Reading the article did cause me to reconsider certain aspects of the film and novel. In the article " I Love you Too; Sexual Warfare and Homoeroticism in Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity by Brain Gallagher suggest that Keyes and Walter have more then just a man friendship. It suggest that they are more then just two friends working together an that Keyes and Walter were closer. At first I viewed Keyes and Walter relationship as a father and son tough love bond. That if Walter was caught between a twisted love affair with Phyllis and Keyes and that if Keyes really wanted Walter. Now at first I thought O no it can't be like that but after reading the novel and watching the film a start putting two and two together with different scenes and parts of both film and novel. In more then one scene Walter tells Keyes that he loved him and how Walter would keep lighting Keyes cigars. And even when Keyes finds out what really happen doesn't just feed Walter to the dogs. Other insights that I gained reading this article is how some of the characters roles are so different in the film and novel. How Phyllis role in the film is not as cold hearted and ruthless as it is in the novel. The novel tells it all, all the people she had really murder and how careless she really was and her disregard for one's life. In the novel she killed to get what she wanted and when it boiled down to it, it was money. She killed her husband's first wife for money she wanted to inherit cause the wife was next in line and then she killed the three little kids. And then he murders her husband for his insurance money. Then turns on Walter and wants him dead and try's to kill him by shooting him. But in the film Phyllis is made to seem in a away trying to get out of a marriage because her husband mistreats her and slaps her around when he drinks, so she wants him dead. And when she double crosses Walter in the film makes it seem like she can't shoot him a second time because she did really love him. For the novel I'm not encouraged to challenge any of the author's conclusion because I liked the novel ending better than the films ending.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Friday, September 13, 2013
Blog #4
For the zero draft questions I pick question #1 for my blog. Discuss the contrasts between the endings of the novel and the film. Which ending seems more appropriate for film noir? Why?
The contrast between the ending of the novel and film are two different endings. In the novel the ending leaves you with your own imagination to figure out what happens. Phyllis ends up shooting Walter putting him in the hospital and then Walter confessing to Keyes that he was the one that killed Mr. Nirdinger . Walter convinces Keyes to give him time to flee to Mexico to get way from what he had done. Walter ends up going on the ship and by no surprise he is join by Phyllis " I heard a little gasp beside me. Before I even looked I knew who it was. I turned to the next chair. It was Phyllis."You." Walter then finds out from Phyllis that Lola and Nino gets married and Keyes gives her away. Also at the novel it ends up coming out what Phyllis and Walter had done, Phyllis states " Yes. It all came out. It's a good thing we're under different names here. I saw all the passengers reading about it at lunch. It's a sensation."pg(113) Phyllis wasn't bother by it,she called it a sensation, how is committing murder a sensation when people find out. In the novel Phyllis is made out to be this cold hear ted killer with no remorse. Walter states " She smiled then, the sweetest,saddest smile you ever saw. I thought of the five patients, the three little children, Mrs Nirdlinger, Nirdlinger, and myself. It didn't seem possible that anybody that could be as nice as she was when she wanted to be, could have done those things."pg(113) In the novel Phyllis is true definitions of a femme fatale, She was mysterious, gorgeous, manipulative and double crossing. She manipulated Walter into killing her husband, and he felt like he was doing it for her and she used her gorgeousness to get him. When she feels like she has no use for him anymore double crosses him by shooting and trying to kill him.But at the end of the novel it ends the same for the both of them death.
In the film the end plays back to the beginning when Walter is confessing to Keyes in his office on a recorder what happen. Walter in the film at the end shoots and kills Phyllis after she shoots him. Phyllis doesn't try to take another shoot because she ends up telling him that she loved him. Also in the film Walter changes his mind about setting up Nino to take the fall for killing Phyllis. Keyes ends up coming to the office because Walter left a blood trail and here's what Walter is confessing on the recorder. Walter asks for Keyes to give him time to leave and Keys response with he'll never make it. As soon as Walter gets out the office he ends up collapsing to the ground and Keys lights him a cigarette. The film ending fits more into a film noir because it didn't really leave nothing to the imagination, you knew that Walter was going to die from his gone shot wound. Phyllis was dead and Walter was going to die and it seemed they both got what was coming to them. There love was doomed from the beginning and unhealthy. After what Walter did he felt trapped by his surroundings.The film started off with being told with flashbacks and voice over narration.
