Down In Old Casablanca-With Brad Pitt’s
“Allied” In Mind
By Seth Garth
“Nobody ever said I didn’t have a sense
of irony,” blurred out Steve Roberts to his friend Jack Davis as they both sat
at Molly’s Diner in Riverdale, a town about fifty miles to the west of Boston
for their usual weekly Saturday morning breakfast get-together to catch up on
each other’s week (by the way breakfast not brunch despite the eleven in the
morning meeting time they are not those kind of guys). The point of the comment
about Steve’s sense of irony had been around a film that he had seen the
previous night with his wife Lana at the Majestic Theater. The film the
favorable reviewed latest Brad Pitt’s effort Allied which had its initial scenes set in Casablanca out in the
deserts of Morocco.
Now the main reason that Lana wanted to
go, was bugging him to go to a World War II romance was to see the female
co-star, Marion Cotillard, who was rumored to have been the reason that Brad
and Angelina Jolie had busted up. Steve had had his own reasons for wanting to
see the film once he knew the story-line involved wartime Casablanca. He had
Googled the film’s title to see what reviewers were saying about the film and
had come across a review by the fairly well-known movie critic Sam Lowell on
the blog American Film History. The
gist of Sam’s mostly favorable review was that Casablanca was a tough town to
keep up a romance in, at least in the movies. Sam had given the example of the
fate of Rick of Rick’s Café in the actual wartime classic Casablanca, actual meaning here that it was produced in1942 at the
height of the war, din who
got short-changed in his rekindled love affair with Ilsa whom he had met in
Paris before the Germans came crashing down on the town. Yeah, Rick, played
almost perfectly by rugged no non-sense tough guy Humphrey Bogart at the height
of his acting career, took it on the chin for the cause so that his Ilsa
(played by fetching Ingrid Bergman) could go away from Casablanca with her
husband the Resistance leader Victor Lazlo (played by Paul Henreid) to fight
the bad guys another day.
After reading Sam Lowell’s review Steve
sat in his chair in the den where he had his computer set up and thought for a
while about that old time film and about how no matter how many times he had
seen it, he had lost count but it must have been over ten, that classic would
always remain the definitive wartime romance film despite the build-up over the
Pitt’s vehicle. He wondered to himself (he didn’t dare tell Lana that he was
already predisposed to Casablanca
when she would ask him the inevitable question about where he would rate Allied in the film universe) that night
how this new film also centered in Casablanca would hold up. Casablanca would be a tough act to
follow between the acting, the story-line and the flat out appeal of the film
during a period when people were being asked, and in many cases not asked but
told, to sacrifice more than an affair with an errant lover.
As Steve attempted to sleep that night
he started going through the story-line of Casablanca.
Rick, beautifully roughed Rick of Rick’s Café was just sitting around his joint
piling up dough from his casino and booze action in Vichy-held French Morocco
during the early part of World War II , paying off the local Vichy cops and
trading with a Moslem middleman in the notorious Casbah to get whatever
pain-killers his clientele desired. (That middleman, always known then as the Fat
Man, by the way was a guy he had worked with before in the States before the
war when he for a short while ran a detective agency in Frisco town under an
alias, Miles Archer, with a guy named Sam Spade, when the Fat man was working
some rare bird scam with some frill Rick had to send over. The Fat man got out
of town faster than the cops could grab him and when Rick landed in the Casbah
there was the Fat Man working this commission trade for everything from heroin
to stolen merchandise to women, any kind of women from Amazons to pygmies and
everything who knew very love trick including some that dare not speak their
name. There were profits aplenty for everybody how do you think Rick got the
damn café-a beautiful front for every kind of illegal activity as long as you
paid Louie off-or some Vichy official)
But from the get go you knew, knew as
sure as anything that here was a man with a past-maybe killed somebody for love
or vengeance who knows. Maybe on the run like half the emigres in the town,
maybe ran afoul of somebody who it was not good to run afoul of but whatever
reason there he was tough guying it all the way. Then the letters of transit,
the damn letters of transit worth their weight in gold for anybody, any
desperate anybody needing to get the hell out of Africa to anyplace. The beauty
of the letters was that the holder had free passage out-no questions asked. Men
have killed, as the courier running the letters had found out, for less and
have been killed as well. They say life was cheap in Casablanca in those days
and maybe they were right, and maybe life was cheap all over the world just
then.
Then she came in and you might have
known that Rick’s dour countenance was not over having killed a man, or men, had
not been on the run from some failed scheme, maybe some betrayed scheme but
that since Adam’s time, maybe before, no, surely before it had to be about a
woman. Yeah, there she was all dewy-like just like in Paris before the fucking
Nazis decided Germany was just too small for the German race, yeah, we have
heard that one before, have heard it chimed out many times since. As it turned
out she left without a word, no good-bye, nothing just Rick with his nose bent
out of joint in the rain in the Paris train station looking stupid.
She would have her reasons, they always
have their reasons is what Rick came to finally figure out, maybe just to keep
a guy guessing, maybe just to satisfy some feminine whim. There she was though
and whatever hard-boiled Rick (honed from the times when Brigid O’Shaunessey
ran him a merry chase back in Frisco town before the war, and before Ilsa’s
Paris, over some freaking bird, some stuff of dreams bird that men were also
willing to kill for, kill for since life was cheap in Frisco town just then.
