Sweet Smell of Success (1957) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
Late Night - Day One / Early Morning - Day Two So Elwell is lured to Sidney's apartment/office where barefooted Rita is lying on Sidney's bed and reading his Esquire magazine - ready for her date with the press agent (it's about 2 am!). She expectantly runs to the front door (with Sidney's profile visible in the glass door window) when she hears Sidney buzzing. After slowly opening the door in the dark and purring "Hi," she approaches to kiss him. But Rita is stopped short in her tracks when Elwell steps into view next to him. She backs off, uneasy, hurt, wounded, and unsure about the interruption. Elwell ("Tricky Otis") immediately senses that he may have met Rita before (in Saratoga? or Miami Beach?). To convince Rita to acquiesce to the leering visitor, Sidney's explanation is that Elwell has joined him to help the job-threatened Rita ("Otis carries a lot of weight with your boss, honey") while he leaves for a late-night business meeting. But she rejects the idea of prostituting herself, slams the bedroom door after her, and begins packing to leave. Resilient once again, Sidney begs Otis to give him a chance to change the mind of his indignant blonde friend. But Rita is resistant to perform ("I don't do this sort of thing") and defends her self-respect, especially in light of the fact that she is being sacrifically offered up to meet Falco's obligations:
Appearing outraged, and accusing Rita of being ungrateful, Sidney manipulates the vulnerable cigarette girl further. Without any scruples, Sidney is despicable in his rude betrayal of Rita - he pimps her to do himself a favor:
She enters the office and toasts with her drink glass toward Elwell: "Here's mud in your column." As Sidney rushes off and leaves them alone, he happily exclaims: "Don't do anything I wouldn't do. That gives you lots of leeway." Rita reminds a delighted Elwell of their last encounter - Palm Springs, two years earlier, but cautions him about telling Sidney. Her earlier representation of herself: ("I don't do this sort of thing") is obviously negated. Falco briskly walks to a nearby counter-stand [Note: The clock in the shop reads about 8:30 ? - it should say about 2:30 in the am] and uses a pay phone to call Hunsecker, who is in his penthouse suite-office, still in business suit, and tapping the keys of his typewriter ("How do you spell Picasso, the painter? One 's' or two?...An item - he goes out with three-eyed girls"). Sidney delivers the news of the fictitious smear: "...the Dallas skull is badly dented...starting today, you could play marbles with his eyeballs." Sidney also demanded a mention for Robard (a client of his that owns Robard's - a jazz joint, celebrating its 20th anniversary). J.J. remains non-committal: "We shall see what we shall see, Sidney." After hanging up, Hunsecker walks to his terrace and to an adjoining window where he looks into Susan's bedroom - she is innocently and defenselessly sleeping. He then strides over to gaze out and tower over the skyline from his high-rise parapet, to survey the prone city below that he also loves, possesses, and dominates like an imperious gargoyle. As he turns away from the sparkling lights of Broadway's skyscrapers, the night dissolves and transitions to a daytime scene. Morning - Day Two That morning, Sidney purchases a copy of The Record and quickly scans the paper for Elwell's smear item. Satisfied that the information has been published, Sidney discards the paper and enters the offices of The New York Globe. On the phone in one of the partitioned offices is a middle-aged, harding working employee named Mary (Edith Atwater), Hunsecker's secretary. She is fending off a 'Mr. Cummings' who demands retraction of a recent item. When Sidney enters the office, she relays a message about Frank D'Angelo trying to reach him through his secretary Sally. There is already a reaction from Steve Dallas' boss to the Elwell column planted by Sidney - and read to him by Mary:
