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Ace
in the Hole (1951) (aka The Big Carnival)
Director/co-writer Billy Wilder's powerful noir was
an uncompromising, scathing and harsh commentary on human nature,
and on the sensationalizing media comprised of self-serving, compromised
tabloid-media journalists. After its first release, Paramount Studios
was so concerned about the misanthropic film's unrelenting cynicism,
anti-Americanism, theme of entrapment, and poor box-office that they
unsuccessfully changed its name and rebranded it as "The Big
Carnival."
- the most powerful character in the film was Charles
'Chuck' Tatum (Kirk Douglas) - a belligerent, self-obsessed, unscrupulous
big-city newspaper reporter who was angling to work for the Albuquerque
Sun-Bulletin (with
its hand-embroidered, needlepoint motto "Tell the Truth");
the reckless, down-and-out East Coast news-reporter was forced to
move West after being dismissed for alleged
libel, for cheating with the boss' wife, and for drunkenness; he
was looking for a way to make money, get a big break, and boost his
sour and drunken reputation after many failures
- stranded in Albuquerque, NM, he was first seen
seated at the wheel of his broken-down convertible sedan as it
was being towed into the city; inside the newspaper office, he
rudely greeted one of the Indian news editors (Iron Eyes Cody)
(wearing his long hair pulled back) with the condescending Indian
expression: "How!" - expressing great disdain without
any sense of respect for cultural differences
- the arrogant Tatum successfully
barged into the office of managing editor-in-chief Jacob Q. Boot
(Porter Hall), seeking employment;
he bragged immodestly that he was a multi-talented,
top-notch reporter, who was capable of creating news by 'biting
a dog' (a prophetic, allegorical description of the depths he would
descend to in getting a news-story)
- one of his boasts was that he had been
fired from eleven different publications: ("You'll be glad to know
that I've been fired from 11 papers with a total circulation of
seven million, for reasons with which I don't wanna bore you");
he explained that he could turn his luck around
with one blockbuster story ("Just one good beat, a Tatum special
and they'll roll out the red carpet. Because when they need you,
they forgive and forget");
in the meantime, he explained how he had been relegated to becoming
a 'prostitute' - to sell his services to the highest (or lowest)
bidder until he found a way to return to a larger news organization;
remarkably, Boot ultimately
offered Tatum $60/week -the current rate for a job at the newspaper,
and specifically warned about not drinking on the job
- after being stuck in New Mexico for a year, the
impatient, stagnating Tatum
gave a contemptuous rant about small-town life and how he missed
New York: ("...Too
much outdoors. Give me those eight spindly trees in front of
Rockefeller Center any day. That's enough outdoors for me...).
- the quick-thinking, smooth-tongued newsman was
on an assignment from the claustrophobic office, to make a report
on a rattlesnake hunt; on the drive to the event, he mused with
young
junior reporter-photographer Herbie Cook (Robert Arthur) about his
desire for drama, sensationalism, disaster and personal gain in
news-stories - and concluded his wishes by emphasizing the type
of 'bad news' he preferred to cover: "Bad news sells best. Because
good news is no news"
- on their way, they came upon the remote Minosa's
Trading Post to get gas, where it was learned that a man was caught
inside an ancient, haunted 450 year-old Indian ancient cliff-dwelling
(Mountain of the Seven Vultures) by a cave-in of rocks 250 feet
inside, while looting it of Native American artifacts in the remote
and deserted (fictional) town of Escudero, 3 hours' drive from
Albuquerque. The cave-in had trapped good-hearted spelunker Leo
Minosa (Richard Benedict), a military veteran and the adult son
of the trading post owner
Minosa's Trading Post
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Site of Cliff Dwellings' Cave-In
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At the Cave-In Site - The Wife of the Local Trapped
Man
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- at the site of the cave-in,
Tatum met Leo's long-suffering, jaded, and cynical femme
fatale wife Lorraine (Jan
Sterling), who was complaining about her husband's foolishness. It
appeared that Lorraine was a disgruntled and unhappy
wife, made tougher and more crude by her arid surroundings that she
intensely disliked:
"He's way in there, under that mountain...We
had a cave-in this morning...Dumb cluck. Everybody keeps telling
him, 'Stay out of that place. Stay out of there.' Not Leo.
Stubborn like a mule. He always keeps goin' back, diggin' for
those Indian pots."
- at the mouth of the cave dwelling site, the
Deputy Sheriff (Gene Evans) was already questioning Papa Minosa
(John Berkes), Leo's elderly father (with a right club foot), who
reported that his son had become trapped about six hours earlier
Tatum Inside Cave Speaking to Trapped Leo
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Trapped Leo Minosa (Richard Benedict)
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- Tatum decided to venture into the cave when no one
else dared, although Lorraine was scornful as she lit
a cigarette and sarcastically fumed:
"And tell him we'll have a big coming-out party for him with
a brass band and everything." As Tatum twisted along in the
labyrinthine cave, he was already formulating in his mind his irresponsible
plan to get the scoop on this disaster - his own personal ticket
for getting out of the entrapping Albuquerque. Tatum sensed a major
opportunity to stage-manage an "ace
in the hole" media-frenzied story (ripe with drama, sensationalism,
disaster and personal gain) involving an orchestrated rescue operation.