And for question #2 I picked
During the title sequence, a man on crutches hobbles towards the camera. Explain the significance of this image. Who in the does this man represent? Why would this be an appropriate image to show at the beginning of the film? How does this sequence anticipate later developments in the film? Walter represent the man on crutches. Because in the film he takes on the role of Mr.Nirdlinger when he going to kill him. Mr. nirdlinger is on crutches in the film when he breaks his leg and has to catch the train to his class reunion back he doesn't even make it on the train. So when Walter and Phyllis is plotting his murder and Mr. Nirdlinger broke his leg, Walter was going to have to be on crutches to play that role when he got on the train to play Mr. Nirdlinger. Mr. Nirdlinger ends up getting killed over scheme plot to collect his insurance money from his accidental insurance he knew nothing about.Walter takes on the role of Mr. Nirdlinger and ends up dieing after he is shoot by Phyllis who was his partner in crime. Mr. Nirdlinger was Phyllis pattern in marriage and she turns on him having him murder. Walter took on the role of Mr. Nirdlinger and ended up in the same boat as Mr. Nirdlinger, Walter was betrayed by his partner to and dies.
The contrast between the ending of the novel and film are two different endings. In the novel the ending leaves you with your own imagination to figure out what happens. Phyllis ends up shooting Walter putting him in the hospital and then Walter confessing to Keyes that he was the one that killed Mr. Nirdinger . Walter convinces Keyes to give him time to flee to Mexico to get way from what he had done. Walter ends up going on the ship and by no surprise he is join by Phyllis " I heard a little gasp beside me. Before I even looked I knew who it was. I turned to the next chair. It was Phyllis."You." Walter then finds out from Phyllis that Lola and Nino gets married and Keyes gives her away. Also at the novel it ends up coming out what Phyllis and Walter had done, Phyllis states " Yes. It all came out. It's a good thing we're under different names here. I saw all the passengers reading about it at lunch. It's a sensation."pg(113) Phyllis wasn't bother by it,she called it a sensation, how is committing murder a sensation when people find out. In the novel Phyllis is made out to be this cold hear ted killer with no remorse. Walter states " She smiled then, the sweetest,saddest smile you ever saw. I thought of the five patients, the three little children, Mrs Nirdlinger, Nirdlinger, and myself. It didn't seem possible that anybody that could be as nice as she was when she wanted to be, could have done those things."pg(113) In the novel Phyllis is true definitions of a femme fatale, She was mysterious, gorgeous, manipulative and double crossing. She manipulated Walter into killing her husband, and he felt like he was doing it for her and she used her gorgeousness to get him. When she feels like she has no use for him anymore double crosses him by shooting and trying to kill him.But at the end of the novel it ends the same for the both of them death.
In the film the end plays back to the beginning when Walter is confessing to Keyes in his office on a recorder what happen. Walter in the film at the end shoots and kills Phyllis after she shoots him. Phyllis doesn't try to take another shoot because she ends up telling him that she loved him. Also in the film Walter changes his mind about setting up Nino to take the fall for killing Phyllis. Keyes ends up coming to the office because Walter left a blood trail and here's what Walter is confessing on the recorder. Walter asks for Keyes to give him time to leave and Keys response with he'll never make it. As soon as Walter gets out the office he ends up collapsing to the ground and Keys lights him a cigarette. The film ending fits more into a film noir because it didn't really leave nothing to the imagination, you knew that Walter was going to die from his gone shot wound. Phyllis was dead and Walter was going to die and it seemed they both got what was coming to them. There love was doomed from the beginning and unhealthy. After what Walter did he felt trapped by his surroundings.The film started off with being told with flashbacks and voice over narration.
