The
opening credits. A book written in Chinese characters is held open by
a mechanical armature, a scanning beam 'reads' the text, a printer
chatters out the English translation in response.
At the end of every
page, an arm emerges from the machine to turn to the next page, the
armature elegantly rising and falling to allow the paper to turn.
Janice, a pretty Chinese-American girl dons her glasses to examine
the result as we are told this is a Sydney Pollack film. The girl
goes over to the computer bank to check the system. She enters the
office where Ray and Harold are debating the method of a murder; a
male Caucasian was apparently shot. The Headmasterly figure of
Dr.Lappe enters a small office to find the only occupant is a poster
of Einstein and a few Da Vinci models. Of Joseph Turner, there is no
sign, but Janice assures him Turner will be here any minute. Frowning
his disapproval, it's clear the Doctor isn't amused.
Robert Redford plays Joe Turner, Code-Name Condor. |
Joseph
'Joey' Turner rides his Solex motorised bicycle through the midtown
traffic, while his colleagues discuss the mystery murder. Finally, he
pulls up outside the 'American Literary Historical Society' building
in the East '70's, unaware of the man sitting in the '75 Torino
across the street who selects his photo from the folder and crosses
off his name against a list. One more to go.
Spoofing for the
security camera, Turner pulls his hat over his face to make a
ski-mask as he hits the buzzer.
At her desk the chain-smoking Mrs.
Russell sighs across at Jennings, the retired Sergeant at his
security post. Pulling open her draw – revealing a Colt .45 – she
presses the hidden switch to buzz the young analyst in.
Blonde, he
stands about 5' 10 and wears glasses. Frostily she informs him he's
seventeen minutes late, he retaliates claiming there was a headwind.
Bustling across to Dr. Lappe's domain, he asks if there's anything in
the early pouch for him. Before answering, Lappe pauses from watering
his plants to consult his pocket watch. He answers in the negative
before telling Turner he wants the book he left on his desk analysed
and on the computer by 4pm. As a parting gift, Turner tells the
Doctor he'd better move the Tolmiea closer to the light; it's getting
leaf blight. Going up the curved stairs he jokes with Jennings and
tells Mrs. Russell it's going to rain at 10:20.
Set photo of Robert Redford taken during production. |
Settling
into his office, Turner overhears his friends still puzzling over the
murder. Apparently, the round used was a .38, but they couldn't
recover the slug itself. Janice drops out, with some Far East
journals to read, leaving Ray and Harold to figure it out. She drops
by Turner's office with a friendly peck on the forehead. 'Ice.'
'Instead of lead. Ice.' He calls this last out so the debaters in the
adjoining office can hear. The murderer pours water into a .38
calibre mould and freezes it until the crime. By the time the cops
show, there's just a few drops of water and no bullet or ballistics.
His arm around her, it's clear these two are closer than just
colleague-close. With a marker pen, Turner sketches a Chinese
character, asking Janice what it means; tiān, or 'Heaven'. Why does
he ask? - he's not sure. Janice asks if they are on for Sam and Mae's
tonight, getting a 'Uh-Hm' of affirmation. Turner is puzzled; neither
Sam or Dr. Lappe gives his theory any credence. Janice admits there's
not much, a mystery that's been translated. 'A mystery that didn't
sell...' he corrects her 'That's been translated into a very odd
assortment of languages; Turkish, but not French, Arabic, but not
Russian or German. Dutch, Spanish... something about this is very
wrong. As an aside, Janice asks where he got the ice bullet gimmick,
Dashiell Hammett? - no, Dick Tracy.
The
Triple-A messenger van pulls up in the pouring rain as, inside,
Turner asks Ray when he can get some computer time. There's some free
run-time at 2:45. The morning pick-up has arrived and Turner hurries
down with a large envelope for the mailman. Dr. Lappe asks where Mr.
Heidegger is; Mrs. Russell informs he he called in sick. Hungover
again, is Jenning's view. The Doctor wants to know about an inquiry
Heidegger sent to Persian Gulf Command – from the stairs, Turner
calls down he did that for him. Dr. Lappe stalks off, wishing people
would go through channels. Spotting some kids trying to boost his
Solex, Turner jumps out to scare them off, noting he was right about
that rain. Torino man is still watching from across the street. With
no sign of Heidegger, he gets out into the rain. Time to call it in.
Highlighting
some key words, Turner takes his print-out and goes to fix a machine.
Torino man makes the call, from a public phone booth. Dr. Lappe
arrives with a communiqué from New York Central; HQ Langley say
there's nothing to support Turner's theory. He reminds the younger
man of his request – is this his idea of working on that book?.
Still tinkering, with calm self-assuredness, Turner asserts the book
will be on the computer by four. His patience waning, the Doctor
insists they have people to service these machines, but Turner simply
states they aren't as complicated as they look. Cleaning his
spectacles, the harassed Lappe asks if Turner is entirely happy
there. 'Within obvious limits, yes.' Is the answer. 'It bothers me
that I can't tell people what I do.' The Professor can't process that
one. Turner tells him he actually trusts a
few people. Backing away from the insurmountable, Dr. Lappe remembers
it's Turner's turn to bring in lunch and shuffles off. He's halted by
a request to know the time. His pocket watch has 11:22. Turner
jauntily states the rain will stop at half past; acidly
the Professor grants him a reprieve for the eight minutes.
The
man with the umbrella walks softly, but with a steady gait that
suggests enormous self-control, focus even. As
well as umbrella, he wears spectacles, raincoat and a hat. Moving
to the Torino, he seems to
stare straight ahead as, oddly, the driver swishes his wipers once.
Only once. Signal received. The man with the umbrella then does the
oddest thing; he closes it and leaves it in a waste
basket.
Walking on aways, he pauses and turns to regard the building that
still claims to be the American Literary Historical Society through
the rain. At the same moment, Turner is descending the stairs and
ducks out through Jenning's security post, to his outrage. Patiently,
Mrs. Russell tells him he always goes out that way when it rains...
saves him a block. Today, it will save Joseph Turner far more. Taking
the stairs to the basement he goes through a book vault and out into
a brick courtyard, shielding himself with his jacket from the
incessant rain. Ducking through a loose chain-link screen, the next
courtyard takes him to an alleyway around a fire escape and up some
steps to make the luncheonette. The man without the umbrella stands
watching and there is something very wrong. We see his face properly
for the first time. How should we describe him if asked?. Blonde,
mid-forties perhaps,
moustache. Something of Europe in those features. Scandinavia?.
Perhaps.
Joubert is played by Max von Sydow. |
Inside
the luncheonette, business is good – Turner hands Jimmy the orders
and they exchange pleasantries. Jimmy is under the impression Turner
is a struggling writer and
jokes he always wanted to be Escoffier. The light-hearted chit-chat
goes on while Jimmy prepares the order. Across the street from the
building the man without the umbrella waits, expectantly. The rain
has stopped. Around the corner of the block opposite, a Mail Man
appears, moving towards the ALHS building.
A second later, from the
other end of the block comes a man in an Army Surplus poncho, his
arms out of sight beneath the plastic. The Mail Man is almost at the
front door. His face has the pallor of a corpse with eyes that, if
they ever knew pity, do not know it now. Torino
man pulls away from the kerb and drives off. The former Umbrella man
crosses the street.
Smoking
her last cigarette, Mrs. Russell pauses her typing to buzz in the
Mail Man. 'Give it to Jennings in the back – he'll sign for it.'
The burst of suppressed fire from the MAC-10 - shockingly
fast, rips through her,
sending her flying backwards in her chair.
His arms full of books,
Jennings appears as Poncho comes through behind the Mail Man and he
dies going for his shotgun. Joubert – for that is the name of the
man who discarded the Umbrella, stands behind them, watching his men
work.
