The Big Combo(Joseph H. Lewis, 1955) A girl (Jean Wallace) runs away in the dark. Down murky corridors and naked open spaces where she can't hide, she runs through a stadium promenade and nobody notices her because their eyes are on a boxing match, where every light of the facility seems to be focused. But, she's not the only one running, as she's followed closely by two goons, Fante (Lee Van Cleef) and Mingo (Earl Holliman), who have split up and are trying to catch her in a pincer move. That's their job tonight, to look after the girl, Susan Lowell, who's the girl of Mr. Brown (Richard Conte), who's attending the fight—it's a business matter for him—and Mr. Brown wants her to see it. But, she's run out in Round 3 and he's mad about it. When Mr. Brown gets mad, that's when Fante and Mingo enter the picture and they finally catch up to her and try to man-handle her back to the fight. But, she decides she's hungry and although Mingo wants to drag her back to the fight-crowd, Fante tells Mingo to hail down a cab. "Mr Brown says to keep her happy." Fat chance.
Down at the 93rd precinct, they're not happy, either. There's an ongoing investigation into Mr. Brown that's been going on for too much of a time and two people are frustrated by it: the first is Capt. Peterson (Robert Middleton) who's mad at all the tax-payers' money he's been laying out for no results; and then there's Detective Lt. Leonard Diamond (Cornel Wilde) who's been spending all that money and who's come up with bupkis except for frustration and the captain breathing down his neck. Diamond wants to turn the heat up on Brown, but the boss has his job on the line, too, and he wants to drop the whole shooting match. Plus, he thinks there might be something more to this for Diamond—he reminds him that he's been tailing Susan Lowell wherever she goes and when Diamond gripes that he paid those expenses himself, the Captain brings the hammer down: "But, I'm not in love with her! You are!" The Captain is starting to think it's all personal and a wild-skirt chase.
But, it's more than that. It's a grudge match. Find a crime in town and it eventually snakes up to Brown. Take down Brown and the 93rd gets a lot quieter. Then, when Susan shows up in the hospital for swallowing pills, Diamond thinks he has something: Susan keeps talking about an "Alicia" from Brown's past and when Diamond hauls in every Brown flunky for questioning and puts Brown under a lie detector, "Alicia" makes the needle jump the Richter scale but there's no answers from the big man. Just more patter from the mutual contempt society. "A righteous man" Brown scoffs to the old boss (Brian Donlevy) he took over the gang from. "Makes $96.50 a week—the bellboys at my hotels make more than that!" But, Diamond does get some respect, if you call taking the trouble to put him on a hit-list respectable.
The Big Combo may not be the best noir-mystery of the genre, there are no stars with bright futures of note (unless you count Van Cleef), the sets are cheap—heck, the director didn't know he was working on it until a week before shooting—but, it skirts the edges of acceptability for its time with an unsympathetic authority figure, a flashy villain (Conte is brilliant in it, rattling off dialog with a no-cares contemptuous smile), some nice hard-nosed dialog, and an artist's touch with the lighting. And, it suggests a lot more than it shows—like Susan's codependent sexual kink for Brown, the "longtime companionship" of Fante and Mingo, and some brutal violence that usually happens off-screen, but comes front-and-center in a scene that features torture-by-hearing-aid (they should have had Wilde's Diamond character shouting his dialog for the rest of the movie). The movie takes chances, at a point when many film-noir tropes were already played out.
But, the star of the show is cinematographer John Alton, who worked shadowy wonders for cash-strapped studios like Republic Pictures and eye-popping color scenes for the extravagant M-G-M, and brought rich dark spaces pierced by shimmering light to whatever set-up he touched. Born in Hungary, Alton began his camera work in the silent era and worked all the way up to 1960's Elmer Gantry. He was quick, economical, and created stunning images that arrest the eye and catch the breath. The Big Combo, for all its outlandishness, becomes more centered because of Alton's photography. You take it more seriously and things matter a bit more. Things "hit" harder because of the look of the thing.
Since 2007, The Big Combo has been in the public domain and, for that reason, we're featuring it in this post below.
