The Second Day Of The Locust-Kirk
Douglas’s The Ace In The Hole
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
The Ace In The Hole, starring Kirk
Douglas, Jan Sterling, directed by Billy Wilder, 1951
Get this story line right
out of today’s mad social media driven desperate cry for recognition in a
sullen, indifferent world. A hard-nosed,
hard-hitting newspaper reporter who liked his liquor, liked his women, liked to
live close to the edge on a story, hell was willing to go over the top six ways
to Sunday in order to sell the boss’s newspapers (and he was not particular
about which boss as long as he go that by-line, got that big fat check). Get
this too was willing, way more than willing to throw the truth out with bath water
in order to keep the story humming for a few extra days, or until the juice was
sucked out of the damn thing. Of course guys (gals too but our protagonist is a
guy on this one) like our boy, Chuck, Chuck Tatum, maybe you read his by-line
when he was riding the big wave, who live for wine, women, song and a big chunk
of fame have a habit over going over the edge a little too much for the city
editors of most newspapers taste which has caused him to be thrown off half the
best newspapers in the country.
As we hone in on the story
line Chuck is cooling his heels out in Albuquerque, on some nowhere square dink
newspaper where the editor/owner thinks you should tell the truth straight and
without the garnish, funny guy right. Finds himself out there where the states
are square and the people left to their own resources by their own choice had
better treat one another square, and be square or else. So our big city
reporter was just looking for that one little story to ride him back to the big
time, to easy street, what the heck maybe to that Pulitzer Prize that has eluded
him all these years. And lo and behold out in the middle of Podunk on his way to
cover yet another hoe-down or picnic in the boondocks Chuck gets his lucky
break, a story a real live human interest story, the kind that people stop
whatever they are doing to follow, the one that has them on the phone telling
one and all their exact opinion of what is happening, with baited breathe. Here
is the beauty of this one, a guy, a regular Joe (although his name is Leo but
nobody cares about the name as much as the one-on-one human interest about what
is happening to some poor sap who is in more trouble than they are, not much
more was caught in a cave looking for relics around the mountains which the local
Indians, oops Native Americans, you know the native peoples and needs help
getting out, help which in the normal scheme of events would take a few hours
and done. Except our boy Chuck smelled this for a million dollar story anyway
you cut it, a story that every poor sucker who reads the newspapers form Podunk
to New Jack City could relate to, if he can keep the thing alive long enough to
draw an audience. So the catch is too get the guy out, but not too some. Through
some very devious methods and some pure high-handed power-plays Chuck shows his
reckless expertise, gets so wrapped up in the thing that he can see the bright lights
of the city as fast as he can write, and
finagle things so that he gets exclusives, the almighty exclusives that separate
the pros from the amateurs in the newspaper business. The key though was to
keep that story going and that is where everything turned to dross in the end.
See Chuck ordered the rescue crews to do the rescuing of poor sap Leo the long
way round, you know, to keep the story going, has the crowds attracted by his
stories coming out to observe the human drama in person on edge, has made the
whole thing a media circus. Key to that
was getting Leo tough/hard as nails/sexy snake of a wife to work the ropes with
him. And she, Lorraine, like all blonde Lorraines played her part well once our
boy Chuck who, frankly, seemed to have been hard on his women, got under her
skin (and gave her the franchise in the gathering circus end of the game). Of
course there was a down side to Chuck’s scheming since Leo refused to cooperate
by getting a little short of breath waiting for that long way around digging to
get to him, yeah the poor guy folded up
under the cave-in pressure and didn’t last long enough to get the big headline.
Great big fifteen minutes of fame story if there ever was one.
Sounds like any other news story of today
24/7/367 media frenzy of the moment though, right. Wrong this is the skinny,
the real skinny this one came in 1951. This one is famed director Billy Wilder’s
(he the super-max daddy director of the close up sordid underbelly look at old
time Hollywood in Sunset Boulevard) Ace In The Hole as he takes a big swing
at the newspaper business in the days when that medium ruled the roost of mass
communication and when like today with the expansive social media mega-reach the
notion of “all the news that fit to print” hinged on how many paper it would sell.
Kirk Douglas as the cranky, over-the-top news hound Chuck gives a very good
performance here as does Jan Sterling as Lorraine, that hustling wife of poor old
Leo. Hey, I didn’t tell you the ending, the real ending not poor schmuck Leo’s
running out of air but Chuck’s. In the end Chuck got “religion” (helped by a friendly
mortal wound from Lorraine when he decided one more time to play rough with her),
see before he too passed from the scene he realized that he had gone over the
edge, had set something in motive better left to the fates. Yeah, that’s the real
cautionary tale sixty some years later.
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