He steps forward, going to the rotary book-case that still
spins from where the Mail Man called. Opening the false top reveals a
secret camera which has recorded everything. 'Mrs. Russell' calls Dr.
Lappe, coming down the stairs, 'Was the Curtis report this...' his
sentence evaporates as does he, his corpse tumbling down the carpeted
stairs.
Joubert removes the incriminating film. Turner exits the
diner and heads back. Upstairs, Ray
dies in his office. The sounds of automatic death are now less than
the noise of office machinery. Still, Harold hears something, opens
the door of the small bathroom and dies behind it.
The office
machines fall silent. Janice takes the computer tapes from the
translation machine and goes to file them. Behind her, Joubert
reaches for the switch to set the machine going again. She looks up
to see a stranger. 'Would you move away from the window please?' the
voice is not impolite, definitely Northern Europe.
She doesn't
understand until the Mail Man steps forward, the ugly mouth of the
suppressed machine pistol suddenly terribly clear in its purpose. 'I
won't scream.' Joubert's face is sombre, yet not unkind. Nothing
personal. 'I know.' He turns away as the MAC-10
speaks.
Meanwhile,
Turner is back at the front door. His Victory-V sign gets no
response, so he tries the door, finding it unlocked. 'Little
breakdown in security there?' He jokes, then spots Jennings on the
floor. Thinking it a joke of some kind, he goes forward and realises
the truth, dropping the food as he spots Mrs. Russell, cigarette stil
smouldering. Lappe too; his toupee hanging off denying him dignity
even in death. Horrified, he rushes up the stairs to find Janice,
lying dead, her blood on the wall and surrounded by empty cartridge
cases.
Cradling her, he goes to lift her before his brain kicks in.
Lowering her gently, he looks at the open door, eyes and mouth wide
with shock and fear. Harold and Ray?. Dashing
across the floor, he finds them both. Stepping down carefully past
the body of Dr. Lappe he plucks up courage and steels himself. Gun.
Mrs. Russell's .45. He thinks of
phoning for help, but changes his mind, throwing Mrs. Russell's last
cigarette from her body. He sees the closed-circuit television screen
she used to identify callers and realises she'd have never let in
someone who seemed unfamiliar. Holstering
the .45 in his jeans belt, he backs away awkwardly and goes out the
door cautiously. Looking around, he decides against using the Solex
and walks. A woman walks towards him pushing a pram. Is she
one of them?. Stumbling out into
the road, Turner almost goes under a taxi-cab and, his nerves frayed,
starts to run in search of an unoccupied phone-booth.
Turner is nearly run down. By Sydney Pollack - the Director doubles as the Cab Driver. |
Finding
an empty booth, Turner calls it in, dials
111-222-333. At
an undisclosed location, the red light flashes and the urgent
buzzer sounds by
a handset. The
CIA 'Panic Office'
is manned by a wheel-chair bound veteran known only as 'The Major.'
Picking up the handset, he flips the 'trace' switch.
Turner gives his
name, but the Major insists on identification. Turner thinks for a
second and recalls it; 'Condor'. Section Nine, Department Seventeen
has been hit. He begins to gabble out the awful event, but when he
finds out Condor's on a public phone line, the Major tells him he's
in breach of secure communications procedure. Joe isn't having any of
that shit; he came
back from lunch, it was raining and the whole house was murdered!.
Placidly, the Major runs the panicked man through it; is he damaged? Is he armed?. No and yes. He is to leave the area, find a secure location. Where?. 'Avoid any place you know; do not go home, do not go home.' Consulting the array of clocks above the global map, the Major tells him to resurface at 14:30 and call 'The Major.' The Major finishes by ordering 'Condor' to walk away from the phone without hanging up. The Major sets things in motion and the Cleaners go in to check what has gone so terribly wrong.
Placidly, the Major runs the panicked man through it; is he damaged? Is he armed?. No and yes. He is to leave the area, find a secure location. Where?. 'Avoid any place you know; do not go home, do not go home.' Consulting the array of clocks above the global map, the Major tells him to resurface at 14:30 and call 'The Major.' The Major finishes by ordering 'Condor' to walk away from the phone without hanging up. The Major sets things in motion and the Cleaners go in to check what has gone so terribly wrong.
Jogging
through the park, Turner puts as much distance between himself the
carnage at Department Seventeen as he can. The Augean
Cleaning Service truck rolls up and the cleaners
– dressed as precisely that, arrive at the ALHS building and go in.
Choosing public spaces over private, Turner goes to the
Guggenheim and looks around.
Newberry, one
of the Cleaners gets on the radio in the truck and calls up New York
Center, high in the World Trade Center. Answering
callsign Augie One
on his radio scrambler is Deputy Director Higgins. Newberry confirms
a maximum hit, six cold items. Higgins enquiries the quality of the
work; clean, fast and first rate, before
noticing the number; six. Aside from Condor, there were seven people
working there. Newberry runs through the names while his man guards
the entrance behind. Higgins hangs it up as a subordinate brings in
Condor's file. Condor himself is getting around a pretzel,
Good King Wenceslas playing in the background. Suddenly, it hits him.
Heidegger. Number
Seven.
Ringing
for Heidegger gets no reply, so Turner tries another button and gets
lucky. Buzzed in, he goes up to number six and finds the door ajar.
The tenant he buzzed calls down, but Turner goes in to see the
inevitable; Heidegger lying dead on his bed. The Torino pulls up
outside and two men climb out to enter the building. Realising the
danger he's in, Turner bolts for the stairs, but sees them coming up,
ducking back up past six.
Looking down, he sees the men enter just as the resident calls down
asking if he rang his buzzer – thinking he means them one of the
men answers 'It was a mistake buddy.' Confused, the tenant's 'Not you
guys' nearly gets Turner burnt, but he slips away with the suspicious
man calling down after him.
Augie
Three calls in; they've found 'item seven' – Ralph Heidegger.
Higgins tells them to button
it up – he'll send them more janitors. He puts in a call to CIA
Langley, to Department Seventeen. A man named Fowler goes into the
office of the Officer In Charge Department Seventeen. Inside, he
tells Wicks, the head of Department about the hit on one of his
sections. Wicks protests they're just bookworms, but there's no
denying it; they've been taken out, seven out of eight. He's wanted
on the shuttle to La Guardia in thirty minutes. He asks about the
eighth and Fowler tells him about Condor, who was literally out to
lunch when it happened. Higgins is bringing him in. Fowler tries to
remind him about the shuttle, but Wicks picks up the phone and throws
some muscle into the equation, ordering a chopper on the pad fuelled
for New York right away.
Watching
his apartment building from across the street, Turner decides to
chance it. Going across, he's met by the landlady taking out the
garbage. Cheerily, she tells him they're waiting for him; his two
friends. They said he'd be home early, said he gave them keys. By the
time she looks around there's no sign of him. The Bell Jet Ranger
carries only subdued markings, setting down on the pad just across
from the imposing bulk of the World Trade Center. From his office on
high, Higgins looks down and waits, his thoughts his own.
Cliff Robertson is Higgins. |
Down
in the basement firing range, Sam Barber is fitted for a ballistic
vest, finding the whole thing ridiculous. Wicks tells him he's not a
field agent, so it's standard procedure, turning down the Armorer's
offer of one for himself. He asks for a side arm instead. Seeing Sam
struggling with the unfamiliar vest, Wicks helps him fit it, making
small talk. How long has he known Condor?; they were at CCNY
together. Wicks takes his .45 from the Armorer and signs weapon and
kit out. Sam asks him if he can tell him what happened with 'Those
murders'. Wick's reply is; 'What murders?.'
