(Read part 1 here: https://silienasrandomreviews.blogspot.com/2019/03/night-and-city-1950-random-movie-review.html)
Fabian the businessman
It is now the morning. A banner is being lifted outside a
building. The banner reads “Fabian
Wrestling Promotion”. Harry’s wrestling empire has officially gone into
business.
Inside the building is a busy scene. Muscular men punch
bags, do push-up and practice wrestling on the ring, under the training of
Gregorius. Everyone is hard at work and is clearly enthusiastic about what they
are doing.
In the midst of the enthusiasm, a man called Stranger buys a
ticket into the building only to laugh at Gregorius’s training. Strangler was
the wrestler in the fight club where Harry first met Gregorius, and he is also
part of Krito’s gang. He comes with a clear intention to discourage Gregorius
from continuing doing wrestling on his own.
But someone in the building doesn’t want to let this slide.
Harry comes out from a private room. He is dressing in an
expensive suit, and walks and talks as if he owns everything in the place. He
no longer the sly-looking man talking in a sweet and lengthy tone we knew
before. He stands straight, and talks very little, with full-on confidence. He
has essentially become a different person.
And he is ordering Strangler to get out of the building.
And everyone stands up before Strangler right after Harry raises
his voice.
After throwing Strangler away, Harry orders people around.
He tells the men to continue training, and Nikolas to take a break. Everyone
listens to him without question.
And he also receives a name tag and tips the delivery boy a
hefty amount of tip.
After failing to use Strangler to intimidate Harry, Kristo
rushes into the building by himself. Kristo comes with a contract with the
permission for Harry to use the building to promote wrestling and present
Nikolas to fight in a tournament. Harry listens to the contract, understandably
worried. Yet, there is not a single trace of the sly, flattering attitude he
displayed earlier when he first met Kristo. This is more like a concerned
attitude of a businessman in front of his potential partner than an attitude of
a lowlife hustler trying to get people to believe him.
Unfortunately, Kristo doesn’t come to announce the contract.
He tears the contract in front of Harry and warns him to move somewhere else to
promote wrestling.
Harry isn’t freaked out. Just when Kristo is about to leave
in satisfaction, Harry calmly tells Kristo to see his “partner”. And he drags
out… Gregorius.
Krito quickly realizes that the stack is against him. If
anyone has enough power to stand against him, that’s his own father. He tries
to convince Gregorius that Harry is a hustler, but fails. Gregorius believes
that Harry is a good friend, a hard worker and a passionate lover of the Greek
wrestling spirit. Coupled with his dissatisfaction with the way Kristo
organizes his fight club, Gregorius has put all hope on Harry for a good
wrestling match. Gregorius even defense Harry against his own son.
Failing to talk Gregorius out of sticking to Harry, the
furious Kristo can only request Harry to give his father what he promises,
clean wrestling.
He then leaves the overjoyed Harry screaming orders to his
enthusiastic “followers” as they return to training.
It’s amazing to see how much Harry has changed just in a few
days. He went from a sacredly loser, begging for attention and support from
other people, to a confident businessman, shouting orders to other people and
bravely standing up for himself. His movement is slower and more deliberate, he
knows exactly what he’s doing (because if he doesn’t, it’s hard to imagine how
he is able to command so many people in his building). This sudden change makes
us wonder, how did he transform so fast?
We soon have our answer when Harry goes into his private
room.
A certain Mr. Hoskins from a hotel Royal Tudor wants to talk
with Harry. According to him, Harry managed to get himself, Gregorius and
Nikolas two expensive rooms for three weeks straight without payment. So Mr.
Hoskins has come to demand £287
in payment on that day or he has to ask the three men out of his hotel.
And then, this is when we realize that the “confident
businessman” attitude earlier is not entirely genuine.
Harry first becomes very aggressive to Hoskins, using the
same tactic he used to Kristo. He attempts to use his reputation to dominate
the conversation, similar to when he called Gregorius into the scene. When he
is quickly dismissed by Hoskins, the confident mask suddenly falls off. He goes
back to the promises we see him do earlier in the movie, telling Hoskins how
hard he works and how he will pay everything quickly if he is given more time.
He basically goes down to his knees.
The aggressive Harry... |
...and a begging Harry. |
And of course, Hoskins doesn’t take the promise seriously.
And so, all the intimidating image is just a mask. We can’t
blame him though, he just has to act strong in front of a respectable man who
has put trust into him. If he isn’t doing it for the old man’s sake, he has to
do it for his own reputation. He is a pretty good actor though, and he has
everyone who hasn’t got to see inside his private room fooled.
