December
1958 release date
Screenplay
by Ben Simcoe
Music by
Perry Botkin
Edited by
Carlo Lodato
Cinematography
by Lucien Ballard
Vince
Edwards as Claude
Phillip
Pine as Marc
Herschel
Bernardi as George
Caprice
Toriel as Billie Williams
Michael
Granger as Mr. Moon
Cathy
Browne as Mary, the secretary
Joseph
Mell as Harry, the hotel waiter
Frances
Osborne as Miss Wiley, Williams’s
former maid
Steven Ritch
as the plainclothes officer with the tear gas
Janet
Brandt as the woman in the movie theater
Davis
Roberts as the clerk at Hall of Records
Don
Garrett as James William Mayflower
Gloria
Victor as Miss Wexley
Cisco Houston as the rifle
salesperson
Distributed
by Columbia Pictures
Produced
by Orbit Productions
The use
of music is very effective in Murder by Contract, much like the zither
in The Third Man (1949). The Columbia logo is the first thing to appear
on the screen with no sound, just silence. Then the film cuts to the opening
credits, which appear over a man (Claude, the contract killer) shaving and
getting dressed. Now comes a kicky, whimsical, foreign-sounding guitar score on
the soundtrack. This guitar score is the theme music for the film and is
repeated throughout. The man continues dressing, with a suit and a tie, and
then he shines his shoes. He could be any businessman getting ready for an
office job.
After the
credits, the film cuts to Claude visiting Mr. Moon and asking him for a job. He
says that Mr. Brink sent him. Mr. Moon is skeptical and not very encouraging. From
their dialogue, viewers know that Claude isn’t looking for any ordinary
business job, although he is dressed in his suit, tie, and shined shoes for
this very different interview. He wants a high-paying job to buy a house, so
Claude is definitely hard to pigeonhole. He aspires to be a contract killer
because he wants the money to afford a middle-class life. As soon as Claude
leaves, Mr. Moon calls Mr. Brink. They might be able to use him after all.
Claude
completes his initial assignments successfully, and Mr. Brink sends Claude to
Los Angeles to kill a witness in a federal trial. Two men, George and Marc,
pick him up at the train station. The shot of George and Marc waiting for
Claude at the train station is very strange because of the rear projection. It
creates the sensation that they are parked on the tracks. And this odd use of rear projection is unfortunately consistent throughout the film. Maybe it
worked in 1958, but I found it very distracting. It stood out, perhaps, because
everything else about the film is so finely tuned.
And so is
Claude. He wants to take his time and conduct some research before he kills his
mark. Before he gets to the particulars of the contract hit, George and Marc
take (or Claude takes George and Marc) swimming; deep-sea fishing; and to the
zoo, the driving range, and the movies. At the movies, Claude slips out of the
theater while Marc is preoccupied with the film and George is asleep in his
seat. George and Marc return to the hotel room without Claude and discuss what
to do next. They finally decide to go looking for him, and when they open the
door to the hotel room, Claude is standing on the other side of the threshold.
Claude tells them that he tailed them so that he could be sure that no one was
tailing any of them.
Claude
refuses to allow emotion to enter into his work. He is a professional, and he
is good at what he does. He tells Marc and George: “The only type of killing
that’s safe is when a stranger kills a stranger. No motive. Nothing to link the
victim to the executioner. Now why would a stranger kill a stranger? Because
somebody’s willing to pay. It’s business. Same as any other business. You
murder the competition. Instead of price cutting, throat cutting. Same thing.” Claude
doesn’t care about conscience, religion, family, punishment. He is frightening
because he makes a lot of sense on some level. The difference between what he
does and what businesspeople do is a very fine line. The risk in his work is
high, but the profit is high. He has trained himself well, and he is very
convincing. Before long, he is literally in the driver’s seat: George and Marc
are letting him drive their car.
Four days
before the trial, Claude agrees to see the hit. He learns then that it is a
woman. He knew that her name was Billy Williams, but he assumed that it was a
man’s name. For the first time in the film, viewers see that Claude is ruffled.
He tells Marc and George: “I don’t like women. They don’t stand still. When
they move, it’s hard to figure out why or wherefore. They’re not dependable.
It’s tough to kill somebody who’s not dependable. I’ll do it, but I want more
money.”
Once
Claude agrees to the new contract, he is just as meticulous as he was from the
start. He tries to learn about Billie’s habits. He learns from her former maid
that Billie reads the newspaper in the morning, watches television all day, and
plays the piano. She is too afraid to do anything else while she is being
guarded by FBI agents. He uses this information to devise his murder plans.
(This blog post about
Murder by Contract contains all the spoilers.)
Murder by
Contract is a
perfect example of why I always say that film noir shows viewers exactly what not
to do. The two handlers, George and Marc, want Claude to do what he agreed to
do and move on, but Claude is meticulous and wants to do the job right. Against
their better instincts, George and Marc let Claude take his time. Before too
long, George starts to appreciate Claude’s technique and his sense of humor.
Marc grudgingly agrees, but he still raises objections here and there. He still
worries that the murder won’t be done before the witness has a chance to
testify, but he is the only one. Viewers come to appreciate the camaraderie
between Claude, George, and Marc, too. Their banter provides some genuinely
funny moments. And then there’s that guitar score that has been used from the
opening scene and credits. It is pleasant, whimsical, but it also emphasizes
some of Claude’s most gruesome work. It’s another detail that seems to lull
viewers into thinking that everything will be okay after all, although nothing
is okay for Claude’s victims.
And
that’s how the spell, for lack of a better word, is created. No one else enters
Claude, George, and Marc’s small circle. If supporting actors appear at all,
they aren’t on-screen for very long. They rarely even speak. Instead, the kicky
guitar music is heard on the soundtrack, or Claude, George, or Marc are heard
speaking whether or not they are in the shot. All three main characters and
the viewers are drawn into the small circle.
Everything
is meticulously planned and carried out. Claude sees to it. But none of the
characters account for fate, coincidence, the long arm of the law, and Claude’s
own superstitions (he isn’t the perfect killing machine after all). As soon as
the rest of the world intrudes on the criminals’ small circle, their plans blow
up in their faces. None of the three main characters survives. I was pretty
sure that Claude wouldn’t make it to the closing credits alive, but I have to
admit I was surprised that George and Marc didn’t.
No comments:
Post a Comment