Sam
Barber and Wicks stand, awkwardly in the alleyway. Sam smokes. Turner
waits around the corner from the alley, having snuck a peek at the
two waiting men. Wicks clearly hasn't spent his whole life flying
desks; he stacks a large empty can onto a trash can ready for an
improvised ambush. What he's expecting isn't clear. Turner checks his
watch; time for the Condor to come home. Looking into the alley,
Turner calls Sam's name. Spotting his friend, Sam brightens up and
goes to him. There's no sign of Wicks. 'Hey Sam... where's that
other...?' Suddenly, Wicks kicks Wicks' cans (!) and steps out with a
suppressor fitted to his .45, taking a shot that misses Condor's head
by inches.
As he fires more shots, Sam realises what's happening and
starts yelling; Turner shoots back with his own (Mrs. Russell's) .45,
hitting Wicks low in the side. Wounded and on the ground, Wicks takes
careful aim... and shoots Sam in the throat.
As
sirens wail and the cops head for the alleyway, Turner is running
hard. With more cops on the scene, he ducks around into a Ski Store.
At the counter, a pretty blonde is being served, the clerk phoning in
her card details. Katharine Hale. As Joe eavesdrops behind a rack of
jackets, we learn she's off to Vermont for the Langlauf. As
she goes to her Bronco, she's wondering what all the sirens are for
when from behind comes
'Kathy!'. Closing on her fast before she can react Joe ignores her
protestations and jams the .45 into her stomach. With no choice, she
gets into the jeep. Turner asks where she lives. Brooklyn Heights.
Alone?. She says she lives with a friend. Turner sees through it; she
lives alone. They get going.
Kathy is played by Faye Dunaway. (Spanish Lobby card.) |
The
Jet Ranger sets down on a grass pad at
Langley. Out steps Higgins to
be met with a note. He can't believe what he's reading. A Lincoln is
waiting and he climbs in back. The
Bronco takes the Brooklyn Bridge, Kathy eyeing Turner warily. At the
same time, the Lincoln sits in a vehicle lift going down to level
twelve of a massive subterranean parking garage.
Rolling out from the
lift, a Marine in dress blues steps forward to open the door for
Higgins. A knot of drivers stand around idly chatting, their cars
sitting empty. The sign says Five Continents Imports Inc., the
security camera hints otherwise. Once
through the door two Marine sergeants check his id and he's admitted
to the conference room.
The
Eastern airlines flight touches down at Washington International and,
a few minutes later Joubert gets into a cab. Kathy's Bronco pulls up
outside her apartment building and Turner walks her along the
sidewalk. An acquaintance says hi, but she ignores him. Turner picks
her up on it; she should have said hello. They go through the gate
down to her basement place.
'Condor
shot us both.' Higgins sets the statement down. He sits facing a
semi-circular commission of enquiry headed
by the redoubtable Mr. Wabash. The 54/12 group as its formally known.
To either side of Wabash sit the heads of departments. Dryly, Wabash
comments on the accuracy of the shot to Sam Barber; two inches above
his flak jacket.
One of the panel asks if Condor was qualified with a handgun. Shaking his head, Higgins goes through Turner's file; two years with the Signal Corps, worked at Bell Labs under the G.I. bill. On Wabash's repeating the question he gives a straight answer; no, qualified M1 rifle and Carbine only. Evidently, he claims, it was sheer luck... or else...' The phone buzzes and Wabash takes it.
One of the panel asks if Condor was qualified with a handgun. Shaking his head, Higgins goes through Turner's file; two years with the Signal Corps, worked at Bell Labs under the G.I. bill. On Wabash's repeating the question he gives a straight answer; no, qualified M1 rifle and Carbine only. Evidently, he claims, it was sheer luck... or else...' The phone buzzes and Wabash takes it.
'Or else what?' Asks Atwood, the second most senior
man. Wabash answers that one for him; 'Or else Condor isn't the man
his file says he is.' Then where did he learn evasive moves?. His
eyes flashing angrily, Higgins replies 'He reads.' One of the panel
doesn't understand. As if sending a message for Wabash alone he
restates; 'It means he reads everything.'
Wabash gets the message and waves the questioner down. He wants
tracks; a blade of grass, a broken twig – something disturbed.
Wicks is in hospital, perhaps they could use him as bait to draw
Condor out?. Wabash isn't buying; he wonders if Condor's gone
private; in business for himself, has he been turned?, is someone
running him?. What motivation?; is he homosexual?, broke?,
vulnerable?.
As
Wabash thinks aloud, Kathy sits awkwardly in her apartment, eyeing
the Tentrex Industries card Turner has shown her. He checks the
curtains and the windows. As he throws off his sports jacket, she
speaks. 'Tentrex Industries.' A cover – he works for the CIA.
Unsurprisingly, she's sceptical, so he tosses her the phone book to
look it up; then look up the number for the CIA, New York. Kathy's
amazed to find them listed under Government Agencies. Her flat is
lined with black and whites and he asks if she's a photographer. The
number is the same, but of course he could have had the card made. He
could have – but he
didn't. Going through her
closet, he finds men's shirts. She told him she had a friend. She
makes a joke about 'digging' 15 - ½ 34s and he fires back 'What are
you, a clown?.' She's scared – but so is he. 'What are you scared
for?, you've got the gun!.' 'Yes!.' he fires back. 'Yeah – and it's
not enough.'
Going
to splash some water on his face, Turner comes clean. He works for
the CIA, but he's not a spy. 'I just read books.' Breathing heavily,
he slumps under the weight of the day. 'We read everything that's
published in the World. And we feed the plots, dirty tricks, codes
(He waves his hand around to signify 'etc.') into a computer and the
computer checks against actual CIA plans and operations.' He looks
for leaks, new ideas, reading adventures and novels and journals...
pausing, he thinks for a second; who'd invent a job like that?. Going
up to the petrified woman, he tells her people are trying to kill
him. Who, he doesn't know. There's a reason, he says – barely
clutching on to his.
He just needs safe quiet time to pull it together. The radiator makes a sudden noise and he whirls round in shock, then flops onto the couch, exhausted. 'Where's the guy with the shirts?.' He's at a ski place in the Green Mountains, they just want a couple of weeks skiing, away from everything. Turner wants to see the news, but it doesn't come on for forty minutes, so he takes Kathy through to her bed. Choked with fear, she does as he asks, laying down against the wall. He lies down next to her, arranging her arm behind her head with his holding it there. He needs to close his eyes, he can't think properly for fatigue. If she tries to climb off the bed, he'll know it. She tries to tell him she believes him – he tells her she doesn't. He's not sure he does.
He just needs safe quiet time to pull it together. The radiator makes a sudden noise and he whirls round in shock, then flops onto the couch, exhausted. 'Where's the guy with the shirts?.' He's at a ski place in the Green Mountains, they just want a couple of weeks skiing, away from everything. Turner wants to see the news, but it doesn't come on for forty minutes, so he takes Kathy through to her bed. Choked with fear, she does as he asks, laying down against the wall. He lies down next to her, arranging her arm behind her head with his holding it there. He needs to close his eyes, he can't think properly for fatigue. If she tries to climb off the bed, he'll know it. She tries to tell him she believes him – he tells her she doesn't. He's not sure he does.
Walking
together with Atwood in the
National Mall, Joubert
pockets the envelope the Senior CIA man gave him. Atwood reminds
Joubert the payment includes Condor; the contract killer acknowledges
that he still owes him Condor. Will Condor take long?. Joubert asks
if he wants an estimate and Atwood says there is a time limit, to
which the European replies 'There always is with you people.' He
expounds on the problem; Condor is an amateur, lost, unpredictable.
