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The Third Man (1949)
"The Third Man" reflects the optimism of Americans and the bone-weariness of Europe after the war"
The story features an evil, charismatic anti-hero who fakes his own death and makes his home in a Viennese sewer, and ends with its dull, perplexed leading man being silently snubbed by the beautiful, unsmiling heroine in a deserted cemetery. This new print does full justice to Robert Krasker’s dazzling, Oscar-winning black-and-white photography and its exhilaratingly forlorn postwar Vienna.
Of all the movies I have seen, this one most completely embodies the romance of going to the movies. I saw it first on a rainy day in a tiny, smoke-filled cinema on the Left Bank in Paris. It told a story of existential loss and betrayal. It was weary and knowing, and its glorious style was an act of defiance against the corrupt world it pictured. Seeing it, I realized how many Hollywood movies were like the pulp Westerns that Holly Martins wrote: naive formulas supplying happy endings for passive consumption. I read the other day that they plan to remake "The Third Man." Do you think Anna will cave in to Holly--or will she remain true to her bitter cynicism and unspeakable knowledge?
- Release date: June 26, 2015 (USA)Narrated by: Carol Reed (UK version); Joseph Cotten (US version)
- Release date: June 26, 2015 (USA)Narrated by: Carol Reed (UK version); Joseph Cotten (US version)
Behind The Third Man >>>
Directed by Carol Reed and written by Graham Greene, The Third Man is widely considered the greatest British film of the 20th century. A definitive masterpiece of film noir, it captures the atmospheric decay and moral ambiguity of post-WWII Allied-occupied Vienna.
The Cinematography (The Dutch Angle)
Cinematographer Robert Krasker won an Oscar for his work on the film. The visual style is defined by:
Canted Frames: Almost every shot is tilted (a "Dutch angle"), creating a sense of unease, disorientation, and a world "out of joint."
Chiaroscuro Lighting: High-contrast black and white with long, stretching shadows against wet cobblestone streets.
Deep Focus: Allowing the crumbling architecture of Vienna to feel as present as the actors.
The Zither Score
Director Carol Reed famously rejected a traditional orchestral score after hearing Anton Karas playing a zither in a Viennese wine cellar.
The "Harry Lime Theme" became an international sensation, topping charts for months.
The jaunty, plucking sound of the zither provides a brilliant, ironic contrast to the film's bleak and cynical subject matter.
Director Carol Reed famously rejected a traditional orchestral score after hearing Anton Karas playing a zither in a Viennese wine cellar.
The "Harry Lime Theme" became an international sensation, topping charts for months.
The jaunty, plucking sound of the zither provides a brilliant, ironic contrast to the film's bleak and cynical subject matter.
The Ending: A Masterclass in Subversion
The film's ending is famous for its refusal to provide a "Hollywood" resolution. After Harry is truly buried, Holly Martins waits by the road for Anna (Alida Valli), Harry’s lover. In a long, static shot, she walks toward the camera from the distance. Rather than stopping to join him, she walks straight past him without a word or a glance, disappearing off-screen.
Producer David O. Selznick fought for a happy ending where they walk away arm-in-arm, but Carol Reed stood his ground, creating one of the most poignant "long takes" in film history.
The film's ending is famous for its refusal to provide a "Hollywood" resolution. After Harry is truly buried, Holly Martins waits by the road for Anna (Alida Valli), Harry’s lover. In a long, static shot, she walks toward the camera from the distance. Rather than stopping to join him, she walks straight past him without a word or a glance, disappearing off-screen.
Producer David O. Selznick fought for a happy ending where they walk away arm-in-arm, but Carol Reed stood his ground, creating one of the most poignant "long takes" in film history.





