The Story: Writer-director Howard Hawks called it "three-corner dialog." People don't come out and get to the point when they talk. They don't talk about their feelings and say what's on their mind "like in the movies" (where film-time is expensive and can't be wasted). No, they dance around it, looking for openings where they can bring things up, talk nonsense until the subject can come up and even then not directly.
So, in -Only Angels Have Wings, Bonnie Lee (Jean Arthur) doesn't say "I made a fool of myself and feel bad about it." She says "Mister, can you kick real hard?" She doesn't say "I feel sad that that pilot died and I feel responsible for it," she starts talking about how she's always thought funerals are useless, but now that the same sentiment is thrown at her, she feels like a fool. People aren't consistent and when confronted with new situations we become flummoxed and our instincts countermand previously held-thought. Gut-punches do that. They turn blow-hards into weaklings.
The fact is, we're all hypocrites about something even if the worst thing you think you can be is a hypocrite.
F. Scott Fitzgerald said "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed
ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to
function."
Like if you love flying but still know "there's not much future in it." You're playing the odds (unless you're like "Kid" Dabb and flip a two-headed coin). "There's not much future in it." But, you can say that about life, too. We get some future, but it seems like never enough. And as sure as you're living, you're gonna die. Some day. Not today, maybe. Tomorrow's another day—another victory.
And these pilots keep doing what they do, even if they know what goes up, must come down. They love it, even if it might not love them back.
And here's the funny thing about Bonnie, the hope about Bonnie—she may wonder at the pilots who love flying even with its risks "like being in love with a buzzsaw." But, she'll still go back in—without a net—and face the guy who just gave her a dressing-down. Even with the benefit of "Kid" Dabb's warning ("he's a good guy for gals to stay away from"). Because, like the pilots, that's what you do.
The test of a
first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind
at the same time and still retain the ability to function.
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
The test of a
first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind
at the same time and still retain the ability to function.
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
The test of a
first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind
at the same time and still retain the ability to function.
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/f-scott-fitzgerald-quotes
You go back in and face the buzz-saw. Even if "there's not much future in it."
Because that's what you do. Every day you're alive.
But, no one comes right out and says it.
The Set-Up: Bonnie Lee (Jean Arthur) just got off the boat in the squalid little South American town Barranca near the Andes. She's got a bit of a lay-over so she lets herself be treated by a couple of brash pilots (Noah Beery Jr., Allyn Joslyn) into a date of sorts. But, one of them had to take a flight flying mail and he didn't make it back. He took too many chances trying to get back to his "date." This weighs on Bonnie as it does everybody else at the airport watering hole, but the pilots don't get all weepy about it, they get on with their lives. "Who's Joe?" Bonnie protests and makes a scene and the head of the air service Geoff Carter (Cary Grant) marches her out and reads her the riot act before she causes any real damage. She's consigned to the outside to take the air. And maybe get some perspective (Victor Kilian, Thomas Mitchell).
Action!
EXT. CAFE - NIGHT
LONG SHOT
MED. LONG SHOT
MED. CLOSE SHOT
Bonnie seated on porch
BONNIE LEE: All my life, I've hated funerals.
The fuss and bother never brings anybody back.
It just spoils remembering them as they really are.
MED. SHOT SPARKY
MED. LONG SHOT
Bonnie seated - back of Sparky left f.g. - people in cafe b.g.
MED. CLOSE SHOT
Bonnie seated
MED. SHOT SPARKY
MED. LONG SHOT
Sparky seated on steps by Bonnie seatedKid enter from cafe door and walks to them.
MED. CLOSE SHOT KID
MED. CLOSE SHOT
Bonnie seated DABB: Flier?
MED. SHOT SPARKY
MED. SHOT
Bonnie seated - starts to riseMED. SHOT SPARKY
seated
MED. SHOT KID AND BONNIE
as Kid turns back to camera, watching her.
-Only Angels Have Wings
-Only Angels Have Wings
Words by Howard Hawks and Jules Furthman
Pictures by Joseph Walker and Howard Hawks
-Only Angels Have Wings is available on DVD from Sony Home Video.
Today's scene starts at about 2:00 into this clip.
The preceding scene gives context. The following scene gives resolve.
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