He could fool a professional with this unpredictability. Unlike
Wicks, for instance, who is entirely predictable. Joubert asks about
the man Condor killed in the alley. Condor shooting a friend
interests him. A smart couple approaches as Atwood compounds his lies
by claiming he didn't know his name, that he was nobody. Joubert
smoothly switches to French, which he speaks proficiently. 'Il
était quelqu'un pour Condor'
– He was somebody to Condor. Still in French, Joubert demands his
name and address to be ready for him when he calls. The CIA man asks
about Wicks, to which Joubert replies the 'Firm' (The CIA) will want
to question him. Atwood doesn't want that. Considering this, the
assassin states the contract will cost nothing – he made a mistake
with Condor, Wicks will be done for nothing. Turning off to stand by
a balustrade, Joubert leaves Atwood walking on alone.
Waking
with a start, Turner asks Kathy the time. Its news time. Flicking the TV on gets adverts, but Turner's attention is caught by the desolate
nature of his hostage's photographs. An empty bench, windowless car
doors framing the sky, an empty curve in a road, a car by some
shipping containers. Railway tracks. Lonely pictures. 'So?' Crossing
her arms defensively, Kathy listens to a critique from her captor.
She takes pictures of empty streets and trees with no leaves on them.
'It's winter' she tells him. No, not quite winter... he goes for
November. Not Autumn, not Winter, in-between. He likes them. Not
entirely sure of this endorsement, she says thanks. The news starts
and he tells Kathy to sit. The reporter comes in on the shootings
behind the Hotel Ansonia, mentioning victims. Plural.
Turner is shocked as he had no idea Sam had been shot. A Police
lieutenant emerges and the reporter offers him the mike for him to
tell the viewers the victims were employees of a large insurance
company. The camera shows a chalk outline. Sam!. Switching
the TV off, Turner's head's in a spin. Victims...
Taking
off his glasses, he tries to make sense of it. What happened in that
alley?. Kathy points out he said he shot someone. 'But not Sam!.'
Plucking up her courage, she says no-one in that alley said anything
about the CIA. But they were there. She looks shocked, but Turner
adds they had to have been to change that story. Trawling his memory,
Turner recalls Higgins said he wouldn't be there, the Section Chief
would be there. The Section Chief would have to come in from
Washington, which means he'd have to reach Sam and Sam would call.
Going to the phone, he dials Sam's number. Mae, Sam's wife answers
and Turner hangs it up. Finding a peacoat in her closet, Turner dons
it and tells her he's borrowing the car. She jokes it's grand theft
and he doesn't want to be in trouble with the Police. He asks what
the guy from Vermont will do when she doesn't show. She says he'll
call and soon. Call... or show up?. Angrily she tells him the gun
gives him the right to rough her up, not to ask personal questions.
Rough her up – has he roughed her up?. She feels he has. 'Have I?,
have I raped you?' her answer; 'The night is young.'
Sitting
down, he looks at her through his glasses. 'You don't believe
anything I've said, do you?.' Cautiously she responds she believes
he's in trouble, danger. She doesn't know what kind. Neither is she
sure how much of it is made up – real. Shaking his head, Turner
decides it doesn't make any difference. Taking her by the wrist, he
drags her over to the bathroom and ducks a bottle before bundling her
over and tying her with her own pantyhose. She calls him a bully and
declares this to be... unfair. He knows. Turner gags her with his
scarf.
Parking
the Bronco he jogs through the Oval to Sam's building in Peter Cooper
village and takes the lift up to fourteen. Mae opens the door, music
playing and preparing dinner. She kisses him affectionately and tells
him he's early. Is Janice working late?. So is Sam. Turner looks
aghast at the normality here, as if nothing's out of kilter. 'Hey,
pour one for me too, willya Joey?' The table is set for four. Jesus
Christ. Suddenly it's too much.
Grabbing her, holding her close, Joe asks how she knows Sam's
'working late.' He called at 2, 2:30, only it was someone at the
Center called. The phone
rings and Mae seems to be aware something's wrong as she goes to
answer. The caller rings off on hearing her voice. That's the third
time tonight. Some creepy burglar casing the joint. Hustling her out,
Turner tells her to get out, to get to Bill and Eileen's upstairs as
fast as she can. Move!. He propels her towards the elevator as it
opens. Go there and stay there. A woman and Joubert get out, Eileen
bumping into him as she's thrust into the elevator. As the door
begins to close, he pleads; 'Do what I'm telling you, please!' 'What
about Sam?' Her face shows fear and hurt through the glass of the
elevator door and she's gone. Pressing 'down', Joe looks around to
see the man who just got out waiting for the lift. Odd in any
language.
The
other lift arrives and there's an old couple, the man holds a cake.
Turner goes in, followed by Joubert, who turns to look at him. Joe
looks away, but Joubert picks up a glove from the floor and offers it
to him. 'Yours?.' 'No.' Carefully, the contract killer places the
glove over the hand-rail. The next floor, the old couple get out,
some kids get in. One thinks it a game to push all the buttons. They
leave on fifth and its just Joe and Joubert, the latter offering a
comment; 'Kids. Probably the same everywhere.' Turner nods, unsure of
this man, his every instinct telling him to get away from him, from
here. Thanks to that asshole kid, the door opens on each floor and
Joe makes to get out, until Joubert warns him it's the second floor.
Finally, they make ground
floor and the polite European gentleman urges Joe to go first. He
insists otherwise and stays in the lift, holding the door and
watching the polite man go. Looking out through the glass doors,
Turner knows this is where he'll get hit. There's some kids in the
lobby, teenagers really. An idea; he asks if any of them are any good
with a coat hanger, claiming he's been locked out of his car and
offering five bucks. He gets a taker, plus the others tag along for
the show.
Braced against the railings, Joubert watches through the
scope mounted to his suppressed Mauser and realises he's got no clean
shot. He takes down the weapon as Turner pays up and runs for it. As
he drives off, Joubert sprints out after him, using his scope to read
the Bronco's license plate.
Back
at Kathy's place, Turner arrives to find the phone ringing and Kathy
still bound. Cutting her free, he orders her to answer, but she
refuses. Pointing his pistol at her, he tells her to be casual –
and nice. It's Ben – the man who shares her wardrobe, rather
stupidly asking 'Where the hell are you?.' Saying his name is too
much, however and she sinks to her knees, Turner supporting her.
She's supposed to be up in Vermont by now. She says she was held up,
gets the barrel pushed hard against her. Ben thinks this is another
one of her last minute changes of heart, which she tries to assure
him is not the case. Turner helps her out mouthing 'The car' and
'Generator'. She uses the line, Ben tells her to take the bus in the
morning instead. 'I'll try.' Try?, what's going on?. Is she ok?. She
tells him she is. She wishes
he could understand, anguish plain on her face. Ben tells her he
does, he's just disappointed. She promises to take the bus and they
exchange goodnights.
Turner's
made a decision. He'll go in the morning. Kathy asks if it was
alright. Outside, was it safe, wherever he went?. He's not sure. She
wishes she knew more, about him – yesterday, today. He can't
remember yesterday. Today it rained. Why did he have to tie her up
like that?, did he think she'd call the police?. She wouldn't have.
Turner asks why.
Kathy
– 'Sometimes... I take – a picture, that isn't like me,
but
I took it, so it is – like me. It has to be.
I
put those pictures away.'
Turner
– 'I'd like to see those pictures.'
Kathy
– 'We don't know each other that well.'
Turner
– (Moves close) 'Do you know anybody that well.'
Kathy
– 'I, don't think I want to know you very well.
I
don't think you're going to live much longer.'
Turner
– 'Well, I may surprise you.'
Joe
tells her she's not being honest – that she'd rather be with
someone who won't be around. She takes pictures – beautiful
pictures, but of empty streets, of trees with no leaves. November.
