Actually, he lights two in this section of Out of the Past (known in the UK as "Build My Gallows High" after the novel on which it is based) and the one recalls an earlier one in which he might have set the match to his own Viking funeral, when he said yes to a questionable job which resulted in him going anonymous and a bit off the grid, changing his name and hopefully his life. Sparing it, hopefully.
But, like one smoke leads to another, Mitchum's character Jeff Markham (or is it "Jeff Bailey"?) can't run away from bad habits. Besides the occasional coffin-nail, Jeff can't resist wanting what he cannot have. It's what got him involved with Kathie Moffat, who turned into something more than an assignment and made him something more of a fugitive. He may change the name but not the man, because it's why he's involved with Ann Miller, whose steady is out of town a lot. He wants what he cannot have, and the tragedy is he knows it and can't escape it, no matter how many lives he leads.
But, now his past has caught up with him. And it's time to come clean—fortunate because it gives us a lot of back-story—but not so much because he's going to get dirty again in one of the most melancholy stories in the black soul of film noir.
Anybody got a match?
The Story: A "town-guy" (Paul Valentine) shows up in Bridgeport, California looking for the owner of the local gas station. That would be "the mysterious" Jeff Bailey (Robert Mitchum) who's "gone fishing"—no, really fishing—with his girl Ann Miller (Virginia Huston). He meets the "guy," who tells him an old client of his (Kirk Douglas) wants to meet him in Lake Tahoe. Bailey agrees, albeit reluctantly. He decides to take Ann along with him to Tahoe. It's a 90 minute drive. He's got a long story to tell.
Action.
ANN Then don't look so grim.
ANN What?
-
ANN Yes?
ANN Now?
-
JEFF BAILEY Yes, now.
I want to tell you something.
ANN All right, Jeff.
JEFF BAILEY You told me once
I'd have to tell you sometime.
JEFF BAILEY Now, the first thing I wanna get off my
chest: My name isn't Bailey, it's Markham.
JEFF MARKHAM I should have told you before.
I meant to, but I kept putting it off...because I didn't like any part of it.
JEFF MARKHAM Well, our friend Markham
lived in New York.
He worked with a sort of stupid,
oily gent by the name of Jack Fisher.
JEFF MARKHAM We called ourselves detectives.
That was about three years ago,
maybe more.
Wintertime. One of the coldest days
I remember in the town.
And we got a call to come and see a big op.
JEFF MARKHAM An operator, gambler.
He didn't come to see us because he was
too high-powered a character.
JEFF MARKHAM Also, because some dame had taken
four shots at him with his own 38.
Made one of them good.
Cross-fade...
JOE STEFANOS who do they think they're kidding?
So he shot himself
cleaning a cap pistol.
So I shot the ace of spades
out of a sleeve during a gin game.
WHIT STERLING You know, I once bet $40,000 on a horse
that ran dead last,
WHIT STERLING Oh, that's where you're wrong. I put that horse
in a nice green pasture...so he'd never get his foot
caught in a mutuel machine.
JEFF MARKHAM Why me?
JEFF MARKHAM Why not?
JEFF MARKHAM Nope.
JACK FISHER All right, all right. It's a good soft touch.
Don't get hot at me.
Words by Daniel Mainwaring (writing as Geoffrey Homes), James M. Cain, and Frank Fenton
Pictures by Nicholas Musuraca and Jacques Tourneur
Out of the Past is available on DVD and Blu-Ray from Warner Home Entertainment.
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