Unfortunately, because this is just an act, he can’t
maintain the attitude for long, no matter how elaborate the act is. The sole
reason why he is able to win over Kristo is because he is holding Gregorius in
his hand. When it’s time to confront Hoskins, he hardly has anything to
counteract him. Even when he uses his reputation to dominate the conversation,
he seems a bit unsure of himself, much less than when he does that to Kristo.
He can only win when he knows who he has to deal with.
In short, Harry hasn’t changed at all.
Nevertheless, he is now faced with the hotel payment and
there’s no way around it. The only way to obtain enough money for that is
getting Helen to pay for him, and that’s through the license for Helen as he
promises before. Harry calls Helen and arrange a time for her to get her
license
And we get to see how Harry gets his license: from a friend
who makes fake papers.
And no one suspects anything, at least for now.
This business will survive!
The movie then cuts to Phil. He is now talking to a furious
Kristo. Kristo is furious because he has asked Phil to stop Harry through his
assistants and yet Harry is still running his business like nothing has
happened. Kristo has also somehow found out that Phil is even backing Harry’s
business. Kristo explains to Phil that there is no way the business will
success, but the heart of the problem is that Harry is conning Kristo’s father
and he doesn’t like that.
Phil remains unemotional throughout the conversation. He
hints to Kristo that he isn’t emotionally attached to Harry, and he would do
anything for Kristo if it helps bring Harry to him. He first offers to stop
backing, then promises Kristo that he will teach Harry a lesson.
Phil seems pretty indecisive about what to do, and Kristo is
extremely confused who Phil really is. Nevertheless, the two men soon reach an
agreement.
And so, Phil meets Harry on a busy street and tell him he is
going to stop backing the business without providing any reason.
Harry, of course, starts pestering him to go back to backing
with all the promises. Phil doesn’t back down. But in his indecisive mood, he
casually slips out to Harry that it would be better if he managed to get
Strangler to fight with Nikolas. Phil doesn’t seem to be aware of what he is
saying though.
The desperate Harry is looking for something to hold on, and
he fails to realize that Phil is just talking nonsense. Harry immediately
promises Phil to get Strangler for a match in exchange to more backing. Phil,
in an attempt to get Harry off his back, just says yes and moves on.
And soon, it turns out that Phil should have been more
cautious of what he said.
It’s now the evening. Strangler is having fun in a luxury
bar. Harry also walks into the same bar and meets Beer. And the first thing Harry
asks is where Strangler is.
Harry has put on the businessman mask again. He puts a £100 deal on Nikolas vs
Strangler, and he says it in the most serious voice he can put on. He hears
from Beer that the news of him overpowering Kristo has been passed around, and
uses it to fuel his determination. The serious tone he is showing seems a bit
over-the-top to Beer; so Beer, much like Phil, puts £200 and jokes that Harry can’t get Strangler to
fight Nikolas. Harry stands up and walks toward Strangler.
The two men choose a table next to Strangler, and Harry
pretends to mock Strangler while praising Nikolas. This of course triggers
Strangler and he jumps on Harry in a fit of rage. Still smiling, Harry tells
Strangler to go to the gym to see Nikolas if he wants to fight that much, then
runs away after having pissed off Stranger enough.
And so it goes. Strangler storms into Harry’s gym where
Nikolas and Gregorius are chilling out. He insults the old man, and Gregorius
gets provoked enough to agree for a fight to happen. Harry sorts out his
contract and goes back to Phil for the rest of the money.
Victory is not final
Phil, of course, isn’t ready for all of this.
Phil is totally horrified by what Harry has done. He was
perfectly calm and collected before this latest news, trying slowly and
methodically to get Harry off his back without getting his hand dirty. And each
time he packs a (discrete) punch, Harry rises again from the ruin. And this
last time, he gave Harry an impossible task, thinking he would just run around
in vain. And Harry completed just that.
Phil can no longer keep his cool. He can no longer pretend not
to know anything. So, in a moment of overwhelming shock and anger, he announces
to Harry that he is calling Kristo to deliver the new about Strangler,
effectively revealing to Harry that he has never on his side in the first
place.
That is a devastating news to Harry. Phil has long been
considered the only source of support for Harry and it could very much mean
chaos to his business. But on the other hand, Phil is already acting out of
character. He just can’t keep his cool, agreeable mask on anymore. As this is
obviously his last effort to get rid of Harry, he is sending Harry the message
that he is on the losing side.