Why hasn't she asked him to untie her hands?.
Kathy
– 'How much do you want?'
Turner
– 'I just want to – stop it. For a few hours.
For
the rest of the night. And then I'll go.'
Tears
in her eyes, Kathy waits for him to free her hands; the panty-hose
slips off so easily she could have done it herself. They kiss. As
they make love, we get a saxophone and a lot of fast cuts between
their lovemaking and her photographs.
Morning.
Turner sits in Kathy's kitchenette scribbling down his thoughts,
coffee pot steaming beside him. She stirs, still in bed. He's done a
crude diagram of the alley, a sketch of the A.L.H.S. building
frontage as well as questions about the A.L.H.S. hit, replaying the
alleyway shoot-out in his mind. The moment he went into the 'Literary
Society' building to find everyone dead. Heidegger. Dead, in his bed.
His thoughts on paper; was it his Section Chief that shot at
him?, why?, did Higgins name him?. He recalls the phone conversation
with Higgins, that the Chief was coming in from DC. And then there
was that exchange with Dr. Lappe; when Joe asked him 'Anything in the
early pouch?' Headquarters at Langley said there was nothing from any
other intelligence source to support his theory. Suddenly, the
relevance of that seemingly innocuous fragment hits; Lappe handed him
a piece of paper. It's still in his back jeans pocket;
There,
on the bottom, is the name. Wicks. Kathy's up. An awkward
moment as she walks to the counter. She tells Joe he didn't sleep
well as she makes coffee. He had some thoughts, has a plan – he
doesn't know if it'll work. Cheerily, she replies 'Have I ever denied
you anything?.' He talks in his sleep. Kathy asks who Janice is. A
friend. Dead. After a silent moment, she asks if she has permission
to take a shower, he tells her she doesn't have to help and she makes
a poor joke; he can always depend on 'the old spy-fucker'. Angered, he
walks away, but she apologises, honestly. She wants to help.
In
intensive care at Gouverneur
Hospital, a radio
playing Christmas Hymns and the little plastic tree on the nurses'
desk remind us the Holidays are near. Three beeping heart monitors
and printouts show the nurses their patient's status round the clock.
No sooner has one nurse brought her colleague a coffee and sat down
with hers than the monitor for Patient 18 flat-lines.
The
doorbell makes Turner jump. Its the mailman with an insured package
for Katharine Hale. Make that the Mail Man. Joe tells him she's not
here, the Mail Man says he can sign, handing Joe a pen when
the door opens. The pen won't work and Joe goes to get one. Smoothly,
the Mail Man steps in behind him, shutting the door-grille. This
makes Turner look back and he notices the man's unusual boots.
He
flings the coffee pot back as the MAC-10 speaks. Scalded, the Mail
Man drops the weapon, Joe grabs for it, it's kicked away. Another
kick sends Joe flying. Mail Man charges – Joe pushes a coffee table
to trip him. Again he grabs for the gun, a flying boot knocks it away
and they fight. The Mail Man is a trained killer, a Karateka to
boot. He throws out a kick that nearly loosens Turner's head, then
demolishes the mantlepiece with the next. Joe fights back with a
poker, swinging viciously. Keeping his distance, the killer assumes a
Karate readiness stance. (Hey, the '70's...)
Every time the
Mail Man goes for his gun, Turner threatens to strike with the poker.
A stand-off, of sorts. Turner's eyes go to his .45, the Mail Man
spots this and goes for his MAC, but Joe pulls the rug from under
him. Finally, Kathy arrives in the middle of the war in her
apartment, furniture flying. Stumbling back onto a flash-stand, Joe
accidentally triggers it and the killer is momentarily blinded,
doesn't see Joe's kick as it hits him in the chest.
Joe's sent
sprawling by a return kick and the Mail Man gets hold of his
machine-pistol as Kathy attacks him with a hand-mirror. Batting her
away, he turns and unleashes a killing burst to cut Joe in half. If
Joe hadn't moved for the .45. Blasting away, Turner kills the killer.
Turner is shocked, but Kathy is hysterical. He goes to her and firmly
informs her she's ok. She's OK. Telling her to get dressed, he finds
a key on the dead man; marked simply '819'. He pockets it, the finds
a piece of paper with the heading; Five Continents Imports, Inc. and
some numbers.
Going
to the phone, he punches in the number and a woman answers; 'Stella
Boutique.' He asks for extension 1891. It turns out to be a Boutique,
so he cuts off and dials for the Operator, asking the area code for
Washington DC. He dials again, adding the DC code. This time a man
answers. He asks for the extension and is instantly put through,
asking for Mister Wicks. The voice on the other end tells him he's
not here right now, may he ask who's calling, please?. Turner slams
the phone down.
Crossing
the bridge in the Bronco, Joe drives. Still in terrible shock, Kathy
asks what he did to 'those people'. He tells her he filed a report,
his Section Chief reads it, comes to New York to shoot him. He didn't
know Wicks, or the Mail Man – which means he won't know the next
one that comes, either. Kathy's observation meets with grim resolve;
Turner isn't going to wait for the next one. He drives on. Higgins
paces his office, Mr. Wabash on the speaker box. The senior man asks
if Turner is a double or dirty, Higgins doesn't know. Is he still in
New York City?. The Deputy Director is clear on that one; 'I
wouldn't be.' Turner poses a question – is there an intelligence
network undetected within the C.I.A. linking certain Arabic-speaking
countries with Dutch and Spanish?. Wabash tells a stressed-looking
Higgins they are already visible, no need to become conspicuous. If
Company agents aren't enough, use freelance. Use whatever is
required, but end it.
Pulling
up, Turner looks over to see that Kathy is ready for this. Pulling on
a wool cap, she does her best to look ready. As she goes, he
thanks her. She gets out and crosses to head towards the World Trade
Center. In no time at all, she's standing in the reception of the
C.I.A. New York offices, a badge proclaiming her to be a VISITOR. The
receptionist tells her the way to Mr. Addison in Clearance and the
'prospective new recruit' goes around the corner, turning the wrong
way to follow Turner's directions. Finally, she reaches a door
marked; J.HIGGINS D. D. N. Y. and enters without knocking. Playing
dumb to start with, she asks if he's Mr. Addison. He isn't.
Apologising, she leaves with a smile. Later that afternoon, Turner
looks down from the mezzanine as Kathy leans against a pillar. A girl
waiting for her friend perhaps. As Higgins leaves, she signals up and
follows, as does Joe. Higgins strides along, shadowed by Kathy as
Turner brings up the Bronco. Higgins is eating his lunch when Kathy
drops into the chair opposite. All sweet and light, she tells him she
didn't get the job. She has a message; Dear Mister Higgins, this will
introduce a friend of mine, Sparrowhawk. Please accompany her to the
Nassau street exit. Now. Personally, she advises him to do it as he
has a huge gun and is looking at them now.
Higgins
walks with Kathy, pulling on his gloves just in time to be bundled
into the Bronco at gunpoint. She drives as, in back, Turner places
his boot on Higgins' chest. Turner is worried about being DF'd
(Direction Finding; the possibility Higgins is being tracked by radio
beacon or transmitter.) Higgins notes that Turner really does read
everything, but Joe's not in the mood; this is no book –
something's rotten in the Company. Who hit the Lit Society?. His eyes
full of amused contempt, the Deputy Director for New York answers
that they had a big meeting about it. Turner's name came up. Unfazed,
Joe shows him the slip of paper he took from the Mail Man. Five
Continents Imports, ring a bell?. Taking the paper, Higgins looks it
over, but looks confused when Condor mentions the Mail Man; they
never use mail-men he claims. What about a very tall gentleman, about
six foot four, blonde, strong like a farmer, not American, accent;
near Germany, perhaps Alsace-Lorraine?.