- Leo
was pinned at the waist under some very large, and heavy rocks, and
was worried about the very unstable confines of the burial cave.
Tatum realized that this might be end up being the perfect story
to exploit. His objective was not really the man's extrication, but
to prolong the perilous situation as long as possible, while befriending
Leo and keeping him assured of his trusting nature. Tatum took two
photos of the trapped victim - so that he could print the story in
the Albuquerque Sun-Bulletin paper - a
feature article that he had already begun to create in his mind.
- it
was really only a minor news-story about a cave-explorer who became
trapped, but the amoral and depraved reporter milked it into a juicy,
big-scoop, blockbuster front-page event by promoting the situation
with national media publicity that brought a feeding frenzy of curious
tourists to descend upon the site and gawk at the tragedy, while
capitalizing on the public's interest and delaying the rescue efforts.
The unethical Tatum succeeded in manipulating the news media, the
construction engineers, the local crooked sheriff who sought reelection
in the county, and the victim's opportunistic, jaded and mercenary
wife
- from the start, Tatum had
to deal with Leo's disloyal wife Lorraine. The hard-hearted, bleach-blonde
Lorraine watched Tatum as she smiled and calmly munched on an apple
- a Biblical reference to Eve (a corrupted temptress). She was
already aware of Tatum's underhanded nature - knowing that she
was the crucial linchpin that could either hold together or unravel
Tatum's manipulative plan. The self-interested and jaded femme
fatale Lorraine also undoubtedly
saw Leo’s entrapment as a convenient way to exit from her unhappy
marriage.
Femme Fatale Lorraine Eating an Apple
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Lorraine Planning to Desert Her Husband With Her
Packed Suitcase
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Lorraine: "Yesterday, you never heard of
Leo..."
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- Lorraine and Tatum both hustled the situation -
the heartless, opportunistic Lorraine was seriously considering
running off from her good-hearted husband after five years of unfulfilled
marriage. She had packed her suitcase and was poised to leave.
She seemed completely unaffected by the entrapment her husband
was experiencing. She realized that Tatum was capitalizing on her
husband's predicament:
"Yesterday, you never even heard of Leo. Today,
you can't know enough about him. Aren't you sweet?"
- she also sensed Tatum's true motives - that he was
a scheming, hypocritical hustler who was creating a "trapped
man" story for his newspaper - to stir up excitement and readership
and to jump-start his career:
Tatum: "Got a little jump on him this time,
huh? Can't run after ya, not lyin' there with those rocks on his
legs."
Lorraine: "Look who's talkin'! Much you care about Leo. I'm
on to you. You're workin' for a newspaper. All you want is something
you can print. Honey, you like those rocks just as much as I do."
- Lorraine strode over to the Trailways Bus Depot sign
for pick-up - ready to desert her husband. Tatum made it his goal
to convince her to stay - by pointing out how she would benefit.
He promised the bleached-blonde that there would be a financial windfall
and monetary rewards for remaining and pretending to be a grieving
and virtuous wife:
"There's gonna be real dough in that cash register
by tonight. When they bleached your hair, they must have bleached
your brains too."
- she was easily persuaded by the promise of revenue
from gathering throngs to remain with her ailing husband - the Trailways
bus she was supposed to depart on pulled away to reveal Lorraine
had changed her mind and was walking back inside.
- Tatum also sided with local corrupt Sheriff Gus Kretzer
(Ray Teal) up for re-election:
"What did ya have? A pair of deuces. This is better. Here we've
got an ace in the hole." There were frenzied scenes at the rescue
site - looking like a drive-in theatre with tourists, a literal circus
(S & M) amusement park and carnival, a camp ground, rising admission
prices, etc. And all the while, Tatum's main goal was to deliberately
delay rescue efforts.
- Lorraine was fast becoming rich, and she gratefully
admitted how thankful she was to Tatum. She complimented him on his
cold-hearted pecuniary greed that she was benefiting from:
"I met a lot of hard-boiled
eggs in my life, but you, you're 20 minutes....I've been doin'
my own figurin'. Took in 70 bucks so far. By tonight, it oughta
be $150. Seven times $150. That's over a grand. That's the
first grand I ever had. Thanks. (She moved and snuggled closer
to him) Thanks
a lot."
Lorraine Insulting Tatum: "I met a lot of
hard-boiled eggs in my life, but you, you're 20 minutes"
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Lorraine in Pleased Satisfaction - Tempting
Tatum to Slap Her to Wipe Away Her Smile
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After Slapping Her Twice: "That's more like
it. And don't wipe those tears."
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Lorraine to Tatum: "Don't ever slap me again!"