So, when Harry finally comes to term with the fact that Phil
has never been his ally, he strikes back forcefully. He promptly announces to
Phil that he will still survive without his help. Calling Kristo won’t help
Phil one bit, because Harry has already got Gregorius on his side. In short,
Harry has already got everything in control.
And that is the last blow for Phil. He is no longer involved
with Harry and he can’t do anything to stop Harry anymore. He is forced to
admit defeat, but not without delivering his last blow: refusing to give money
to Harry.
And it is actually a pretty powerful attack. Harry can only
survive because he has a source of money. Money has been an overlooked but
crucial factor behind his business. Harry has come to Phil just for the money,
and fails. He has no choice but to get the money himself.
And the only way to do it is to lure Mary out of the house
and steal the saving she has put aside.
Back at the gym, something unexpected happens. Gregorius and
Strangler are having a heated quarrel to dominate each other. The quarrel soon
turns into a nasty fight right on the training ring. No one is able to stop
them, not even Harry.
The two wrestlers are now two mindless angry rams trying to
kill each other. Like two rams fighting, anyone standing in between will be
crushed to death. Nikolas tries to pull Gregorius out of the fight and is
thrown out of the ring with a broken wrist. Harry also attempts to interfere
but is pulled away. Finally, everyone is forced to stay outside and watch the
mess unfolded. And during the fight, we see Harry shouting for Gregorius,
surprisingly with all the sincerity we have never seen from him before.
Finally, just as Kristo arrives, Gregorius wins the
battle. He leaves Strangler lying on the ground victoriously… while also
looking just as exhausted as his opponent.
And he dies, of exhaustion, before Kristo’s eyes.
Gregorius wins, but no one is happy for him.
Even Strangler isn’t happy to see the sight, especially when
he learned that the reason why he is at the gym is because Harry provoked him.
No one is happy with Gregorius winning.
And everyone knows who to put the blame on.
The savage night
The next 17 minutes plays out like a sequence of a surreal
nightmare. We see Kristo’s men driving in the street, passing news about Harry
to shady men, in dark, noisy streets, in crowded clubs and stadium. There is
now a prize on Harry’s. No one says anything. We don’t get to see the faces of
the men. They are like ghosts and demons, sneaking in the dark corners of
London, only waiting to be summoned. And now they are all summoned, to roam the
darkness for a skinny, sleazy fellow.
Darkness covers the entire sequence. We can’t even see
Harry’s face clearly. And when we do see him, he looked all scared and beaten
up. There is the sound of the streets, and some talking. However, they have no
substance. Every sound we ever get to hear is mixed up in a chaos of noise. No
one speaks. They just run and chase, in the street then in a construction ruin.
There is no human connection, at all.
There is no human connection, which means no one acts
remotely like a human. The shady men chase Harry together, but they also compete
with each other to reach Harry first, so that they can claim their hefty prize.
We see one of the men holding a knife, with the full intention to kill. At one
point we get to witness a “friend” of Harry who discretely calls Kristo to tell
him about Harry’s location. Even Harry does things he wouldn’t dare to do
before. He kills the man with the knife, pushing him down a stair. And it seems
like he also kills the cheating friend off-screen.
Everyone is desperate. There is no humanity here, only
people stomping on each other, and the dark.
And sandwiched between this sequence are slower scenes of
other characters and things falling apart. Mary is enjoying some comfort from
Adam after being betrayed by Harry when suddenly Kristo’s men rush into the
room in search for Harry. Mary’s brief peace is disrupted, and she is forced to
hit the street to find Harry.
Phil also takes a hit. He finds out Harry is now the
underworld’s most wanted man is about to enjoy his victory. But then a
determined Helen comes to him and tells him she is leaving. Helen has already
got her club ready, and she has no more reason to stay around with Phil. He can
do nothing to hold her back.
Helen doesn’t get out scott-free either. Shortly after she
officially opens her club, a young policeman shows up to check on her license.
Everything is in order, Helen’s club and license is legit, until some water
drips onto the license, revealing a secret even Helen doesn’t know.
With nowhere else to go, Helen comes back home to Phil. But
too late, Phil has already killed himself out of grief.
A savage night. It could just have been Harry running away from something like he does after every scheme. But tonight, it's different. Harry has touched too many people. And now when Harry goes down, everyone is going down with him.
And it starts all over again...?
It’s approaching day time. Harry is now totally worn out. He
is out of breath. He can barely run. He is heading toward Anna’s boat; it is
the only safe thing in front of him.
And he finally gets some rest. Anna, luckily, become the
only “friend” Harry knows that doesn’t have ill intention on him.