As
Turner describes Joubert, we see the man himself busily and
meticulously painting model soldiers in what looks to be a hotel
room. His telephone rings and a voice asks if the letter was
delivered. 'The return receipt has not arrived.' 'You should have
delivered it yourself.' Joubert explains that a more complicated
'package' had to be handled... but he might have under-estimated this
one. The voice says he was told (Joubert) never made that kind of
mistake – which brings a flickering smile to the contract man's
face. He will wait, for people who move – leave word of
change-of-address.
Down
on East River Lane, Wards Island, Kathy watches from the Bronco as
Turner continues to interrogate Higgins. The DD tries to take control
by demanding to see the report, but Turner insists he wants to know
if he knows the man he described.
Higgins
– 'Professionally, yes.'
Turner
- 'Professionally, he kills people.'
Higgins
– 'Yes... yes.'
Turner
– 'He works for the Company?.'
Higgins
– 'He did, once – he's a contract agent.'
Turner
– 'Contract agent?'
Higgins
– 'Freelance. Where did you see him?.'
Turner
(Shakes head) – 'Uh-uh.'
Higgins
– 'It would help if I knew.'
Turner
– 'Who would it help?. Who'd hire him now?'
Higgins
– 'Anybody.'
Turner
– 'Terrific answer!.'
Higgins
– 'I wouldn't accept it either.'
Turner
wants a name; when Higgins knew him, Joubert. Turner wants to know
who'd hire him, you don't look up Jouberts from the Yellow Pages. The
DD agrees – it would have to be someone in the community, the
intelligence field. Community!. Joe is appalled at the misuse of the
word. Higgins still wants that report. Turner tells him that report
was sent to Headquarters and disappeared. Who read it?. Turner
replies besides Wicks? - you tell me. He picks up traces of what he
thinks are an intelligence network the Company doesn't know about.
And he reports it. Now why is that going to make anybody mad?. Unless
it was the Company's network - and Higgins didn't want it
blown. Higgins says he doesn't know – that's what's
bothering him. Nor can he ask Wicks as he died in Gouverneur
Hospital. Someone yanked him off life support. Sick to the stomach,
Turner appeals to Higgins to get him in. Turning, Higgins looks at
him in a matter of fact way; what good would that do if he's right,
if they're on the inside what good would that do?. Lost, Turner asks
what to do. Shaking his head, Higgins has already written him off. At
least he tells him he's sorry.
Turner
gets the picture; Higgins expects him to draw fire, like a penny
arcade Bear going backwards and forth waiting for someone very good
to take a shot. And he's going to hang around and pick him up before
he does it?, or just after?. Even in his spot, Higgins can only take
so much – he turns and declares his intent is to try and find out
what's going on and cross-check those names. Joe's heard enough and
walks away. Higgins asks how he'll find Condor; he'll find Higgins
when he needs to.
Pulling
up to a gas station, Kathy asks Joe if he trusts Higgins. He raises
his eyebrows at the word. 'Trust?' Does he trust Turner?. Higgins is
in the suspicion business, he can't trust anyone. She says these
people's mistrust makes it hard to believe they could be fooled. This
sparks a thought in Joe's head. Maybe there's another CIA.
Inside the CIA.
Night-time
at a busy cross-section, the phone company engineers are digging
noisily under electric lights, the noise of the generator blocking
out most of the usual street noise. Timing his move carefully, Turner
goes past and shuts off the valve on a gas tank and walks on a few
paces before doubling back as the lights fail and the generator
stutters to a halt. Smoothly, he goes around back of the phone
company truck and lifts a briefcase from it. Next stop is to Sal
Schillizzi, Master Locksmith, to show him the Mail Man's key. Its
from a hotel room, but no tag. Turner protests that there's a code
number cut in the edge. Suspicious, Sal asks if he's in the trade.
Turner tells him he read it in a story – that's the lock
manufacturer's code. Sal doesn't want to get involved, but Joe offers
him some cash. Will he make the call?.
The
Holiday Inn, West 57th Street and 9th Avenue. A
liveried footman opens the door for a guest and Turner walks in with
the case. At the hotel switchboard, he patches in with the engineer's
telephone he took and dials up Room 819. Joubert sits reading the
paper, a cigarette burning in the ashtray. Turner speaks; he's doing
a survey. Does Joubert really believe the Condor is an endangered
species?. There is, of course, no answer, but Joe didn't expect one.
Quickly, he rings off, sticks one of those mail order suction-cup
phone pick-ups on, plugged into a portable Sony cassette
player/recorder which he sets recording.
Joubert makes a call – and
the tape picks up all the tones. Joubert informs the voice at the
other end he's had an interesting call, about an all-but-extinct
bird. Has he had such a call?. The other end isn't happy at being
called there, he (Joubert) is a fool for calling there. The voice has
not had any such call and Joubert jokes it must have been the Audubon
Society, he assumes they are still located in New York City. (Of
course, this is a coded reference to Condor still being in town.)
Next,
Condor dials up the Langley Computer and the voice asks him to state
his program at the tone. 'G'. CARRIAGE RETURN/TRS.' then 'Tone,
Symbol for number.' A voice tells him the computer is ready and he
plays the tones from the tape-recorder. A computerised voice; 'That
number is 202 227-0098. All he has to do is call the CNA service at
Langley and he has the address; Mr. Leonard Atwood, 365 Mackenzie
Place, Chevy Chase, Maryland.
The
Jet Ranger comes in to the grass pad at Langley and Higgins goes
through to an Operations room that's more like something from NASA. A
suite of video monitors, computers and communications equipment at
which he sits with a computer operator and another CIA man. The Mail
Man's corpse is shows from different angles, electronically
transferred and retrieved from the scene. Then, a photo of him in
USMC uniform. On-screen, the words;
WILLIAM
LLOYD, GUNNERY SGT. USMC
320-618
DETACHED
SERVICE: CIA
LEBANON/1967-9/OPNS
LIBYA/1970/OPNS
Higgins
tells the operator to cross-check it with Wicks' tape and hold the
intersects. The screens fill with electronic text, changing too fast
to read (With what look suspiciously like in-jokes hidden on screen)
and, to Higgins' disgust the machine throws out some of Wick's
measurements, including hat size; both Lloyd and Wicks took a seven
in hat size. Finally, however, an intersect of interest;
HAVANA,
CUBA/8-21-67
GHAT,
LIBYA/1-14-68
JASL,IRAN/5-31-68
PARIS,FRANCE/8-7-68
BEIRUT,LEBANON/9-9-69
>IN
RE: LUCIFER 2<
Lucifer.
Higgins tells the operator to
run the name. This brings up
an image of Joubert, for some reason in negative, followed by a
negative image of a VW Beetle exploding somewhere in Europe. Text
appears on screen claiming this to be the termination of free-lance
agent G.Joubert, confirmed by the case officer - none other than
Wicks, assisted by the Mail Man, Lloyd. Clearly something is very,
very wrong inside the Company.
Kathy
waits in the Bronco while Turner goes into the New York Telephone
Company building. Going into the Equipment Room he finds a vastly
more impressive set-up than the hotel exchange. The room is huge,
racks of switch-gear stretching for the length of a city-block.
Finally, he finds the one he's after and the red light and buzzer
sound in the CIA's Panic Office. The
Major picks up and Condor asks for Higgins. He routes him through and
points to the waiting Deputy Director, NY to alert him to pick up.
