Plot Synopsis (continued)
In
an exchange of small talk as they continue walking through the park,
Terry learns that Edie attends a "regular college" in Tarrytown
that is "run by the Sisters of St. Anne." She is a teacher
trainee, and aspires "to be a teacher."
As they walk, Edie accidentally drops one of her white mittens. Terry
picks it up and cleans it off, but instead of immediately returning
it, he holds it, and then puts it on his left hand - as a substitute
for getting close to her.
Edie reminds him that "it isn't just brains. It's
how you use them." Terry has always been awe-struck by Edie,
having first seen her years earlier as a teenager when they went
to Catholic school together. He remembers what she was like, with
simple observations:
Terry: You know, I've seen you a lot of times before.
Remember parochial school out on Pulaski Street? Seven, eight years
ago? Your hair, you had your hair, uh...
Edie: In braids.
Terry: Looked like a hunk of rope. And you had wires on your teeth
and glasses, everything. I mean, you was really a mess.
Edie: I can get home all right now, thanks. (She removes the glove
from his hand.)
Terry: Now listen. Don't get sore. I was just kiddin' ya a little
bit. I just needed to tell ya a joke. You grew up very nice.
Edie: Thanks.
Terry: You don't, you don't remember me, do ya?
Edie: I remembered you the first moment I saw you.
Terry: By the nose, huh? (She smiles at him) Well, some people just
got faces that stick in your mind.
Edie: I remember you were in trouble all the time.
Terry: Now you got me. Boy, the way those Sisters used to whack me,
I don't know what. They thought they was gonna beat an education
into me, but I foxed 'em.
Edie: Maybe they just didn't know how to handle you.
Terry: How would you have done it?
Edie: With a little more patience and kindness. That's what makes
people mean and difficult. People don't care enough about them.
Terry: Ah, what are you kiddin' me?
He is interested in seeing her again, although he feels
unfamiliar, awkward emotions for her during their departure.
When she gets home, her father has already packed her
suitcase and made preparations for her return trip to St. Anne's.
After witnessing her goodbye from Terry out the window, he tells
her that he disapproves of her association with Terry: "A daughter
of mine walkin' arm-in-arm with Terry Malloy. Do you know who Terry
Malloy is?" He informs her of the thugs Terry is associated
with: "He's the kid brother of Charlie the Gent who is Johnny
Friendly's right hand and a butcher in a camel hair coat."
Edie tells her father that she sees him differently
than the tough exterior appearance he always projects - he has a
sensitivity that others cannot see:
"He tries to act tough, but there's a look in his eye." Her
father knows she has always been soft-hearted and soft-headed: "You
think he's one of them cases you're always draggin' into the house
and feelin' sorry for. Like that litter of kittens you brought in." And
he has worked all his life to shelter her and make life better for
her: "And every time I heist a box or a coffee bag I says to myself,
that's for Edie, so she can be a teacher or somethin' decent. I promised
your Mom, Edie. Don't let her down." Not wanting to be ungrateful,
Edie is still stubbornly determined to remain:
...But Pop, I've seen things that I know are so wrong.
Now how can I go back to school and keep my mind on things that
are just in books, that aren't people living? I'm gonna stay, Pop.
And I'm gonna keep on tryin' to find out who is guilty for Joey.
That evening on the tenement rooftop, where Edie looks
at Joey's coop, Terry catches sight of her. He proudly talks to her
about his fondness for his racing pigeons - the "champion flock
of the neighborhood." "I started them Golden Warriors.
You might say that I was the original Golden Warrior." Tommy
idolizes Terry: "This bum here is my shadow. He thinks I'm a
tough man because I boxed pro a lot."
She thanks him for helping to feed Joey's pigeons: "I
wouldn't have thought you'd be so interested in pigeons." And
then he explains how dangerous a pigeon's life can be:
You know this city's full of hawks? That's a fact.
They hang around on the top of the big hotels. And they spot a
pigeon in the park. Right down on him.
He proudly takes out one of the larger pigeons from
the coop, a lead bird named Swifty that won't let other birds take
his top perch.
Edie: Even pigeons aren't peaceful.
Terry: There's one thing about them though, they're very faithful.
They get married just like people.
Tommy: Better.
Terry: And they stay that way till one of 'em dies.
Edie: That's nice.
