-a-tat-tat) They're fleeing like
rats.
Bob: But sir, I've got to tell you.
Firefly: (totally engrossed) Remind me to give myself the Firefly
Medal for this.
Bob: Your Excellency, you're shooting your own men!
When told that he has returned friendly fire, he keeps
it under his hat (metaphorically and literally). He offers Bob a
banknote as a bribe to cover up his mistake: "Here's five dollars.
Keep it under your hat. Never mind. I'll keep it under my hat."
Pinkie's main contribution to the war effort is to
wander on the battleground's front lines with a sandwich board over
his shoulders - a recruitment sign to gather more volunteers:
JOIN THE ARMY AND SEE THE NAVY
Chicolini, a spy for Sylvania and the Freedonian Secretary
of War, enters the Freedonia headquarters and punches the time clock
as he enters:
Firefly: Awfully decent of you to drop in today.
Do you realize our army is facing disastrous defeat? What do you
intend to do about it?
Chicolini: I've done it already.
Firefly: You've done what?
Chicolini: I've changed to the other side.
Firefly: So, you're on the other side, eh? Well, what are you doing
over here?
Chicolini: Well, the food is better over here.
Firefly tries to keep gunfire and shells out by pulling
down the blinds. Pinkie's hat twirls around on his head as it is
hit by a rapid-fire machine gun. Mrs.Teasdale calls for rescue and
Firefly delivers the famous line to his cohorts as they rescue her:
Remember, you're fighting for this woman's honor,
which is probably more than she ever did.
Beseiged, they are soon running low on ammunition and
overwhelmed by a counter-attack. When the house is hit by shells
and it explodes, a large ceiling beam crashes to the floor in the
shape of a cross or "X." A volunteer is selected to seek
aid in a parody of the draft system. Pinkie hangs a "HELP WANTED" sign
on the door, and then is chosen for the dangerous mission when Chicolini
fools him in a circular counting game. As Pinkie prepares to march
off, Firefly shakes his hand, kisses him, and makes fun of him:
You're a brave man. Go and break through the lines.
And remember while you're out there risking life and limb through
shot and shell, we'll be in here thinking what a sucker you are.
Pinkie cuts off the tail on Firefly's cap, and then
falls backwards into a closet that explosively detonates with fireworks.
Firefly telephones for assistance, sending help to the front. Stock
footage shows the response to his call for aid:
- squadrons of fire engines
- battalions of motorcycle policemen
- marathon runners
- crew rowers
- long-distance swimmers
- packs of baboons/monkeys crossing a jungle footbridge
- herds of elephants
- schools of porpoises
When Firefly is shot in the rear-end, he cries: "They
got me. Water!" Firefly gets a large white flower vase stuck
on his head while drinking water from it: "Get me out of this!
The last time this happened to me I was crawling under a bed." Pinkie
removes the "Groucho" face-painted vase from his head by
exploding a stick on dynamite inside it. Firefly emerges from behind
a cloud of smoke: "Any mail for me while I was gone?"
Firefly keeps track of the war tally with a pool-hall
counter. Freedonia finally emerges victorious and the war is won
when Trentino rams the door and then gets his head stuck in the door
of the Freedonian headquarters. Captured, he is pelted with apples
until he surrenders.
The final line in the climactic absurd battle episode
is delivered when Mrs. Teasdale cries:
Victory is ours!
She also attempts to sing to their victory with the
glorious national anthem of Freedonia: "Hail, hail, Freedonia,
land of the brave..." but is pelted with tomatoes, apples, and
oranges. |