The
Third Man Movie Review:
It`s
the theme music which proclaims the attitude of this film.
A zither score, which to me sounds vaguely Western or Mexican,
inhabits the soundtrack like a natural, casual presence.
It is wonderful just to listen to, but it also creates a
feeling of normality in what is generically a outrageous
crime thriller. The events which occur in Carol Reed`s 1949
film The Third Man are, therefore, not done by demonic creatures
set apart from the ordinary folk, but by those with entirely
human motivations. It may be criminal activity, but it`s
everyday human activity all the same.
Holly,
played by Joseph Cotten, is an American writer of pulp Westerns
and mysteries, who travels to war-torn Vienna to look up
an old friend, Harry Lime. When he arrives at the apartment,
however, he is shocked to learn from Lime`s German-speaking
landlord that Lime was killed accidentally by his own car
in front of the apartment. The landlord knows because after
hearing the accident, he saw through the window three men
dragging his body across the street. Holly is obviously
very interested in why such a thing would happen, and so
searches around for anyone who may give him some answers.
Along the way he meets some interesting individuals, including
his friend and his personal physician, who right from the
beginning seem like people with something to hide. A first
time viewer would naturally suspect perhaps Lime had been
murdered, and these "friends" had something to do with it.
Holly also meets Lime`s girlfriend, an opera singer. Holly
takes a natural fancy to this woman and wants her to be
in on the search for the truth. Along the way, rumours are
spoken of on how Lime was a somewhat shady character. Holly
naturally cannot believe this, for this is his friend they`re
talking about. There are also many inconsistencies in the
stories of the different people involved. Lime`s friends
both say they were the only people dragging Lime`s body.
But the landlord, as mentioned before, said there were three,
so who could the third man be? Such a disagreement isn`t
just a small problem, but a deadly one.
The
revelation of who is "the third man" develops into what
is considered one of the most famous film entrances in history.
While he walks down the night streets looking for anyone
who can explain to him what is going on, Holly notices the
shoes of a man behind the shadows, rubbed on by a stray
cat, and so he calls this stranger on it. Holly has a feeling
this is a deliberately mysterious individual who may have
some answers. Holly`s calls disturb a neighbour enough to
open the bedroom window. And as she does so, the light from
the room illuminates the stranger, who is none other than......
Harry Lime, played by Orson Welles. Lime realizes he`s just
been found out, and gives his old friend an odd smirk, as
if to say he`s cheated death, perhaps. Or maybe as if he
is a ghost, for as soon as Holly approaches him, the window
closes, the light is gone, and Lime has vanished. In actuality,
he hides in the city sewers, allowing himself to yet again
avoid the clutches of the police, who later tell Holly exactly
what sort of character Lime really was. Lime sold defective
penicillin in the underground economy. The medicine harmed
a lot of people, but Lime was able to make a killing from
it.
Welles
is also a contributor to an equally fascinating monologue.
Legend has it that Welles improvised this speech; certainly
he is able to make it his very own. Lime and Holly meet
at a Ferris wheel the next day, after Holly has convinced
Lime`s friends to let him out of hiding, so he can explain
to his best friend why he would choose such a contemptible
criminal activity. Lime rationalizes this most convincingly
when, as they reach higher on the Ferris wheel, he points
to the people below. From such a height, these people are
nothing more than insignificant dots. Welles also says a
world without such ambiguities of good and evil can only
produce a culture of little significance: "Switzerland had
three centuries of brotherly love, and what did they come
up with? The cuckoo clock." Harry Lime figures opportunity
and fame can only come about in an illicit society, so naturally
for him to get ahead he must adapt a criminal mind. If anyone
knows they can get away with something, the odds increase
that this person will actually commit that certain something.
Holly
is portrayed as basically naive; one who until this experience
could only see the world in black and white, where your
friends were trustworthy, and the bad guys were easy to
spot. The most obvious symbolism for this personality trait
is in his profession itself. He writes potboilers designed
with the lowest common denominator in mind, and is at a
loss for words when he inadvertently finds himself guest
speaker for a literary function, and hasn`t the foggiest
who James Joyce is or what the fashionable literary trends
are about. Just as he doesn`t understand the complex variety
of the literary world, he doesn`t recognize the serious
complications of the human condition. This naivete also
reveals a few things in his own character. He says to Lime`s
girlfriend that Lime made everything fun, etc. which seems
to mean Holly never really had a chance to truly know Harry
at all. Harry was only useful to Holly as an enjoyable character,
but if they were true friends,wouldn`t Holly already have
an idea of what potentially could come about in Harry`s
life?
David
Macdonald
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