Taking her for a drink of Glockenheimer beer in a "saloon" (with
a special entrance for ladies), Terry tells Edie that he used to
be a prizefighter, but before that, he was an orphaned kid after
his father was killed:
I had to scrap all my life. I might as well get paid
for it. When I was a kid, my old man got bumped off and - and never
mind how. Then they stuck Charley and me in a dump they called
a Children's Home. Oh, boy! That was some home. Well, anyhow, I
ran away from there and I fought in the club smokers and peddled
papers and Johnny Friendly bought a piece of me...Yes, then, uh,
I was goin' pretty good there for awhile. And after that, uh. Well,
I don't know, what do you really care? Am I right?
Kind-hearted toward him, Edie expresses a philosophy
of life totally foreign to him. He believes in a 'dog-eat-dog' world
point of view ("Do it to him before he does it to you"):
Edie: Shouldn't everybody care about everybody else?
Terry: Boy, what a fruitcake you are!
Edie: I mean, isn't everybody a part of everybody else?
Terry: And you really believe that drool?
Edie: Yes, I do.
Terry: ...You wanna hear my philosophy of life? Do it to him before
he does it to you.
Edie (complaining): I never met anyone like you. There's not a spark
of sentiment or romance or human kindness in your whole body.
Terry: What good does it do ya besides get ya in trouble?
Edie: And when things and people get in your way, you just knock
them aside, get rid of them, is that your idea?
Terry still doesn't believe he is responsible for Joey's
death - "fixin' him wasn't my idea" although he is allegedly
blamed for it:
Edie: You don't believe anybody, do you?
Terry: Listen, down here, it's every man for himself. It's keepin'
alive. It's standin' in with the right people, so you got a little
bit of change jinglin' in your pocket.
Edie: And if you don't?
Terry: And if you don't - right down.
Edie: That's living like an animal.
Terry: All right, I'd rather live like an animal than end up like
-
Edie: Like Joey? Are you afraid to mention his name?
Her brother's name keeps popping up in their conversation.
Suddenly, in the film's most touching scene, Edie pleads with him
to help find her brother's killer, but he refuses, knowing that his
loyalties are with his brother Charley, his steady work, and loyalty
to Friendly's mob and its code. But Terry is still deeply touched
by her pure request, and disturbed that he can't help her:
Edie: Help me if you can, for God's sakes!
Terry: Edie, I'd like to help, I'd like to help, but there's nothin'
I can do.
Edie: All right. I shouldn't have asked you.
Terry: Here, come on, have a little beer. Come on, come on. (He puts
the glass to her lips, but she doesn't drink)
Edie: I don't want it. You just stay here and finish your drink.
Terry: Oh, no, no, listen, don't go. I got my whole life to drink.
(pause) You sore at me?
Edie (innocently): What for?
Terry: Well, I don't know, for not, for not bein' no help to ya.
Edie (intensely): You would if you could. (She strokes his face gently)
She has deep faith in him and in basic human nature,
and this causes him inner pain to hear her. Obviously, he is influenced
by her and cares for her, and he begins to feel more guilty, frustrated
and responsible for the murder. Gradually, he starts to be persuaded
to turn against the union.
On their way out of the bar, they encounter a boisterous
wedding reception in progress - in a room decorated with paper streamers.
Dreamily, they begin to dance together to the music of the party,
and soon are spinning around. Terry grins and jokes with her: "Ah,
you dance divinely...The Sisters oughta see you now." Terry
draws her to him, and they dance closely together, just as Edie breathlessly
shares her dizzying feelings with him while her eyes are closed: "I
feel like I'm just floating. Just floating. Just floating."
Terry's lips draw near to hers, but they are interrupted before they
are able to kiss each other.
One of Johnny's men, Barney (Abe Simon) approaches,
ordering Terry to report to his boss immediately: "He just got
a call from 'Mr. Upstairs.' (Whispering) Something's gone wrong.
He's pretty hot." Before they can leave the bar, Terry is served
with a subpoena to testify at the State House at 10 o'clock on Friday
morning regarding Joey's murder. Edie asks the angered, pained, and
tortured Terry about what he is going to tell the committee, and
whether Johnny Friendly and his brother Charley had anything to do
with the murder:
Edie: What are you going to do?
Terry: I ain't gonna eat cheese for no cops, and that's for sure.
Edie (intuitively): It was Johnny Friendly who had Joey killed, wasn't
it? (Terry doesn't respond) Or he had him killed, or he had something
to do with it, didn't he? He and your big brother Charley? (Still
no response from Terry) You can't tell me, can you? Because you're
part of it. Cause you're just as bad as the worst of them. Tell me
the truth, Terry!