For instance, the astronaut's description of his job as "98% tedium punctuated by moments of sheer terror," and Elwood P. Dowd's "You can be 'oh-so-smart' or 'oh-so-pleasant'—I recommend "pleasant." Then, because the story is basically, "Moby Dick in The Cold War," there are all sorts of Melville quotes...and one bad joke: "Cook 'em, Dan-O." It's that last one that sticks, though. The Bedford Incident is, basically, a terrible, terrible joke with a possible several mega-tonnage punchline. And director James B. Harris, who, before making this film, was Stanley Kubrick's film-making partner, can't have missed the thought as his ex was making an out-and-out comedy of errors out of the nuclear arms race.
But where that one took to the air, The Bedford Incident plays out at sea in a cat-and-mouse game between a Soviet nuclear sub and a naval destroyer. In command is Captain Eric Finlander (Richard Widmark, steely with just a touch of baleful twitchiness that goes full-on berzerkoid in an interview), a determined commander who takes enormous pride in the proficiency of his crew, and in the hunt and pursuit of his targets. As an advisor is a former Nazi U-boat commander Wolfgang Shrepke (Eric Portman), who was responsible for the most tonnage (ours) sunk during the second World War. Also on board is reporter Ben Munceford (Sidney Poitier), who serves as an exposition conduit and Royal Pain In The Ass. Among the crew are Martin Balsam as the ship's new doc, James MacArthur as a too-eager ensign, Wally Cox as the sonar bat, and if you're watching early and quickly, there's a young Donald Sutherland as a garbage analyst—garbage being clues to conditions on the enemy boat, and age-analysis gives tracking position and history.
It shows how extreme the measures are on the Bedford, how detail oriented, how precise, how strategic and how puckered the thought processes go into keeping an eye on the enemy. And once found, Finlander will pursue chasing Soviet subs out of territorial waters, even forcing them to stay underwater until they're desperate for air, provoking confrontation. When your Nazi adviser tells you he's scared of your methods, it means you might be going so overboard as to pro-actively lower the life-rafts.
If you're immersed at all in pop-culture, you can see elements of Bedford in such disparate strategy plays as "Star Trek" and The Hunt for Red October. And such gamesmanship is all well and good in limited skirmishes. But, when the arsenal is nuclear? Do you really want a cigarette in a room full of gasoline?
No, and that the game is played despite the mega-stakes makes the movie and its characters seem not just petty, but a little dim for all the talk of brilliance. The point of hubris is well taken, but the point was better made as an out-and-out black comedy about short-term, selfish interests in the face of global catastrophe.
The Story: Up until The Godfather Part III (or as it's now known The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone) this last scene from The Godfather Part II was the last we would have seen of Mafia chieftain Michael Corleone, who—as that particular film makes plain—has a path as Mafia Don far different from that of his father, Vito.
The previous Don managed to keep his family (only to see it torn asunder by the events of the first "Godfather" movie) while his son, in an effort to protect his father, sacrifices his future...and his family...for a security that may never exist, especially as his trade involves organized crime.
At the end, it is apparent that Michael, now aging, is isolated, alone, and without his wife and children...as far as blood relatives, he's managed to have killed quite a few of them. At the time the film was released, there was no doubt that Michael, in his quest for power, has lost everything, and the future that he had such high hopes for (in his youth) would never come to be despite his ambitions and earlier protestations. Oh, it's true that he wouldn't become a man like his father...but, one suspects that he never suspected that he would be worse.
But, that last scene reveals the "Godfather Saga" to be a tragedy (despite the lionization of "Godfather culture" among fans). There is no triumph in gaining power if you lose everything else. And, if The Godfather Part II wasn't abundantly clear in that point, Coppola's return to the story for Part III/Coda made it unambiguous and twisted the dagger of Fate.
But, I remember this scene of Michael reflecting on the time when he "broke" with the Family, and remember being elated that they got so many people back from the first movie for the flashback: James Caan's Sonny, Gianni Russo's Carlo Rizzi, and Abe Vigota's Tessio. And then you realize with a thump that two of those characters died on Michael's orders, as did John Cazale's Fredo in events of Part II. Maybe it isn't so much a flashback as a "haunt."
But, if you read all the way to the end, what we got on-screen at the end of Part II isn't what was originally written for the movie. What's on-screen is superb. What the plan was, though, is much richer.
Also, apologies for the racial slurs. But, the people uttering them are violent mobsters, so please put that in context. Don't end up like Sonny...or Michael.