So the stereotypical, libelous accusations are that the bohemian musician, Steve Dallas, is both a marijuana smoker and a card-carrying Communist - items certain to discredit his reputation as a guitarist. As he is sweet-talking Mary, she allows Sidney a sneak-peek and advance look at the proofs for J.J.'s column for the afternoon paper, although she slightly reprimands him. Sidney excuses his own curiosity by bragging: "There's Falco blood, sweat, and tears in that column." She admits her bemusement with him, although she has little respect for his professional goals ("immersed in the theology of making a fast buck"):
In the afternoon's "The Eyes of Broadway," there's a plug for a "funny man" comic - Herbie Temple (Joe Frisco), performing at the Palace Theatre. Pumped up and seeing an opportunity for "making a fast buck" after learning that Temple doesn't have a press agent, Sidney proceeds quickly to the Palace Theatre and enters its stage-hand area without permission. He hears Al Evans (Lewis Charles), Temple's manager, speaking to Herbie during a break, and introduces himself. Sidney adeptly and persuasively assures the unimpressed Evans that he will provide Temple with proper publicity build for his performance as his press agent: "When I tell a client I can get him space in Hunsecker's column, it's not talk." Within their hearing, he promptly fakes a phone call to Hunsecker, and dictates the words for the column (that he has memorized): "If there's a more hilariously-funny man around than Herbie Temple at the Palace, you'll pardon us for not catching his name. We were too busy laughing - no, make that 'we were too busy screaming.'" Cool and confident that he has clinched another deal, Sidney realizes he has hooked a new client after promising: "You know Temple, you've been three passes behind for the last twenty years. This could start you off real big - TV, movies, anywhere," although Temple knows being represented by Falco will cost "a pretty penny." He encourages them to wait and make a deal the following day - after reading J.J.'s column: ("Wait as long as you like, you know where my office is").. Back at his office/apartment, Sidney walks in on Sally with Steve Dallas and his manager Frank D'Angelo - they are furious at The Record's slanderous column, and are suspicious that Sidney might have "a faint idea of how that item originated." Steve is accusatory and certain that only Hunsecker or Falco could be responsible for the smear, until Sidney points out the illogicality:
Frank is worried that the "future of the whole quintet" is endangered - in fact, Van Cleve has already fired the musical group. Steve calls Susan from Sidney's office and informs his frightened, frail and timid girlfriend of the "smear." After they have left, even Sally has become disillusioned and ashamed of her employer for his slimy callousness. He vents his aggressiveness towards her starry-eyed idealism:
Sidney phones Hunsecker, who is having breakfast in his penthouse, with the news of the "Elwell smear" and in addition, the fallout including the firing of the quintet by Van Cleve. Perceptive of the corruptive ties to his henchman, Hunsecker is convinced the dirty-work that is easily traced to Sidney will also be traced back to himself:
And then Hunsecker becomes interested in a new tact to clear any suspicion - he repeats Falco's suggestion that he play the sympathetic good-guy by getting Steve Dallas' job back: "You said get him back his job?" Rather than speak to him in person in his penthouse, with Susan around, Hunsecker orders Falco to meet him at the TV studio at 3 pm, where Hunsecker will be broadcasting a show. Pensive and uncertain about how to react, Hunsecker sits in his office, where he lives a forbidding, secretive life as a repressed, asexual bachelor who is solely attached to his sister.
