Murder Anyway You Cut It- With The French Film Tell No One In Mind
By Zack James
Phil Larkin, the locally well-known private investigator from
Gloversville about sixty miles west of Boston, loved to go to the National
Private Investigators Association (NPIA) annual conventions not so much to
inspect the inevitable new technological gizmos which were touted as the P.I.s
next best friend by their producers but to gather up old acquaintances and over
a few whiskies to find out about some new interesting case one or more of them might
be working on. They are not all interesting by any means whatever the
individual P.I. might be hyping about by virtue of his or her prowess in
solving the riddle of the age –usually some missing husband who was ready to go
home after a couple of months with some floozy who spent all his dough and blew
for places unknown, a guy who fled town for some reason and wants to remain
missing but something got him up from the underground, some scared kid who blew
home and is out in Topeka somewhere and can’t get out of the caboose until some
adult accompanies him or her home, or a skipper you would be amazed at how much
P.I. work is “repo” stuff which keeps many guys in clover and a full scotch
bottle in that bottom desk drawer for those long stretches between jobs. Or
about a case they might have heard about. That is how he heard from his old
friend Artie Shaw about the Beck case, the case that had half the public
coppers, gendarmes they call them there, in France baffled and Artie too until
things fell into place by virtue of that over-rated prowess that every P.I.
hung out like single in front of his or her shabby sixth floor office in some
seen its day office building filled with failed dentists, cheapjack insurance
agents, seedy repo men (guys who do it full-time) and discount wholesale
jewelers.
[By the way for those who are confused, or only know of the
more famous American Forensic Investigators Organization (AFIO), the one the
famous detectives Jack Dolan, Robert Parker, and Shane Chandler, the latter a
distant relative of the crime writer Raymond who practically invented the
hard-boiled detective genre that has misled several generations of readers and
average citizens about the real lives of P.I.s, belong to, the NPIA and AFIO
work two very different tracks. The AFIO had split, an acrimoniously split,
from the NPIA over the issue of working with the public coppers. The NPIA
historically had deferred, meaning “butted out on,” once a case went onto the
police blotter. The AFIO made up of a bunch of “hot-doggers” who spit on the
public coppers and their half-ass work went on the premise that all cases were
better done through private hands. Phil an old time public cop himself would
have been railroaded out of business in Gloversville if he had made step one to
mess with the open police cases in that town. Would have been run out of town
on a rail if not put under some very loose ground especially when Nick Devine
was chief copper in that burg and was so “connected” to the boys with grunts
and funny noses that he well might have done it himself-or had it done.]
Every NPIA member in attendance could hardly wait for the
banquet that closed each convention to hear the words, to hear the deep dark
secret of the profession that the difference between the actual numbers of
cases between the two organizations was minuscule or NPIA’s were better. The
reality was that despite the few headline cases like the Galton kidnaping and
ransom case which some guy, some almost amateur sleuth named Ross MacDonald
solved there was as much co-operation between AFIO and public coppers as the
NPIA.
Artie, originally from Boston, had worked with Phil when he
had started out on a couple of cases, key-hole peeping cases which in the 1950s
was bread and butter work for most private detectives in the days when getting
a divorce was heavy lifting without an army of reasons adultery being the primo
reason a court would accept. Phil eventually moved on from that work saying to
anybody who would listen that he would rather try to solve mass murder cases,
solve serial murder stuff than have to swallow the lies associated with guys
and gals shacking up once they got to court and practically accused him of
breaking up happy homes or being the fall guy for some kind of abuse. Less strain on the nerves. Artie, knowing his
limitations, always stuck with key-hole peeping which is how in a roundabout
way he got the Beck case.
The wife of a big Boston international banker had hired him
to get the goods on her husband and his French mistress whom said banker had
established, had set up in a Paris apartment for when he travelled there on
business. Artie, really a pro then at getting the dope, getting the photos
necessary to close a divorce case in court, rapped that one up tight, no
problem. What Artie had found out in Paris as the 1950s turned into the 1960s
was that there was still much key-hole peeping work to found there through the
still pretty much intact cumbersome French Napoleonic civil code and so he
stayed around there to pick up the pieces, especially when that Boston banker’s
divorcee set up herself in Montmatre.