And for question #2 I picked
During the title sequence, a man on crutches hobbles towards the camera. Explain the significance of this image. Who in the does this man represent? Why would this be an appropriate image to show at the beginning of the film? How does this sequence anticipate later developments in the film? Walter represent the man on crutches. Because in the film he takes on the role of Mr.Nirdlinger when he going to kill him. Mr. nirdlinger is on crutches in the film when he breaks his leg and has to catch the train to his class reunion back he doesn't even make it on the train. So when Walter and Phyllis is plotting his murder and Mr. Nirdlinger broke his leg, Walter was going to have to be on crutches to play that role when he got on the train to play Mr. Nirdlinger. Mr. Nirdlinger ends up getting killed over scheme plot to collect his insurance money from his accidental insurance he knew nothing about.Walter takes on the role of Mr. Nirdlinger and ends up dieing after he is shoot by Phyllis who was his partner in crime. Mr. Nirdlinger was Phyllis pattern in marriage and she turns on him having him murder. Walter took on the role of Mr. Nirdlinger and ended up in the same boat as Mr. Nirdlinger, Walter was betrayed by his partner to and dies.
Monday, September 9, 2013
- As we will see when we
view the film, the ending of the novel is quite different from the
movie. Discuss the appropriateness
of the novel’s conclusion. Do you
feel that the ending is satisfying, or do you feel that Walter and Phyllis
should receive different treatment?
Why do you think that the screenwriters Raymond Chandler and Billy
Wilder changed Cain’s ending?
Monday, September 2, 2013
Noir vs. Not
Double Indemnity fits right into the film noir. It had that weird, erotic, ambivalent and cruel qualities of film noir. The character playing the insurance agent selling polices for accidental insurance kind of takes on the role of rotten police featured in film noirs. The character is suppose to be selling insurance but instead plotting against and trying to scam the one company he works for. In which is entrapment trying to take money with in your own company. From the website Flimsite states " An oppressive atmosphere of menace, pessimism, anxiety, suspicion that anything can go wrong, dingy realism, futility, fatalism, defeat and entrapment are stylized characteristics of film noir" In the novel Double Indemnity , Walter states "Money" " Your mean you would-betray your company, and help me do this, for me, and the money we could get out of it?" His character was in for it for the money and i feel Ms.Nirdlinger going to be his fall man. Mrs. Nirdlinger fits and takes on the role as the femme. Also from the website Filmsite states that " Very often, a film noir story was developed around a male character, who encountered a beautiful but promiscuous and seductive femme fatale..." The novel compares to a film noir because it fits the plot of a film noir, the novel is developed around a male which is Mr. Walter and Mrs. Nirdlinger being the promiscuous seductive e femme that falls for Walter, and set up a murder plot. Double Indemnity fits the qualities of a role film noir because of it's weird,erotic, and cruel plot.Walter thinks he has the perfect plan and later in the novel it's starts to unfold.The insurance company starts to take the law in it's own hands when Mr. Keys starts to see Mr. Nirdlinger death as a suicide and then a murder. Instead of reporting it to the police Mr. Keys and Mr. Norton is going to handled it by getting Mrs. Nirdlinger to sue them for them to pay her. Mr. keys was trying to make Mr. Nirdlinger death to look like a suicide instead of an accident so that the company wouldn't have to pay on Mr. Nirdlinger policy. But starts to aspect that it was murder and Ms. Nirdlinger has someone working with her, this falls into the corruption side of film noirs. The novel has that unknown twist to it especially the relationship with Walter and Mrs. Nirdlinger. Paul Shrader states in the article "Note on Film Noir" " Finally, there is ambiguity surrounding the woman: the femme fatale who is fatal to herself. Frustrated and deviant, half predator, half prey, detached yet ensnared, she falls victim to her own traps....." When Walter visits Mrs. Nirdlinger and lets her know what Keys and Norton were up to she wants to back out and not even sue, then aske Walter if he stilled loved her and did think about her all the time, playing that seductive role of a film noir. Also in the novel Walter is having mixed feelings about what happen and states " I had killed a man. I had killed a man to get a woman. I had put myself in he power, so there was one person in the world that could point a finger at me, and I never wanted to see her as long as I lived."Walter also states that he loved her like a rabbit loves a rattlesnake. I'm taking this as he is really in it for the money and she is going to play the fall guy.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)