The Set-up: It is 1961. The main branch of the Corleone Family has moved from New York to Lake Tahoe with their business in Las Vegas. But, the cost has been huge: Mike Pentangelli (Michael V. Gazzo), the last of the Corleone capo's in New York is dead; Mama Corleone (Morgana King) has died of natural causes; Kay Corleone (Diane Keaton) has divorced The Don, Michael (Al Pacino); and Michael has ordered and had carried out the death of his last remaining blood-brother, Fredo (John Cazale). Alone in his Lake Tahoe retreat, Michael contemplates what has become of his family...and him.
Action.
MICHAEL sits down in the boat house
DISSOLVE TO: 1941 the Corleone family is sitting at the table in the kitchen.
SONNY Hey
SONNY ...everybody come on pay attention. Come here.
SONNY EVERYONE this is my friend CARLO RIZZI.
[CARLO RIZZI walks in.]
SONNY This is my brother FREDO -- oh you know FREDO sure don't you.
FREDO (Sure)
SONNY This is my step brother TOM.
SONNY That's
his uh, girl Theresa.
SONNY And this cute little thing over here -- this is my sister CONNIE. I was telling you about
her, huh.
SONNY Come on say hello to CARLO.
SONNY He's good looking isn't he?
CONNIE Yes.
SONNY Oh, that droopy thing over there --
SONNY that's my brother Mike.
SONNY We call him JOE College, you know what I
mean.
SONNY Go ahead. Sit down. Talk to each other.
TOM
Sit down.
SONNY Hey, Mr. Einstein... (It's a) joke.
[Salvatore TESSIO walks in.]
TESSIOHere's the cake.
TOMHey, Sally, get in here!
TESSIOI was scared -- I was scared.
TESSIOWhere's your father?
TOMWe sent him on a wild goose chase -- Christmas shopping.
CONNIE Here..
SONNY Oh, let's see that thing.
[TESSIO reveals the cake.]
CONNIE Beautiful!
SONNYOh, golly that's nice. Huh.
CONNIEShould I put the candles on now.
SONNY
Yea go on --
SONNY
you help her, right CARLO.
CARLOSure.
[SONNY takes a lick of the frosting.]
MICHAEL How are you, Sal?
SONNYHey what is that, rum?
TESSIO
Yea.
SONNYBoy that's good.
SONNY Hey...
[SONNY wipes some on TOM.]
TOM Hey, get outta here.
[Then touches some pasta.]
CONNIEHey SONNY don't touch the ante-pasta until Pop gets here.
[Fredo slaps his wrist]
[He begins to mock-fight with FREDO.]
TOM He's not ugly!
(TOM laughs)
SONNYYea, come on.
[SONNY sits down and begins to smoke.]
SONNYAh, say -- what do you think of the nerve of those Japs -- those slanty eyed bastards, huh.
SONNYDropping bombs in
out back yard -- and on Pops birthday ya know.
FREDO Aw, they didn't know it was Pop's birthday.
SONNY
"They didn't know it was Pop's (birthday)."
TOM
Well, we should have expected it after the oil embargo.
SONNYWhat do you mean expect it -- expect it or not they have no right dropping bombs. What are you a Jap lover
or something -- are you on their side?
TESSIOI understand thirty thousand men enlisted this morning.
SONNYA bunch of saps.
MICHAELWhy are they saps?
CONNIESONNY come on we don't have to talk about the war.
SONNYHey beat it -- you go talk to CARLO alright.
SONNY They're saps because they risk their lives for strangers.
MICHAEL Now that's Pop talking.
SONNY You're god damn right that's Pop talking.
MICHAEL They risk, they risk their lives for their country.
SONNYYour country's not your blood --
SONNYyou remember that.
MICHAELI don't feel that way.
SONNY
"I don't feel that way.."
SONNY
Well if you don't feel like that why don't you just quit college and go to -- go to join the Army.
MICHAELI did --
MICHAELI enlisted in the Marines.
[Everyone is silent.]
TOM
MICHAEL why -- why didn't you come to us?
MICHAELWhat do you mean?
TOM
I mean Pop had to pull a lot of strings to get you a
deferment.
MICHAELI didn't ask for it.
MICHAELI didn't ask for a deferment -- and I didn't want it.
[SONNY punches MICHAEL and begins to get in a fight.]
SONNY
What's wrong...
TOM
Come on, come on knock it off.
TESSIOSONNY --
SONNYPunk!
TESSIOSONNY -- SONNY sit down.
SONNYGo on!
TESSIOSit down.
Siddown.