Terry: You'd better go back to that school out in daisyland. You're
drivin' yourself nuts. You're drivin' me nuts. Quit worryin' about
the truth all the time. Worry about yourself.
Edie: I should've known you wouldn't tell me. Pop said Johnny Friendly
used to own you. Well, I think he still owns you.
She tells him she believes he is 'owned' by the bosses
and insults him - she calls him "a bum":
Edie: No wonder everybody calls you a bum.
Terry (obviously hurt): Don't say that to me. Edie. Don't say that
to me now.
Edie: No wonder. No wonder.
Terry: I'm only tryin' to help ya out. I'm tryin' to keep ya from
gettin' hurt. What more do ya want me to do?
Edie: Much more!
Terry: Wait a minute.
Edie: Much, much, much more!
Edie runs off, as Terry looks after her - deeply pained.
As he leaves the bar, Charley and Friendly drive up
in a car in front of him. They are worried about another informant
longshoreman, Kayo Dugan (Pat Henning), who left the parish meeting
that Terry had attended. Terry vainly explains that nothing happened: "It
was a big nothin'. The priest did all the talking." However,
according to Friendly, a half hour after the meeting was broken up,
Kayo Dugan went into a secret session with the Crime Commission and "he done
all the talking." "Dugan knew thirty-nine pages of our
operation," an exasperated Friendly exclaims. Incensed, Friendly
produces a bound, 39-page deposition of testimony Dugan gave to the
Crime Commission:
Why that crummy pigeon! He ought to have his neck
wrung! (To Charley) That's what I get for gettin' mixed up with
this punched-out brother of yours. He was all right hangin' around
for laughs. But this is business. I don't like anyone goofin' off
in our business.
Suddenly, Charley lashes out at Terry for "goin'
around" with Joey Doyle's sister: "(To Johnny) Listen Johnny.
The Doyle broad. She's got him so he doesn't even know where his
feet is anymore. IT'S AN UNHEALTHY RELATIONSHIP." Friendly pressures
Terry to keep away from Edie for good:
Get rid of her, unless you're both tired of living.
You got her address?
Friendly orders Charley to arrange to "muzzle" Dugan,
and then Terry is told that he has lost his "cushy job in the
loft. It's down in the hold with the sweat gang till you learn your
lesson. See?" Friendly squeezes and roughly twists (and then
slaps) Terry's cheek and face. Charley yells: "WISE UP!"
After they drive off, Terry is left standing there in the dark.
The next day at the docks, the protesting dock-worker
Dugan is part of a crew unloading cases of Irish whiskey from a ship.
When a heavy pallet is being raised from the open hatch, Big Mac
signals to the operator of the winch above the hatch to drop the
load. The cargo net plunges down, spilling the entire heavy load
of whiskey boxes into the hold of the ship - the load 'accidentally'
crushes and kills Dugan (wearing Joey Doyle's jacket) who is positioned
directly under. Deep in the hold of the ship, Father Barry stands
over the body of Dugan and gives him his last rites at the death
scene.
In a symbolic and memorable scene, Father Barry in
a "Sermon on the Docks" retaliates by preaching against
apathy and keeping silent. As the men gather around the opening of
the hatch, Barry explains that Joey Doyle and Kayo Dugan were killed
because they were threatening to expose the racketeering of Johnny
Friendly:
Some people think the Crucifixion only took place
on Calvary. They better wise up. Takin' Joey Doyle's life to stop
him from testifying is a crucifixion. And dropping a sling on Kayo
Dugan because he was ready to spill his guts tomorrow - that's
a crucifixion. And every time the mob puts the crusher on a good
man - tries to stop him from doing his duty as a citizen - it's
a crucifixion. And anybody who sits around and lets it happen -
keeps silent about something he knows has happened - shares the
guilt of it just as much as the Roman soldier who pierced the flesh
of Our Lord to see if He was dead.
Although some of the workers react with hostility and
yell at him to go back to his church, Father Barry preaches that
his church is anywhere that the longshoremen work:
Boys, this is my church! And if you don't think Christ
is down here on the waterfront, you've got another guess coming!
One of Friendly's mugs, Truck (Tony Galento), harrasses
Father Barry by throwing a rotten banana at him and splattering it
all over his shoulder. Terry supports the priest, telling Truck to "let
him finish." Ignoring the mob's anger, the Father continues.
