The Roaring Twenties (1939) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
In Eddie's newly-opened and swanky PANAMA CLUB, featuring Jean Sherman and her Baby Bandits, he attempts to bring peace to the rival gangs by calling them all together in his back office. He has taken over Nick Brown's territory and rules over him as the new boss. A double-crossing George, tired of being ignored, jealous of his power, and weary of being treated as Eddie's "office boy" or "stooge" (along with gangster-pal Pete), is ready to end his association. In his plot to murder his boss, George's first step is to send Danny Green into a trap at Brown's place:
Shortly after, one of Brown's vehicles dumps Danny's body at the front entrance to the club. A note on his body reads: "LET ME ALONE AND MAYBE I'LL LET YOU ALONE." In a sensitive moment, Eddie bends down over his friend's corpse: "Well Danny, I told you this wasn't your racket." As George expected, Eddie is determined to vengefully retaliate against Brown. [Note: This is a continuation of a series of deadly retributions, resulting in the deaths of Sgt. Pete Jones, Danny Green, Nick Brown, Georgy Hally, and ultimately Eddie's.] With a phone call, George tips off the racketeer at his Italian restaurant that Eddie is on his way, after he vows to his pal Pete that Eddie is a target: "He'll be home early, feet first." He boasts that Brown can do his dirty work for him and murder his 'good pal':
In the blazing shoot-out scene at Brown's spaghetti & ravioli restaurant (with a flashing EATS sign), a frightened, innocent dining couple are caught in the ambush cross-fire between Brown's men and Eddie's gang. Behind upturned red-and-white checkered tables, two of Brown's hoods are killed, and Brown is shot in the back through the kitchen door by Eddie. George is informed of the killings by a special news report about "gang violence" in a radio broadcast heard in his luxury apartment:
Eddie knows that he was set up and confronts George in his apartment. He breaks their partnership and vows to kill him if he eventually proves that he was betrayed: "That's right, George, you didn't get me...The only thing that's savin' your neck is I can't prove you dealt me a second. But if I ever find out, I got one in here with your name on it. Remember that." Upon his return to the club, Panama explains to a deeply-affected Eddie, with graceful understanding, that Jean has quit the club and left with Lloyd - her true love:
Outside the club, Eddie sees Jean with Lloyd and punches his romantic competitor in the mouth. But with Jean standing loyally at Lloyd's side, Panama's words ring true to Eddie and he apologizes: "I'm sorry. Sorry." Back inside the club, Eddie shares a drink with Panama at the bar - his first in the film: "One for you and one for me. Who can tell? I might like it."
With the crash, even Eddie's heavy investments in the stock market are jeopardized, and he begs George to lend him $200,000: "I'll sell ya forty percent of my cab company for two hundred thousand." Eddie is compelled to accept his slimy ex-partner's counter-offer to usurp his operation: "Two hundred and fifty grand for the whole company." As a condescending part of the deal, George leaves Eddie with one cab from his entire fleet: "I ain't gonna take all your cabs away...I'm gonna leave ya one, just one, cause you're gonna need it, pal."
After being financially broken by the repeal of Prohibition, suffering arrests and jailings, sleeping in 15 cent a night flophouses, and driving his cab, Eddie's down-and-out descent is rapid. One day during the Christmas season, he happens to have Jean as a cab passenger - she hires him to take her (with an armful of packages) from a downtown department store to her suburban mansion in the wealthy town of Forest Hills. Tightlipped about his own life, he learns that she has married Lloyd - a crusading, reform-minded lawyer within the district attorney's office. They also have a four-year old boy, who is playing cowboys and Indians in the house when they arrive and greets Eddie by pointing his toy gun at him ("stick 'em up, mister"). Vanquished by their domesticity and by the downturn of gangsterism, he tells both Lloyd (who has just come home) and Jean that he has "run into a streak of bad luck," but hopes to be back "up there on top again. I just got to figure a new angle." His second wartime buddy warns him that the rackets are no longer a viable way to succeed in life. Eddie reminds his friend, now sworn to battle the mob, that the prosperous racketeer George will kill him if he ever dutifully pursues a case against him:
On New Year's Eve, after Lloyd has left for work, George's goons threaten Jean in her home about the case against their gang boss: "...your boyfriend should bury any stuff the DA's office got on him...if your boyfriend don't bury the stuff, your boyfriend will get buried instead." Panicked that her young son may be harmed or her husband may be assassinated, Jean immediately searches for Eddie, asking door porters and cabbies about where to find him. She learns that he's taken to drinking to ease his pain and despair. According to his cabby friends, he is usually hopelessly drunk - "oiled to the gills," "on that bottle," and living "in the saloons." She is told that he may be found at a third-rate saloon where Panama works ("that dive where that off-key canary sings") called Flanagan's joint on Third Avenue. In the drab dive ("a dog and pony joint") where Eddie hangs out with his faithful nightclub friend Panama, the off-key chanteuse sings In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town. Eddie is penniless and in a drunken stupor (and still feeling pangs of unrequited love). He drowns his sorrows after his unsettling reunion with Jean and remembers: "She sure had a swell kid" - and mentions that Jean "gets prettier all the time."
After a full day's search, Jean finds them in the saloon and implores Eddie to help her. She tells him that two of George's men threatened her husband: "Eddie, you've got to help me!" She begs him to talk to George and save her husband's life because Lloyd cannot remain silent in the case ("it's his duty"). But Eddie is bitterly reluctant to help the man who stole away his girlfriend, and ultimately refuses to help. She sadly leaves him:
After Jean leaves in despair, Eddie relents and changes his mind with additional urgings and reasoning from Panama:
As they leave the saloon (where Panama has just quit), Eddie reminisces about his idealized love, as the piano player's tune (My Melancholy Baby) reminds him of Jean. Accompanied by Panama in his cab, Eddie drives to George's apartment building. She waits outside as he enters and is ushered in to see George ("Sure, take him up, give the boss a laugh"). George's henchmen laugh at the decrepit, ruined man: "The rags of his pants are beatin' him to death." In George's fancy upstairs bedroom, Eddie redeems himself by having a showdown with his vile and despicable ex-partner:
During their run-in, George resists Eddie's petitions, and then orders his aide Lefty (Max Wagner) to take Eddie for a car-ride to oblivion, causing Eddie to reply suspiciously: "You're really gonna take good care of me, huh?" George sneers ferociously:
Eddie punches Lefty, seizes his gun, and corners a sniveling, cowardly George against the wall, and then shoots him to death with three point-blank shots: "That's one rap you won't beat." Using Lefty as a shield, Eddie fights his way down the stairs past George's mob in the downstairs living room, shooting one man and tossing another over the second-floor banister. But as he flees the rival gangsters into the snowy street, he is shot in the back and mortally wounded. In this fatalistic story of rise and fall, Eddie is bound to die a self-sacrificial, bloody death in the memorable finale - and death scene on New Year's Eve. [Note: The scene approximates the fate of Larry Fay, who was killed on the eve of 1931 in his NY nightclub by a disgruntled employee. Texas Guinan died two years later following an intestinal operation.] He finds sanctuary outside the nearby COMMUNITY CHURCH, where he stumbles, climbs, wobbles, and then tumbles down the flight of snow-covered steps. Weeping Panama Smith runs up to him and cradles his head in her arms as he expires on the steps of the church - the image evokes Michelangelo's Pieta. She answers a curious cop's inquiries about the deceased man's identity ("Who is this guy?") and laconically provides his epitaph and eulogy in the film's final poignant line:
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