KATHRYN CORLEONE (One of Sonny's twins)Mommy,
KATHRYN CORLEONE (One of Sonny's twins)Daddy's fighting again.
SONNY
Go show CARLO the tree.
KATHRYN CORLEONE (One of Sonny's twins) Go Ahead!
FRANCESCA CORLEONE (One of Sonny's twins)-- Uncle MICHAEL, MAMA.
Daddy!
SONNY
Nice -- nice --
SONNY
break your father's heart on his birthday.
FREDO
That's swell, Mike --
FREDO
congratulations.
SONNY
That's right, go on, encourage him.
SONNY
I want -- I want you to get me a drink --
SONNY Go on.
TOM Mikey...
TOM
Now you don't understand but, uh,
TOM
your father has plans for you. Now many times he and I have talked
about your future.
MICHAELTalked to my father about my future?
TOM (quietly) Yeah.
MICHAELMy future.
TOM
Mikey, he has high hopes for you.
MICHAELWell I have my own plans for my future.
SONNYWhat'd you go to collage to get stupid? You're really stupid.
CONNIE
He's here, come on.
[Everybody but MICHAEL walks out.]
SONNY
Come on --
SONNY
come on --
SONNY
stupid!
[MICHAEL sits alone at the table while the rest are heard in the distance waiting to their surprise the Godfather.]
EVERYONE Surprise! --
EVERYONE For he's a jolly good fellow, for he's a jolly good fellow
The Godfather Part II is available on DVD, Blu-Ray and 4k UHD from Paramount Home Video.
Interestingly, this is not how The Godfather Part II originally ended. Things change when making a movie, though. Like Marlon Brando doesn't show up for his one day of shooting as the Don and it has to be re-written...that day. Or maybe make-up doesn't work the way you think it will. Or Al Pacino wants a re-write. Richard Castellano wants more money and to write his part. For all sorts of reasons, things changed. As did the originally scripted ending. There's a lot that's similar. There's a LOT that's different and those things incorporate things from the original Godfather, and also things that would not be discussed again until the writing of The Godfather Part III.
This is the SECOND DRAFT
dated September 24, 1973
MED. VIEW
The peninsula of the private Corleone Harbor. We see the
figures of two people, seated at a table.
MED. VIEW
Michael sits at a table having a sparse lunch. He is
attended by his sister Connie, who seems to be the closest
person now living on the estate with him. We see from the
way she pampers him with his lunch, that she has fallen into
the role of a surrogate Mother-Wife. He seems older than
his years, as though his illness, diabetes, has taken its
toll.
CONNIE
Don't worry; I'm sure he got here
on time. The roads from the
airport are so windy, it takes
forever; I've driven them myself.
She picks up some of the serving plates that he has left
untouched.
CONNIE
I'll bring him out to you as soon
as he comes.
She moves back to the main house.
MED. CLOSE VIEW ON MICHAEL
He turns and looks at the rough water of the lake for a
moment. He slowly takes a sip of wine.
EXT. A PLACE IN THE GARDEN - DAY
There are a few chairs.
MED. VIEW ON ANTHONY CORLEONE
He is eighteen years old.
ANTHONY
Hello, Dad.
VIEW ON MICHAEL
squinting up at his son.
MICHAEL
Anthony.
He rises, and reaches up to his son, who is now taller than
he; he embraces him.
MICHAEL
You've grown so tall... so tall in
the last year. You're much taller
than me.
ANTHONY
I was taller than you when I was
fourteen.
MICHAEL
Sit down. Your Aunt Connie and I
waited for you to have some lunch,
but now it's all dried out.
ANTHONY
I'm not hungry.
MICHAEL
Well, that's alright... alright.
Good. You'll graduate in another
year, isn't that right? You know...
I never finished college. I was a
good student, but I never finished.
Of course, there was a war then.
Connie approaches them.
CONNIE
Don't let me interrupt anything,
this will just take a second. Here.
(she takes out a
small needle, and
begins to prepare it)
CONNIE
Your father has to have his insulin
shot. Why don't you go to your
room and put your things away,
Anthony.
She begins to give Michael the shot.
MICHAEL
Hurry back; we'll talk. We'll talk.
Anthony goes on his way to the house with his things.
Connie gives Michael the shot.
CONNIE
Whenever I see that lake so cold, I
think of poor Fredo, drowned. Lake
Tahoe is very cold. They say if a
person drowns in it, that the body
will remain mid-suspended --
perfectly preserved. Some say it
will remain forever.