But at this point, Harry doesn’t have enough energy to find
a hiding anymore. For the first time in his life, Harry admits to himself that
he is powerless. When he sees a shadow on the bridge which he assumes is
Krito’s men, he no longer wants to evade. He stands up and tells Anna to go
upstairs. He braces himself to face his fate.
And to his surprise, the shadow belongs to… Mary
It soon becomes the first scene at the beginning of the
movie again. Harry admits his latest get-rich-quick scheme is a failure. He
implies he wants to be somebody. Mary comforts him, saying he doesn’t need to
be somebody because he is already great in her eyes, and the two reconcile.
It’s the end of another night, another stupid scheme. Harry returns to be a
normal guy. The couple return to their house and go to work again. After all it’s
just a typical day in the life of Harry and Mary, right?
Only that… Harry doesn’t want to stop.
Harry suddenly thinks of another scheme. He wants to fake
his death to claim the prize of Kristo. He tries to convince Mary to get
involved, with the same old empty promise of it being another “fool-proof
idea”, just like thousands of “ideas” he comes up with.
And of course, Mary isn’t going to put up with it anymore.
No one can, after such a life-shattering experience. Mary walks out of the boat, furious and heartbroken.
Harry just lets his second chance for life slip past him.
It could have ended well. He and Mary could have gone home.
On the bridge stands Kristo. He has somehow tracked Harry
down to the boat. He is standing there waiting for Harry to come out.
And then he sees…
As Harry chases after Mary, he catches sight of Kristo on
the bridge. Harry suddenly has a plan. He makes it look like Mary is on
Kristo’s side and turns himself in, while demanding the prize from Kristo, for
Mary.
He is effectively implanting the “fool-proof idea” he was
talking about, without Mary.
And for Mary.
It is predictable how it ends afterward. Harry immediately
gets killed by Strangler. Mary witnesses the killing and breaks down. Adam
comes to the scene with the police to arrest Kristo’s gang. Adam takes the
sobbing Mary home.
And the sun is rising, signaling the end of a night.
My thought of Harry
So that was it, the story of the life and death of a loser
who refuses to learn from his action. Harry’s downfall is completely his fault.
He saw time and time again that he would go nowhere with his get-rich-quick
ideas. Every scheme always ended up in him running away from something. This
latest scheme was no different than the others, and it also started in the same
pattern (Harry saw an opportunity to make quick money, he conned a bunch of
people into funding him, something went wrong and everyone found out he was a
liar, and he ran away). When you don’t learn from your action, life will
eventually catch on you.
Or so everyone thinks. But is that the end of the story? Is
Harry such an unlikeable, conning husler?
If we go back to the scene where Harry goes to work in the
Silver Fox (in part 1), it is quite unclear what job Harry does there. It is
later revealed that Harry’s job there might be finding a way to get customers
for the club. And Harry certainly doesn’t attract his customers by
straightforward marketing. Instead, he pretends to have some connection with
random people, gains their trust, then lures them into the club. And as
demonstrated in the earlier café scene, the scheme works beautifully.
Looking at the “marketing” scheme, the big plan for the
wrestling business, and maybe the idea of the small energy-saving cube very
early on in the movie, we have to admit that his ideas are pretty creative.
Harry just has a way to see opportunity in things people wouldn’t waste a
second to think about, and he has the ability to make it work, at least on
paper.
Phil can say anything about Harry being a loser, but the
fact that he keeps Harry in his club for such a long time despite all the
antics speaks volume about how important Harry is in the club. Phil definitely
values Harry’s talent, even though he may not admit to it.
And that isn’t all. Harry does not only have talent in
spotting opportunity. He also have the gut to actually push the ideas into
action. Everyone can think of a good idea once in a while, but it actually
takes courage to act on the idea. Who would have thought of actually going out
and asking for funding for an energy-saving cube that may or may not work? Who
would dare to approach a legendary wrestler and convince him to join in an
unknown business venture? Who would go out to provoke an aggressive wrestler
just to set up a match between him and his opponent? Of course the way he conducts
his plans is questionable, but he certainly has enough gut to carry them out.
Bravery and determination are what set Harry apart from the
crowd. We never get to see Harry give up on anything, unless the situation is
too obviously impossible. No matter how much obstacle Phil throws on his way to
get him off his back, Harry always find a way to get back up. There is really
no giving up for Harry. Once he promises, he fulfills. Get a license for a club
in exchange for money? He does it. Get Strangler involved in a fight? He does
it. He is so determined that he pushes Phil in a corner and forces him to admit
defeat.