Condor gives him the Holiday Inn on 57th Street, room 819; if he moves fast he'll find the Alsatian gentleman they spoke of. Switching plugs to foil the trace, he asks who Leonard Atwood is. There's an awkward pause, largely because Leonard Atwood is sat right next to Higgins, as is Mr. Wabash. Higgins goes quiet. Condor asks where he is; no answer. His voice rich with amused irony Turner asks; 'Ain't we pals anymore?' And pulls the plug. The Major calls across that he's got him. A microfiche map viewer shows the trace. Condor's in Flatbush.
Condor gives him the Holiday Inn on 57th Street, room 819; if he moves fast he'll find the Alsatian gentleman they spoke of. Switching plugs to foil the trace, he asks who Leonard Atwood is. There's an awkward pause, largely because Leonard Atwood is sat right next to Higgins, as is Mr. Wabash. Higgins goes quiet. Condor asks where he is; no answer. His voice rich with amused irony Turner asks; 'Ain't we pals anymore?' And pulls the plug. The Major calls across that he's got him. A microfiche map viewer shows the trace. Condor's in Flatbush.
What's he doing in
Brooklyn?. It changes suddenly; Condor's in the East Village.
Brooklyn Heights. Near
Borough Hall, Brooklyn. The intersection of Henry and Clark Streets.
A frustrated Major keeps trying to nail the trace, but Condor's got a
telephone exchange to play with. Higgins demands to know what's going
on. The sonovabitch wired together fifty phones!. Everybody in
Brooklyn's talking to each other!.
At
the Erie-Lackawanna-Hoboken Terminal, Kathy buys some cigarettes from
the news-stand. Turner didn't
know she smoked – she quit three years back. She
asks what he's going to do. See a guy. She picks him up; no secrets.
'Like those pictures you hide.' Someday she'd like to show them to
him. If he lives through this. Joe says she could drive him to
Washington, but this is good-bye.
Kathy says he has good qualities; his eyes, not kind, but they don't lie and rarely look away. They don't miss anything. She could use eyes like that. She's overdue in Vermont. Joe asks if her man is tough and the answer is; pretty tough. What will he do?. Understand, probably. 'Boy, that is tough.' His train is called and he has to go, but he asks for time, eight hours or so. He's telling her not to call anyone, not to tell anyone. When it comes to part, in that moment when it becomes so real, so final – it's hard for him to go or her to let him.
Kathy says he has good qualities; his eyes, not kind, but they don't lie and rarely look away. They don't miss anything. She could use eyes like that. She's overdue in Vermont. Joe asks if her man is tough and the answer is; pretty tough. What will he do?. Understand, probably. 'Boy, that is tough.' His train is called and he has to go, but he asks for time, eight hours or so. He's telling her not to call anyone, not to tell anyone. When it comes to part, in that moment when it becomes so real, so final – it's hard for him to go or her to let him.
At
Langley, Mr. Wabash kills the
waiting time with Higgins,
asking why he isn't further along with the Company. Was he recruited
out of school?. Korea. Higgins
asks the old man if he served with Wild Bill in the OSS.
Enigmatically, he replies he sailed the Adriatic with a movie star at
the helm. 'Didn't seem like
much of a war now, but... it was.' He goes even further back than
that; ten years after the Great War, as it was known. 'Before we knew
enough to number them.'
Higgins
– 'You miss that kind of action, Sir?.'
Wabash
– 'No. I miss that kind of clarity.'
The
phone; 'He's being held at New York Center.' Nodding, Higgins clips
his id badge on as the sound of his helicopter starting up on the pad
comes through the wall. Fixing him with a look that belies his years,
Wabash makes sure Higgins is clear on the Company's position.
Chevy
Chase, Maryland. Atwood's house is what you'd expect of a senior
official in government service; palatial. Set in it's own grounds,
the Federalist style house is both impressive and well-lit by
security lighting. No matter. The sound of loud music plays; 'I've
got you where I want you'. Appropriate. The .45 sits on the large
desk in Atwood's study, Condor sits in his leather chair. Executive.
Atwood comes down the stairs in his pajamas and gown. Condor reaches
for the automatic. Atwood wants to know what's going on. Reaching
behind him, Condor never breaks eye contact as he switches off the
music, levels and cocks the .45 and asks 'Who are you?.'
Turner
repeats the question as he gets up to walk around the desk. Atwood
wants to know who's pointing a gun at him and Turner tells him,
getting ahold of his dressing gown to walk him around the desk,
asking what he does - pushing him back into his comfortable leather
chair. By now nervous, Atwood responds; 'Deputy Director of
Operations.' Section? 'Middle East.' Very close, very quiet, Turner
asks what he's working on. What's the secret worth murdering
everybody at the A.L.H.S. house? Despite himself, Atwood tries to
lie, telling Joe there's no secret. Wicks saw his report though? -
Atwood tries again, but Turner shakes the chair roughly and the truth
comes as if of it's own volition. Wicks saw the (Condor's) report.
They
say you can tell a lot by a man's eyes. Turner sees a lot in Atwood's
now. He realises with a start that it was Turner's network he
uncovered. Doing what? Doing what?. What does
Operations care about a bunch of god-damn books?. A book in Dutch?.
Atwood's face is contorted by absolute terror now, the muzzle of the
.45 awfully demanding on his attention – Turner awfully
demanding on the same. A book out of Venezuela? Mystery
stories in Arabic?. Shouting now, Turner's at the end. What the
hell's so important about... 'Oilfields.' Joe answers his own
question. Oil. At once the terror is gone from Atwood's
features, the burden of the lies lifted.
Turner
– 'That's it, isn't it?. This whole damn thing's about oil.
Wasn't
it? Wasn't it?.'
Atwood
(Nods slightly, tense) – 'Yes, it was.'
Atwood's
eyes flick over to the corner of the room momentarily.
Joubert
– 'Don't turn for a moment.
Put
your thumb in front of the hammer.'
Turner
complies.
Joubert
– 'Release it slowly.'
Turner
complies.
Joubert
– 'Set down the gun on the desk.'
Turner
does this.
Joubert
walks into the room, levelling a small automatic at Turner's back. He
takes the .45 from the desk and ushers Joe back away from the desk,
standing between him at Atwood, who's now visibly relieved, smiling
even. 'You were quite good, Condor – until this. This move
was predictable.' Joubert angles his automatic at Turner's temple and
presses the trigger, blowing his brains out.
Turner jumps back in
shock, an inarticulate noise coming from him involuntarily. Joubert
levels the .45 again, then pockets it. Working quickly, without
haste, Joubert places the smaller auto in Atwood's hand before wiping
the area down to remove prints. Suicide.
Turner
– 'You're working for the Company again.'
Joubert
– 'Yes. I am.'
Turner
– 'Jesus, they took you back...'
Joubert
– 'Just for this. For Atwood.'
Turner
– 'How... he's with the Company – why?.'
Joubert
– 'I don't interest myself in 'why',
I
think more often in terms of 'when',
sometimes
'where' -
always
'how much?'.
I
suspect he was about to become an embarassment.
As
you are.'
Turner
(Removes glasses in final acceptance) – 'So you're not finished?.'
Joubert
– 'Um-pardon?, oh no,
I
have no arrangement with the Company concerning you.
They
didn't know you'd be here. I
knew you'd be here.'
Turner
– 'But didn't you send the Mail Man?.'
Joubert
– 'That was a business arrangement with Atwood.
But,
you see...' (Indicates the dead man with his head)
Joubert
leaves, telling Turner to come with him as he switches off the light.
Dazed, Turner stumbles out into the early dawn light. As a final
touch, Joubert switches off the exterior lights, buttoning his
overcoat as they walk down the drive. The assassin asks about the
girl – what about her?. He wants to know how Joe chose her; age?
Her car? Appearance?. It was Random. Chance. Joubert asks if Turner
wants a lift; he'd like to go back to New York.
Joubert
– 'You have not much future there.