From his office, Hunsecker calls to Susie inside their apartment (she has just returned from buying the newspaper, with the article in her hand), and she obediently cowers next to him. With a reassuring and indulgent voice, he asks her about the newspaper's accusations ("Anything in these charges?"), and soothes her by promising to take care of her worries. He extends his arms to her, inviting her to come into his embrace:
She is hesitant about his shady and scheming connections with Sidney. He acts pained and hurt because of their strained relationship, and promises to do anything to keep her with him:
To bring them together, to prevent conflict, and to become her ally, Hunsecker agrees to her request to "get Steve back his job." She uses his "lingo" to show her sincerity, her affinity to him, and her like-mindedness (although contaminated!). His twisted love for her is a combination of sibling affection, repressed incestual domination, possessive jealousy, and selfish need. His seemingly-honest suggestion to meet Steve after cleaning his glasses "for a better look" may imply that he will more clearly target his derisive and lethal contempt toward her boyfriend:
Hunsecker phones for Billy Van Cleve, and angrily asks him: "Now what about this Dallas boy?" - as the scene ends. Mid-Afternoon - Day Two All of the main characters are brought together at the theatre at 3 pm for his TV show, where Hunsecker is rehearsing his script for a broadcast, although Sidney avoids a confrontation with Susan at the front entrance, and enters through a side stage entrance. Inside, he loiters in the background waiting for an opportunity to speak to J.J. The columnist's radio guest, an old movie star named Mildred Tam (Queenie Smith), exalts Hunsecker for his eloquence during the practice timing of his reading. At a water cooler in the backstage area, Hunsecker speaks in hushed tones to Sidney about their recent "smear incident." Hunsecker accuses Falco, his ally, of lousing up the entire "dirty work" job, and Susie was aware of everything. Hunsecker is upset now that he is involved and compelled to pull some strings to get Steve's job back - in order to regain the couple's confidence. Falco makes a plea to discredit Steve in his own way:
Hunsecker then ignores Falco's prediction of what would now happen - Steve will refuse the favor. He also dismisses Falco's pleas to discredit Steve his way, but admires the press agent's sordid persistence and lethal substance:
In fact as Falco has predicted, an angered Steve arrives at the theatre and does blame Hunsecker for the smear. Nonetheless, his manager D'Angelo, is eager to promote his musician to accept Hunsecker's gesture of peace - "an olive branch." Susan greets Steve in the foyer and with Sidney (lurking in the background), the four enter the auditorium and approach the stage. When Hunsecker meets the guitarist, he demands (and accepts) Steve's "personal assurance" about his own integrity and his pure intentions with his sister: (Steve: "Mr. Hunsecker, there's nothing to the smear. You have my sincere word"). Hunsecker responds: "Now, you do me a favor. Be good to my kid sister." Hunsecker then speaks about Susan's "uncommon" love for Dallas but then queries Dallas' morals: "I imagine, Dallas, she fancies you in an uncommon way. (to Steve) Now, how about you? Not just, uh, well, not just tom-catting around, I hope?...Steve wouldn't be much of a man if he didn't understand my concern, now would you?" He draws a comparison between the "serious," more preferable, strait-laced ("average Joe"), Ivy-League type Dallas and the morally-corrupt Falco:
A "hot" confrontation soon develops between the self-righteous, ungrateful Steve, who couldn't keep his mouth shut, and the object of his real hatred - Sidney, who is being made the fall guy by Hunsecker. Dallas questions Sidney about his presence there, and suggests that he is corruptly 'coupled' with Hunsecker: "Why is he here? Tell me, sir, when he dies, do you think he'll go to the dog and cat heaven?" Steve is forced to admit that his first inclination was to blame J.J. for "the Elwell smear." He then argues with J.J. for making him the "injured party" in front of Susan:
Hunsecker feels defensive for his younger sister, calling her "the injured party" in the crisis. The musician admits that the columnist is too shrewd and clever (with "more twists than a barrel of pretzels") for him to compete fairly against him. Nevertheless, he coaxes his girlfriend to stand up for herself, "air her views in public," and choose between the two men in her life:
Overwhelmed and timid, Susie runs away toward the backstage area during the argument - weak-kneed. Although bitter at Hunsecker, Steve is more interested in saving his girlfriend from her domineering brother's manipulative clutches than in finding revenge:
Steve's tactic is a fatal mistake, and Sidney is pleased by the results of the altercation - he whispers to J.J.: "You did it, J.J., you did it good." Backstage, Hunsecker demands that Susie's romance be broken forever. She must never see Dallas again - and she compliantly agrees: "I'll never see him again." He tenderly touches her shoulder to pacify her, and she passively lets him kiss her on the side of her face. And then Hunsecker instructs his secretary, Mary, to call Van Cleve and definitely fire the quintet's musicians from the club: ("Tell him I said he was right. Those Dallas boys are not worthy of his club"). Outside on the street, Susie slams her taxi-cab door on Sidney's hands as he follows after her to talk. |