Bravery and determination are also something everyone is
scared of Harry for. His plans do fail eventually, he has never has any
success. That is why he is labeled “hustler” by almost everyone. But everyone
is also intimidated by the fact that Harry carries out his ideas in the first
place. There is a reason why people turn him down when he asks for funding.
It’s not only because he has low success rate, but also because his plans sound
so absurd that no one can imagine it can success. There is no one with the same
level of imagination and optimism as Harry to see opportunity in the plans. It
does take a lot of gut to plunge into such a risk.
And that is also the reason why he is able to keep every of his schemes running for so long before he is forced to run away. That is the reason why he is able to fool so many people into thinking he knows what he is doing, even the legendary Gregorius. After all, aren't real leaders determined and confident and full of passion?
Harry is truly a force of nature. And Mary has seen it in
him.
And Harry could be a wild success, if only he knew how to
balance his burning passion with a bit realism.
One weakness Harry has is his own short-sightedness. Harry
just can’t think of anything long-termed. He is extremely good at thinking of
ideas, but he has no capacity to draw a long-term plan for his plan to sustain
long enough. His attitude is pretty much like a child, thinking of an absurd
idea and going on to make it work, only to realize that it takes more work to
make it happen than to think of it. Harry is only left with an ability to
improvise. This explains how Harry is always on edge and wears so many masks at
the same time. One minute he is a stern, confident businessman, the next minute
he becomes a weak guy begging for mercy. Harry spends too much time and energy
reacting to whatever thrown on his side. He certainly does not go provoke
Strangler because he has planned it long ago; he only does that because Phil
suggests so.
Furthermore, as hinted several times in the movie, Harry has
a less than healthy motivation for his passion. He has a long history of being
underestimated. He was not valued by people around him for his talent. This has
become a fuel for his unstoppable determination. He wants to finally prove to
the world that he has enough talent to be respected. He just wants to finally
be “somebody”. He just wants to take the glory all for himself. Does that
energy-saving cube help improve the life of anyone? Is Fabian Wrestling Promotion created with the aim to help improve the
status of wrestling? No. Every scheme Harry comes up with has to help boost his
own status first. This sure guarantees a self-centered attitude toward the
long-term plan, and this will not serve Harry well in the long run, as he has
seen it countless time.
His short-sightedness and his egoism are the two biggest
flaws Harry has. So big that they manage to ruin his life.
But given the two weaknesses, does it mean Harry is a
self-centered psycho who only does things and stomps on people?
My answer: not really. While it is true that Harry is
motivated by his selfish need to be respected, he does not have any ill will
while carrying out his plans. Harry isn’t just pushed by his selfish need, he
also has Mary in mind. He is doing all of that not only for himself, but also
for Mary. He also wants her to shine with him. At the start of the movie, we
can already see how he calls Mary “Dutchess”. And if he didn’t love her, what
possibly had put him into his final act of redemption: handing himself over to
Kristo?
And we also get to see random acts of kindness from Harry.
Harry may be selfish, but he does show kindness to people he deems worthy.
There seems to be a genuine bond between Harry and Gregorius. When Gregorius is
fighting with Strangler, Harry is the one who cheers for the old man. And when
Harry sense that Kristo is going to the boat to capture him, he tells Anna to
go upstairs, as he doesn’t want her to get involved in the matter, or at least
witness a killing.
Deep down, Harry is just an poor angry soul, trying hard to
be accepted.
Adam, who seems to be Harry’s counterpart, embodies
everything Harry should be. Adam is also incredibly creative (with his toys and
furniture), but he knows his limit. He knows how to finish what he starts, and
he knows which ideas are too crazy to be carried out.
And most of all, he knows when to stop. He knows not to get
too many people involved in his plan.
He also has the tender heart of Harry, and he doesn’t let it
be buried in his thirst for power.
Because, he creates to serve himself and other, not to prove
himself to anyone.
Conclusion
On the surface, Night
and the City’s plot is an action-packed movie about a loser failing big
time while trying to get rich quick. But behind that surface is an incredibly
in-depth character study. This is not only a story of a loser, it’s also a
story of the people around him. Everyone is calling Harry a loser, but they are
also harboring their own demons. Phil and Helen are involved in a silent power
struggle. Kristo and Gregorius are struggling with balancing between their
relationship and a passion. Most of Harry’s friends are sacredly lowlifes and
one of them is a covert opportunist. No one is completely pure.
And one loser, while minding his own scheme, accidentally
stirs up the demons and get some of the people invested in him.
There is just nothing more I can say about the incredible
depth of this seemingly simple movie.
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