The Third Man |
Review by |
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Director: Carol Reed
London Film; British Lion Film: 1949 |
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104 minutes / black & white | April 2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Divided city, emptied men Perhaps I am the odd man out in dissenting to the heaps of praise piled high around The Third Man — as though all this praise could conceal the rottenness at its core. The critics' praise is fulsome, from one of the best films ever made to the best British film ever and so on. Well, the visuals are famously striking: stark black-and-white confrontations amidst chiaroscuro glimpses of Vienna. The background music is excellent. But what is the movie about, who and what has been filmed here, and why? Let's glance at the characters, structure, and message of The Third Man to discover what might justify such over-the-top praise for the film as a whole. The setting is Vienna, Austria, just a few years after World War II. It is a contemporary portrayal of Vienna, when the city still was occupied and divided into administrative zones by the four Allied Powers: American, British, French, and Soviet. The aftermath of the war has many interesting but little-known aspects. The one motivating character is Harry Lime (played by Orson Welles), a racketeer taking advantage of post-war confusion and specifically of the tangle of porous borders and difficult-to-police zones in occupied Vienna. Film scholars believe that screenwriter Graham Greene modeled the character of Harry Lime on his friend and wartime colleague, the British intelligence officer, traitor, and Communist spy Kim Philby. Lime's just-arrived pre-war American friend Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten), Lime's lover Anna Schmidt (Alida Valli), and Lime's pursuers, British Army investigators Major Calloway and Sergeant Paine (Trevor Howard and Bernard Lee), as well as assorted minor characters — all of these trail along gloomily in the wake of the smugly cynical criminal. Not Harry Lime, nor Holly Martins, nor Anna Schmidt, is shown as notably bright, consistent, principled, or empathetic. When all is said and done, it's really hard to like any of them, and there's not much respect to go around, either. A great opportunity for The Third Man's story was not developed, or more likely not perceived. The primary plot centers on the police attempt to shut down Harry Lime's racket — but this is a type of crime and a manner of pursuit that would fit easily into any typical big city, any time. If this were printed detective fiction, there's material for an unimaginative short story here. There are critical turns in the plot which are contrary to any reasonable consistency in the characters. The sub-plot is that of Anna Schmidt's residing in Vienna on a forged passport. Being a German-speaker born in Czechoslovakia, under the loathsome Operation Keelhaul agreement of the victorious Allied Powers at the Yalta Conference, if discovered she is liable for deportation — "repatriation" — back to Czechoslovakia. Winston Churchill already had, in March 1946, applied the phrase Iron Curtain to the hardening frontier between Western Europe and the captive nations of Eastern Europe, where Stalin's lengthened shadow weighed heavier and heavier as the brutal despotism of Soviet Communism imprisoned and stifled and buried more millions of victims. In The Third Man, however, the occupation zones are portrayed more as inconveniences. Screenwriter Graham Greene has Harry Lime state that the Western forces and their leaders are no better than Stalin, and implies that the Allied bombing of the Axis Powers was done out of wanton brutality. Any actions that Harry Lime takes are of the same murderous ilk as the national leaders', hence no big deal. There are no values in this world, only the seesaw of advantage. As for the sub-plot, the movie implies that if Anna Schmidt is dragged back behind the new Iron Curtain, it would be an annoyance. Viewers who know something of the history of World War II, and of the tainted peace which followed, will know better. Some film experts, however, have a higher opinion of Soviet Communism, of world-class cynicism, of depressing plots. I don't know why. The British Film Institute voted The Third Man the greatest British film of the 20th century.The Third Man
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© 2011 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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utopia in power, or dystopia |
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