That banker’s ex-wife connection got him the Beck case, got
it to him at least indirectly through her lawyer in Paris who was also the
lawyer that this Doctor Beck had retained once he got into serious trouble, or
rather he and his sister, Anne, a devotee of the horsey set, but loaded with
dough from her husband’s fortune had retained. The case would have seemed to be
on the face of it way over Artie’s head as it involved a “cold case,” a case
that the French gendarmes had closed up tight. But the ex-banker’s wife and
Beck’s lawyer both agreed that a non-French P.I. would have less hurdles to
cross than some Parisian private dick who was bound by law to turn everything
over to the coppers under penalty of losing his or her license. (Artie was
working off his U.S. permit courtesy of influence with the public coppers by a
friend of that banker’s ex-wife).
Artie had moreover gotten on the case after the thing had
been dead for about seven, eight years. Years after this Doctor Beck was
cleared as far as could be of his wife’s murder out in the country while they
were out for a swim on the lake. The doctor’s story then had been that he had
been knocked unconscious by a party unknown and dumped into the lake when he
heard his wife’s screams. Except he was found on the dock. As such things went
the public coppers had to let it go when they couldn’t shake his story and his
wife’s father, a public copper himself, identified his daughter’s body and
vouched for his son-in-law.
Then a couple of bodies surfaced in that same area and a
couple of cops from the old case started to put two and two together and come
up with the doctor. The frame was on but the point was how was Artie to get enough
evidence to get the doctor off the hook. As it turned out a couple of pieces of
evidence surfaced that got the ball rolling. The doctor’s wife, who along with
his sister were seriously into steeplechase horse shows, had been beaten badly
by someone a few weeks prior to her death. The coppers figured that Doc Beck
did the deed, a wife-beater not uncommon among certain high profile types. As
it turned out the wife, Margot was her name, had had his sister take
photographs of the wounds but had also swore her to secrecy that this horse set
guy, this Phillip Neuville, the son of Baron Neuville, a guy with a pile of
money as well had done the beating when she confronted him with evidence of
child sexual abuse of a bunch of kids who worked the stables as a part of
program she was involved with.
That confrontation as it turned out resulted in the death of
young Philip. The photographs were taken after the Doc’s wife had killed the
bastard.
Switch up to the film made of the Beck case minus, at his
request since it might be bad for his business in America do, Artie….
Nowadays in order for a thriller to pass muster there have
to be many little twists and turns or else the film get very tedious, get very
boring, never gets, as a friend of mine who is into both written and cinematic
thrillers has suggested, off the slow-moving track which spells death to the
film, makes one reach for the remote very quickly. That is not the case with
the thriller under review, the French film, Tell
No One, although frankly I thought that the film would in its opening
scenes succumb to that slow-moving death every thriller has to dodge.
Here are the twists in this “cold file” case. Doctor Beck’s
wife, Margot, had been killed, senselessly killed by a serial killer, several
years earlier and he was just beginning to put his life back together when a
whole ton of hell started coming down on his head. Reason: a couple of male
bodies filled with bullets had been found out in the country where his wife had
been killed. Beck had just barely gotten out of the clutches of the law back
then since the law thought under the odd-ball evidence in the case that he was
the mastermind behind the deed. He had been mysteriously found unconscious on
the dock despite his assertions that he had been hit and fallen into the water
by the killer being a chief reason that he had been suspected by the cops.
Lots of things begin to pop up that had the cops interested
in reopening the case, hoping to see the big frame placed around his head.
Unaccounted for bruises to his wife’s face on photos that survived, a gun found
in secret place in his house, the murder most foul of his wife’s best friend
are just some of the examples that dog him. Put those together with Beck’s
taking it on the lam to figure out what the hell was going on and for the
average cop never mind what country he or she works in and you have an “open
and shut” case of consciousness of guilt and an easy and early wrap-up to the
cases.
But hold on. This Doctor Beck actually loved his wife, was
not faking the trouble he had trying to put his life back together. Something
else was going on, some nefarious plot to get him to take the big step-off and
let him rot in prison forgotten after a while. Not only was something going on
in the frame department but the good doctor was getting information via his
e-mail that his wife was still alive. So two trails of events were going on at
the same time (always a good sign in a thriller): the net tightening over his
head by the coppers and his frenzy to find his wife knowing now that she is not
dead. That’s all I will tell you because I have been asked to “tell no one” in
order not to spoil the ending, okay. Except old Doc Beck was not crazy, was not
wrong in assuming that nefarious forces were out to get him although it would
take a while before he learned that it was because of something that Margot had
knowledge about shortly before her “death” which had people in high places
ready, willing and able to do her in. Watch this award-winning film.
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