(Takes
pity on Turner)
It
will happen this way.
You
may be walking. It may be the first sunny day of the Spring...
and
a car will slow beside you.
And
the door will open...
And,
someone you know, maybe even trust,
will
get out of the car -
and
he will smile, a becoming smile.
But
he will leave open the door of the car...
and
offer to give you a lift.'
Turner
– 'You seem to understand it all so well.
What
would you suggest?.'
Joubert
– 'Personally, I prefer Europe.'
Joubert
hints that Condor might like to try his profession; it's well-paid,
no causes to believe in. Only the belief in one's own precision.
Turner tells him he was born in the USA; he misses it when he's away
too long. Joe asks if he can be dropped at Union station. It would be
Joubert's pleasure. He offers Joe his .45 back. For that day.
Times
Square. A Pontiac pulls up with another car shadowing it. Higgins
gets out and, watching from across the street, Turner yells his name.
Somewhere God rest Ye merry Gentlemen
is playing. This and the Santa collecting for the blind somehow
make it seem wrong. Out of whack somehow. A Torino rolls up and
Turner takes it in. Beaming like he's meeting an old pal, Higgins
crosses. Joe asks if the car's for him, Higgins tells him its safe,
they have a few hours de-briefing to follow. Joe asks if, for the
sake of argument he had a .45 aimed at Higgins and wanted to take a
walk, he'd do it. He tells him to head West and stay ahead three or
four steps. Joe looks to see the Torino is four-up and following
slowly. Turner makes him wave them on ahead.
Turner
– 'Do we have plans to invade the Middle East?.'
Higgins
– 'Are you crazy?.'
Turner
– 'Am I?'
Higgins
– 'Look, Turner...'
Turner
– 'Do we have plans?'
Higgins
– 'No. Absolutely not.
We
have games, that's all.
We
play games... 'What if?'
'How
many men?' 'What would it take?.'
'Is
there a cheaper way to destabilize a regime?'...
That's
what we're paid to do.'
Turner
surmises Atwood was really going to do it; Higgins states this was a
renegade operation. Atwood knew 54/12 would never authorise, not with
the heat on the Company. And if there wwas no heat on the Company?,
if Turner hadn't stumbled onto the plan?. Coolly, the Deputy Director
NY replies; 'Different ballgame.' Stubbornly, he stops to face Turner
and claims the plan was fine, it would have worked. In disbelief, Joe
asks what is it with these people – do they think not getting
caught out on a lie is the same as telling the truth?. No, simple
economics;
Higgins
– 'Today it's oil, right?.
In
ten or fifteen years –
food,
plutonium –
and
maybe even sooner.
What
do you think the people are going to want us to do then?.
Turner
'Ask them.'
Higgins
– 'Not now. Then.
Ask
them when they're running out.
Ask
them when there's no heat and they're cold.
Ask
them when their engines stop.
Ask
them when people who have never
known
hunger start going hungry.
Want
to know something?
They
won't want us to ask them.
They'll
want us to get it for them.
Turner
– 'Boy, have you found a home.'
Turner reminds Higgins seven people are dead. The reply is that Atwood did it.
Who is Atwood anyway? He's you he's all you guys... Seven dead and they play
fucking games. Resolute, Higgins determines that as the other side play games
too, they can't let Condor stay 'outside.' Joe tells Higgins to go on home – they've
got it. He knows where they are – that's where they ship from. Higgins looks and
sees a truck backing up laden with reels of paper, backing up to the New York
Times.
Suddenly suspicious he asks what Turner did. He told them a story – Higgins
plays games, Turner told them a story. The DDNY calls Joe a poor son of a bitch,
says he's done more damage than he knows. Joe hopes so. He walks away as
Higgins tells him he's about to be a very lonely man. The Salvation Army are
singing God rest Ye merry Gentlemen. Higgins calls to him 'How do you know
they'll print it?. You can take a walk, but how far if they don't print it?.' Turner
shoots back that they'll print it.
Higgins asks 'How do you know?.' Backing away
with doubt and uncertainty clouding his features, Joe Turner walks away, looking
over his shoulder. As he will have to do for the rest of his life...
Below: Theatrical Trailer.
Japanese Movie Poster |
conspiracy thrillers, but this really is a classic and needed it's own review. The film
is one of the greatest of the Watergate-Era conspiracy movies – Robert Redford
went on to star in All the President's men (1976). Nowadays, the mention of the
C.I.A. in a film conjures up visions of high-tech control rooms and bad men in
cheap suits murdering their own. This film helped shape that view, however
inaccurate. Echoes of the film can be seen in unlikely places; Redford stars in the
2014 film Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which copies elements of the film's
structure.
Max von Sydow's character Joubert is a likable, if amoral killer. |
performance in Condor set the bar for Conspiracy thrillers. Faye Dunaway's Kathy
Hale is sexy, bright, flawed and layered. An impressive outing. Max von Sydow's
character Joubert is flawless. You can't help, but like the man despite his
loathsome trade. Cliff Robertson plays Higgins, the CIA Deputy Director New
York. Whether he's good, bad or just on the fence takes you the whole film to work
out. Maybe not even then... Hank Garrett's Mailman is menacing, pitiless and
utterly believable. Probably the finest screen assassin before Javier Bardem's Anton
Chigurh in No Country for Old Men (2007). The rest of the cast add to the whole with
credible, convincing performances.
Hank Garrett is the Mailman. Got a pen?.
Celebrated Director Sydney Pollack worked with star Robert Redford in films such
as The way we were (1973) and Out of Africa (1985), being brought in to helm after
Redford replaced Warren Beatty. (Beatty was to have been directed by Peter Yates,
who was paid his $200,000 fee for doing nothing.) Look out for Pollack as the
Cabbie who nearly runs Condor down, and as the voice of Kathy's boyfriend on the
telephone.
Discussing the finer points of film-making with Director Sydney Pollack. |
Co-Star Faye Dunaway famously said she didn't mind being
kidnapped and tied up by Redford – she'd wanted to work with him for years.
Former CIA Director Richard Helms on set with Redford. (Photo Getty images/Terry O'Neill) |
Richard Helms, the former C.I.A. Director acted as personal assistant to Robert
Redford. As an aside, Wabash's character references his OSS service in WWII – he
mentions sailing the adriatic with a movie star at the helm.
The Press Book.
This is undoubtedly Sterling Hayden, who worked with the OSS under the
pseudonym John Hamilton as a blockade runner in the Adriatic, resupplying
Yugoslav partisans. The film was shot in Autumn, but set in December, to trees had
to be defoliated, a process Robert Redford scrutinised closely; Redford is a long-
time ecologist.
French Poster. |
the skills Joseph Turner displays. His basic C.I.A. training may have included such
topics as lock-picking, surveillance and counter-surveillance drills, but these are
skills that take repeated practice to develop. It's just... he's too slick too soon. He
starts off as a book-geek and suddenly he's Jason Bourne's Dad.
During the hi-tech video sequence we see colour-reversed images of Joubert, including the one above; by inverting the colours it's clear that's actually a frame from the lift scene. |
Just visible at top; Winipeg? |
Just visible at bottom; the wire from the squibs passing through jenning's trouser leg and off to the left. These squibs simulate bullet hits.
His resume includes working on telephones, so perhaps the phone-tap sequences
pass unscathed beneath my frowning gaze here. Kathy goes from tied-up
hostage to sexual partner in next-to-no-time.
VHS Cassette cover.
I do wonder what happened to Poncho; after the hit on the ALHS house he's never
seen again. Perhaps if they'd sent him in after the Mail Man Condor would have
been properly plucked. At any rate, however, if this isn't on your movie-shelf
/shelves you need to get onto Amazon. Just watch what boots the Mail-Man is
wearing...
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