That was the caper that the Fat Man got out of town just in a nick of time
leaving the murderous femme fatale to find her pretty little head in a noose
before it was all over) had done to put up a shield around himself that was
melting pretty damn fast. So fast that Louie the local pay-off gendarme working
hand-in-glove with the Nazi scum noticed it, noticed that that hard-boiled
don’t give a damn about the world let it go to hell in a handbasket (hell he
had even cracked a lot of wisecracker jokes with some Nazi high muck who was
asking about his allegiances-told him that where he came the Nazis might want
to take a pass on trying to overrun) had made an exception once she came
through that front door of his gin mill.
Yeah, she had her reason. See she was
married to Victor Lazlo, yeah, that Victor Lazlo, the great Eastern European
resistance leader whom the Nazis were salivating to get their hands on-put out
of commission even though they knew, knew for certain and for public
consumption in their greedy little small minds that such figures were like so
much wind against the power of the German juggernaut. Yeah the great Victor
Lazlo whom she had thought dead, erroneous thought dead since every other day
there were report s that he had been captured and executed only to be found in
some other country being hidden by the local resistance fighters and the
Germans would again put out the lie that he was a goner. So Ilsa had latched
onto in all sincerity Rick on the rebound, on the lonely rebound in romantic
Paris (she would later agree to the sentiment that they, she and Rick, would
whatever happened later would always have Paris). Here is what you have to know
though, know about a guy like Victor Lazlo. Guys like him will stand alone if
necessary against a whole array of Nazi-infested tanks but in the quiet night
they need a woman, need a woman’s sexual allure to make them whole, to make
them able to go out the next day and face what tanks have to be faced. And
women like Ilsa, farm-fresh younger women need a guy who is ready to face that
day but in the quiet of the night succumb to their allure. If you want to know
the truth of that think about Rick on that last day in Paris when he had to get
out or his was going to be facing some serious hell from the encroaching Nazis
who had a price on his head. He could have forgone the lovely Ilsa if he had
only been worried about his own skin at that moment. Don’t forget too despite
his don’t give a damn manner in Casablanca before Ilsa arrived that our dear
Rick had a past, had smuggled guns to the Ethiopians when Mussolini decided to
pick on somebody not his own size and fought beside the International Brigades
as a “pre-mature anti-Fascist when that designation meant something in world
politics. So Ilsa was like catnip to a guy like Rick. And he to her.
Reasons enough I guess. In any case
that is all stuff from the past, water over the dam or under the bridge take
your choice. What was important now were those damn letters of transit-the free
ticket to wherever no questions asked. Documents Victor Lazlo could have surely
used as the Nazis and their Vichy henchmen (sweet corrupt Louie too he was
cutting corners to save anybody’s just then but only his own) started putting
the head on to get him under their wing. Documents too that Rick-with luscious
dreams of Ilsa in tow could use to get out of the stinking Casbah and back with
regular civilized types in whatever country he decided to de-plane.
This is where a guy like Rick, busted
up in love, cynical almost by profession (and culture having grown up in Hell’s
Kitchen in hard-knocks New York so that trait needed to survive in one piece)
and anxious to move on trips you up though. He will make that fateful gesture
to love and pull a switch-will let Victor and Ilsa slip out of Casablanca and
do whatever do-gooders do when they are not on the run. Nice. And Rick, well,
Rick will always have that smell of her perfume to think about on lonely nights
out on whatever front he finds himself. The last thing he said to Louie who
turned traitor cold to the Vichy-Nazi machine when he let the airplane fly out
unhindered was that Casablanca was tough on the love nerves (for public
consumption they say he said that he and Lou were starting a beautiful
friendship but that was all bullshit if you knew Rick in those days out in the
heat of the stinking desert).
Yeah, a tough act to follow no doubt.
Here is how times have change though, or maybe not change as far as wartime
Casablanca was concerned. Casablanca this time as the 1942 wartime backdrop to
the action in Brad Pitt’s Allied. A resourceful
highly skilled British Intelligence Officer Max, the role that the pretty boy
handsome Pitt plays, is sent to that stinking town on a mission to take out the
German ambassador to the Vichy-regime there. His local contact was a much
valued French woman Resistance fighter, Marianne. (No more passive Ilsa
companions edging on their man to greater exploits by day and using their
sexual allure by night to get their guys back in one piece to face the next day.
Now they are fighting side by side with the men on the dangerous missions-and
doing okay at that). The ploy they are to use to gain the confidence of the
local Nazi establishment in order to get an invite to an embassy gala is to act
as a romantic married couple. All the signs of a happy couple are played out
and they gain entrée to the event after some close call stuff about getting the
tickets. During the course of “playing house” they actually do fall madly in love,
an act consummated in a tiny car out in a desert whirling dervish of a wind
storm, an act in a film which would not have passed the Hollywood censors back
in that day as such things were only implied at best by a fade-out.
Of course after the assassination of
the German ambassador they had to flee town he to head back to England and she,
well, she was going to London too since our dear Max asked her to marry him.
Once she arrived in England they were dutifully married and had a child (born during
a German bombing raid over London) and then things got dicey. There were
serious allegations that sweet quick on the trigger Marianne was actually a
German spy. Max refused to believe that hard fact, hell, hadn’t they pulled off
that caper in Casablanca. But the evidence began to pile up, seriously pile up
that she was not who she seemed to be. She was in the thick of the espionage ring
the Germans were running. In the end maybe she did love Max, did love her
infant daughter so when the deal went down she committed suicide. Hard-bitten storyline,
very hard. But you know that reviewer
Sam Lowell from the American Film History
blog was right was right Casablanca was a tough dollar, a tough place for love
to blossom.
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