He believes the longshoremen sell their souls every day to the mob,
and he tries to convince them to testify against their employer:
Every morning when the hiring boss blows his whistle,
Jesus stands alongside you in the shape-up. He sees why some of
you get picked and some of you get passed over. He sees the family
men worrying about getting the rent and getting food in the house
for the wife and the kids. He sees you selling your souls to the
mob for a day's pay.
Another of Friendly's thugs, Barney, hurls an empty
beer can at the priest, striking him in the forehead and drawing
blood. Pop shouts out a threat: "The next bum that throws somethin'
deals with me. I don't care if he's twice my size."
Father Barry then denounces the union bosses who benefit
off the labors and kickbacks of the workers. He tells the workers
that they should stop doing the bidding of the union bosses while
ignoring each other:
And what does Christ think of the easy-money boys
who do none of the work and take all of the gravy? And how does
he feel about the fellows who wear hundred-and-fifty dollar suits
and diamond rings, on your union dues and your kickback
money? And how does He, who spoke up without fear against every
evil, feel about your silence?
Terry flattens Truck with a punch to the face when
he is about to throw another banana at the priest. Johnny Friendly
notes that Terry's allegiance and loyalty is gradually being drawn
away from the racketeers, due to the persuasiveness of Father Barry.
You want to know what's wrong with our waterfront?
It's the love of a lousy buck. It's making the love of the lousy
buck - the cushy job - more important than the love of man! It's
forgettin' that every fellow down here is your brother in Christ!
But remember, Christ is always with you - Christ is in the shape
up. He's in the hatch. He's in the union hall. He's kneeling right
here beside Dugan. And He's saying with all of you, if you do it
to the least of mine, you do it to me! And what they did to Joey,
and what they did to Dugan, they're doing to you. And you. You.
ALL OF YOU. And only you, only you with God's help, have the power
to knock 'em out for good. (Turning toward Dugan's body) Okay,
Kayo? Amen. (He makes the sign of the cross).
Father Barry rides the pallet up and out of the hatch
with Dugan's body on it when it is hauled up by a crane (heavenward),
as the men begin to go back to work.
That night on the rooftop, Edie finds Terry outdoors
lying on a mattress, one that he would often use as a bed on hot
summer nights. Terry appears troubled and pensive, now that his conscience
is being affected. She offers him Joey's jacket (it was returned
to her after Dugan's death). Terry believes his pigeons, which are
making cooing sounds, are "nervous. There was a hawk around
here before." She huddles close to him, and then he tentatively
reaches out - his emotions overtaking him. They finally kiss at last,
and their bodies press together.
As time progresses, and he develops a growing affection
and relationship with Edie and Father Barry, Terry believes he can
redeem himself by coming clean through his testimony. When Father
Barry leaves the confessional booth in the church the next day, Terry
rushes after him, but the priest doesn't want to take his confession.
Outside the church, Terry follows again, grabs the priest by the
arm, and then confesses that he was involved in setting up Joey Doyle
for the murder.
The priest finally stops and listens to Terry, who
is relieved to have someone to listen to him. As they take a walk
through the park, he tells the tough priest that it only "started
out as a favor...I just thought they was gonna lean on him a little
bit. I never figured they was gonna knock 'em off. And I tried to
tell Edie the other night. I really tried. I wanted to tell her.
She's the first nice thing that ever happened to me."
Terry is confident of what would happen to him if he
told what he knew about the murder. And he is reluctant to "put
the finger" on his own brother and Johnny Friendly, a life-long
friend:
Terry: You know, if I spill, my life ain't worth
a nickel.
Father Barry: And how much is your soul worth if you don't?...Listen,
if I were you, I would walk right...Never mind. I'm not asking you
to do anything. It's your own conscience that's got to do the asking.
When Edie appears along the pier wall, Terry also confesses
his knowledge to her and admits his involvement in the murder of
her brother. A prolonged blast from a ship's whistle drowns out and
accentuates his words. She is horrified by what he says. She turns
and runs away from him and never turns back.
Up on his rooftop, where he finds Glover, the Crime
Commission investigator, they talk about Terry's prizefight at the
Garden against Wilson about three or four years earlier. Terry reluctantly
admits that he was "doing a favor for a couple of pals of mine" by
thowing the fight: "It was all over except for the lousy bet...When
those guys want to win a bet, there's nothin' they won't stop at." |