She finishes the shot, puts her things away.
CONNIE
Your boy will be right back.
She leaves.
VIEW ON MICHAEL
Alone in the garden.
OUR VIEW begins to MOVE CLOSER to him. We begin to HEAR
MUSIC of the forties; happy music, swing music, as we move
CLOSER to Michael.
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. OLD CORLEONE HOUSE - MED. VIEW - NIGHT
SONNY CORLEONE, his arm wrapped around a smiling red-faced
Carlo Rizzi, pulls him into the Corleone dining room.
SONNY
Hey, who knows my buddy Carlo Rizzi.
Here... my brother Fredo, here's my
Mom. Mom, whatcha got cooking?
And Carlo, this is my kid sister
Connie. Here, pull up a chair,
Carlo is sitting next to Connie.
Oh, the droopy kid over there is
Mike. The college boy.
An older, lanky man enters the room, his arms laden with
presents.
SONNY
This is TESSIO.
TESSIO
Buon Natale, everybody. Buon
Natale...
(he smiles at Tom Hagen)
Hi, Tom, how's every little thing?
HAGEN
(helping him with the presents)
Wonderful, Sal.
Now the study door opens, and DON CORLEONE enters.
DON CORLEONE
Is dinner ready?
MOM
Two minutes.
The Don happily regards his family; his sons and daughters
and even some Grandchildren. He raises a glass.
DON CORLEONE
A good life, a long life to all my
children, and friends. To my
grandchildren, and those that will
be. To our family.
They all drink.
They refill glasses; then Tessio proposes a toast.
TESSIO
To our Godfather.
They all drink.
INT. THE DINING ROOM - MED. VIEW - NIGHT
The family is happily at Christmas dinner. Don Corleone
seated at the head of the table.
SONNY
What'd you think of those Japs, eh?
The nerve of those Japs, coming
right here in our own backyard
dropping bombs!
HAGEN
Well, we could have expected it
after the embargo.
SONNY
Hey! Expect it or not, those Japs
don't have a right to drop bombs in
our backyard. Whose side you on?
MAMA
Please, do we have to talk about
the war at the table? On Christmas,
much less.
VIEW ON MICHAEL
He has been listening to this discussion.
MICHAEL
Pop, I've decided I'm going to
enlist.
A quiet hush descends over the table, as though everyone
knows the effect this will have on the old man. Sonny tries
to make light of it.
SONNY
Kid, stay in college. The girls
are cuter, if you know what I mean.
HAGEN
Pop had to pull a lot of strings to
get you your deferment.
MICHAEL
I never asked for it; I don't want
it.
VIEW ON DON CORLEONE
Disturbed; but wise and prudent.
DON CORLEONE
My son wants to talk about this,
and so we'll talk, but not at the
dinner table.
He rises, and starts across the room toward his study. Then
he looks back.
DON CORLEONE
Michael.
He disappears into his study. Michael rises, glances around.
People are generally tense over the situation. Michael
follows his father into the study.
INT. DON CORLEONE'S OLD STUDY - NIGHT
The Don closes the door behind his son, and then moves
across the room. He stops at the little bar there, and
pours himself a brandy.
DON CORLEONE
Would you like some?
MICHAEL
No, Dad.
DON CORLEONE
Now what is this talk about joining
the army? Eh?
MICHAEL
It's not talk; I'm doing it.
DON CORLEONE
You would risk your life for
strangers?
MICHAEL
Not for strangers; for my country.
DON CORLEONE
Anyone not in your family, is a
stranger. Believe me, when trouble
comes, your country won't take care
of you.
MICHAEL
That's how it was in the old world,
Pop, but this is not Sicily.
DON CORLEONE
I know. I know, Michael. It's
Christmas, your brothers and sister
are all here -- we are happy.
Let's not spoil this. Go your own
way, but when you are ready, come
to me the way a son should. I have
hopes for you...
CLOSE VIEW ON MICHAEL
looking at his father with a mixture of great love, and also
fear, and confusion.
MICHAEL
I won't be a man like you.
DISSOLVE TO:
EXT. THE TAHOE ESTATE - HIGH FULL VIEW - DAY
The leaves are blowing. MUSIC comes up.
Michael and his young son, Anthony, walk through the grounds
of the estate, talking about things we cannot hear.