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- Tatum was forced to reprimand
Lorraine for deviating from her feigned sorrow as the worried wife
with an ever-widening smile - he slapped her face twice to literally
wipe away her pleased satisfaction, to cool her sexual desire for
him, and to also batter her into submission (just as Leo had unintentionally
trapped her). When tears formed in her eyes, he approved: "That's
more like it. And don't wipe those tears. That's the way you're
supposed to look. Put on your wedding ring. Go on back and peddle
your hamburgers."
- Tatum encouraged her
to continue her fake charade of grieving for her husband, and to
be available for a photo-op of her grieving at the church. But
she cautioned him about ever physically striking her again: "And
another thing, mister. Don't ever slap me again."
- as
an accomplice in Leo's prolonged predicament, Lorraine became his
own monomaniacal self's mirror-image - reflecting his own cold callousness,
selfishness, shamelessness and venality by always angling for the
best set-up for herself. When she seemed to be maneuvering to join
him back in New York after the crisis was over, Tatum's fist grabbed
the back of Lorraine's bleached hair as he drew her close to him
("Why don't you wash that platinum
outta your hair?") - their only kiss in the film - obscured
by a close-up of the back of Lorraine's head.
- on
the 5th wedding anniversary of Leo's marriage to Lorraine, Tatum
retrieved Leo's present for her (a cheap mink stole) and gave it
to her, but she snidely rejected it: "I got enough
money to buy me a real fur, a silver fox...I hate it, Chuck...It's
like him touching me," but Tatum picked up the wrap, slung it
around her neck, and insisted that she wear it as he pulled it tighter
and began to strangle her: "He wants you to wear it...Don't
take it off!" She struggled to free herself, and then suddenly
in self-defense, in the film's most shocking moment, she stabbed
him in the lower right side of his gut with the pair of scissors
in her hand.
- at the same moment, the site of
the accident was engulfed with profiteers as the cursed victim died
of pneumonia in the darkness of the cave. Last rites were administered
by Father Diego (Lester Dorr) to pneumonia-stricken Leo after 6
days of being unnecessarily trapped in the cave-in; Leo was
prepared to die and told them: "I'm ready"; Father Diego absolved Leo of his sin as he confessed: "Bless
me, Father, for I have sinned. I'm sorry"
- finally realizing that he was beyond redemption
and that the spectacle was over, the severely-wounded
Tatum delivered a speech to the crowds to go home after Leo's death:
"Leo Minosa is dead. He died a quarter of an
hour ago... with the drill just 10 feet away. There's nothing we
can do anymore. There's nothing anybody can do. He's dead. Do you
hear me? Now go on home, all of you! The circus is over."
Ending Sequence
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"Rescue Fund" Sign
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Tatum's Speech: "Leo Minosa is Dead....The circus is over"
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- after hearing the news, Lorraine (without the wrap)
turned away from her window and soon emerged from the trading post's
second floor apartment with her suitcase - dressed for travel and
finally free. However, she remained an outcast and undesirable -
she was unable to hail a departing bus and was last seen walking
away from the camera amidst the stream of departing cars that were
beginning to clog the highway. She vainly sought a hitchhiking ride
to escape.
- Leo's forlorn Papa Minosa
looked at the "Rescue
Fund" sign (that earlier promised proceeds to go to rescue Leo)
after everyone's departure - with litter blowing in the wind.
- in the conclusion, after Tatum's hypocritical rescue
efforts were uncovered, he received his come-uppance when he expressed
some guilt and remorse over his unscrupulous actions - and dropped
dead back where he started.
- there was a final low-angled shot of bleeding, defeated
journalist Tatum collapsing at the feet of his editor-in-chief Mr.
Jacob Q. Boot and delivering his final words:
"How'd you like to make yourself a thousand
dollars a day, Mr. Boot? I'm a thousand-dollar-a-day newspaperman.
You can have me for nothing."
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Charles "Chuck" Tatum (Kirk Douglas) - Angling For a Newspaper Job
with Managing Editor Jacob Q. Boot (Porter Hall)
Tatum's Rant About Missing New York
Lorraine Minosa (Jan Sterling), Leo's Wife - Who Called
Her Husband a "Dumb
Cluck"
Lorraine to Tatum: "I'm on to you. You're working for
a newspaper"
Front-Page News-Story: Cave-In
Tatum Convincing Trapped Wife To Stay In Order to Benefit
Financially ("There's gonna be real dough in that cash register by
tonight")
Lorraine Deciding Not to Take the Trailways Bus
Tatum with Corrupt Sheriff Gus Kretzer
(Ray Teal)
Business Booming at the Trading Post for Lorraine
Throngs of People at The Rescue Site
Spectators Being Interviewed
Amusement Trucks Arriving
Arrival of "Leo Minosa Special" Train
"Why don't you wash that platinum outta your hair?" - Fist Grab of
Her Hair For a Kiss
Dying Leo's Last Moments in Cave-In
Lorraine with Leo's Mink Stole Gift Around Her Neck
Tatum Strangling Lorraine
Tatum's Reaction to Being Stabbed
Lorraine with Suitcase Abandoning the Trading Post
Wounded Tatum Helped Into the Newspaper Office
Tatum's Collapse Face-First
Tatum Falling Dead: "You can have me for nothing"
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