Dead Reckoning is a
Columbia Pictures film noir starring
Humphrey Bogart and
Lizabeth Scott and featuring
Morris Carnovsky. It was directed by
John Cromwell and written
by Steve Fisher and Oliver H.P. Garrett based on a story by
Gerald Drayson Adams and Sidney
Biddell.
Plot
Just after
World War II, paratroopers Captain Murdock (Humphrey Bogart) and Sergeant Johnny Drake
(William Prince) are
mysteriously ordered to travel to Washington, DC
. When Drake learns that he is to be awarded
the
Medal of Honor (and Murdock the
Distinguished
Service Cross), he disappears before newspaper photographers
can take his picture. Murdock follows the clues and tracks his
friend to Gulf City, where he learns Drake is dead – burned to
death in a car accident.
Murdock finds out that Drake joined the Army under an assumed name
to avoid a murder charge. He was accused of killing a rich old man
named Chandler because he was in love with his beautiful young wife
Coral (
Lizabeth Scott). Murdock goes
to a nightclub to question Louis Ord (
George Chandler), a witness in the murder
trial. Ord reveals that Drake had given him a letter for Murdock.
Murdock also meets Coral and Martinelli (
Morris Carnovsky), the club owner, there.
Murdock's drink is drugged. When he wakes up the next morning, he
finds Ord's dead body planted in his hotel room. He manages to
dispose of the corpse before police Lieutenant Kincaid (Charles
Cane), responding to an anonymous tip, shows up to question
him.
Murdock teams up with Coral. Suspecting that Martinelli had Ord
killed in order to get the letter, Murdock breaks into his office,
only to find the safe already open. Just before he is knocked
unconscious by an unseen assailant, he smells jasmine, the same
aroma as Coral's perfume. When Murdock awakens, Martinelli has him
roughed up by his thug, Krause (
Marvin Miller), to try to find out
what is in the coded letter. However, Murdock manages to trick his
captors and escape.
Now suspicious of Coral, Murdock goes to her apartment to confront
her. She claims to be innocent, but finally admits that she shot
her husband in self defense. She gave the murder weapon to
Martinelli to dispose of, but he has been blackmailing her ever
since. In love with her himself, Murdock agrees to leave town with
her, but decides to retrieve the incriminating weapon first,
despite Coral's fears. He threatens Martinelli with a gun,
eliciting some startling revelations. The club owner reveals that
Coral is his wife. He killed Chandler and framed Drake so that
Coral could inherit the estate before the
bigamy could be discovered. Murdock gets what he came
for and forces Martinelli to precede him out of the building. As he
opens the door, Martinelli is shot and killed.
Murdock jumps into the waiting car and drives off with Coral. As
they are speeding away, he accuses her of having just tried to kill
him. When she shoots him, the car crashes. He survives, but she
suffers fatal injuries. In the hospital, Murdock comforts her in
her final moments.
Cast
Reception
The
New York Times gave the
film a mixed review, praising Bogart as "beyond criticism in a role
such as 'Dead Reckoning' affords him", with "some of the best
all-around dialogue he has had in a long time." However, it was
less kind to his co-star, Scott, "whose face is expressionless and
whose movements are awkward and deliberate." Though the plot was
considered to be "rambling" and Bogart's character's actions not
particularly plausible at times, "the suspense is skillfully drawn
out."
Notes
External links