Ace in the Hole
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1951
- 111 min
- 1,974 Views
Hey. Pull up at the corner.
Wait here.
How.
Good afternoon, sir.
Yes?
I'd like to see the boss.
What'd you say his name is?
- I didn't say.
- Cagey, huh?
Mr Boot is the owner and publisher.
Okay. Tell Mr Boot Mr Tatum
would like to see him.
Charles Tatum from New York.
What about?
Look, fan, just ask him,
how would he like to make
himself a fast $200 a week?
What did you say you
were selling? Insurance?
I didn't say.
Cagey, huh?
Now, isn't that something?
Who said it?
Well, Mr Boot said it,
but I did the needlework.
Oh!
- Okay.
- I wish I could coin them like that.
If I ever do, would you
embroider it for me?
- Mr Tatum?
- Yes, sir.
Go ahead. What is it?
Well, Mr Boot, I was passing
through Albuquerque.
Had breakfast here.
Read your paper.
Thought you might be
interested in my reaction.
- You bet I am.
- Well, sir, it made me throw up.
I don't want you to think I
expected The New York Times.
But even for Albuquerque,
this is pretty Albuquerque.
All right. Here's your nickel back.
Now, what's all this about
my making $200 a week?
Apparently, you're not
familiar with my name.
Can't say that I am.
That's because you don't get
the eastern papers out here.
I thought maybe once in a while
somebody would toss one
out of the Super Chief
and you might've seen my byline.
Charles Tatum? Worked New
York, Chicago, Detroit...
- What about the $200?
- I was coming to that.
Mr Boot, I'm a $250-a-week
newspaperman.
- I can be had for $50.
- Why are you so good to me?
I know newspapers backward,
forward and sideways.
I can write them, edit them, print
them, wrap them and sell them.
- Don't need anybody right now.
- I can handle big news and little news.
And if there's no news,
I'll go out and bite a dog.
- Make it $45.
- What makes you so cheap?
A fair question, considering I've
been top man wherever I've worked.
You'll be glad to know that
I've been fired from 11 papers
with a total circulation
of seven million,
don't want to bore you.
Go ahead. Bore me.
I'm a pretty good liar. I've
done a lot of lying in my time.
I've lied to men who wear belts. I've
lied to men who wear suspenders.
But I'd never be so
stupid as to lie to a man
who wears both belt and suspenders.
- How's that again?
- You strike me as a cautious man.
A man who checks and double-checks.
So I'll tell you why I was fired.
In New York, a story of mine
brought on a libel suit.
In Chicago, I started something
with the publisher's wife.
In Detroit, I was caught
drinking out of season.
- In Cleveland...
- I get the picture.
Now, then I find myself in
Albuquerque with no money.
A burnt-out bearing, bad tyres
and a lousy reputation.
Bad tyres can be dangerous.
I've only one chance to
get back where I belong.
To land a job on a
small-town paper like yours
and wait and hope and pray
for something big to break,
something I can latch on to,
something the wire services will
gobble up and yell for more.
Just one good beat, a Tatum special,
and they'll roll out the red carpet.
Because when they need you,
they forgive and forget.
But until then, Mr Boot,
you'll get yourself the best
newspaperman you ever had.
- At $40 per. When do I start?
- Don't push.
- I hope I haven't scared you off.
- Well, I don't know.
I'm not afraid of a libel suit,
because I'm a lawyer myself.
Check and double-check
every word I print.
Sure. Belt and suspenders.
Now, about that publisher's wife,
I think you should know Mrs Boot
is a grandmother three times.
If you wanna start something with
her, she'd be very flattered.
And as for drinking,
do you drink a lot?
Not a lot. Just frequently.
We have a shop rule here,
no liquor on the premises.
- How about smoking?
- Of course.
And I pay $60 a week in this shop.
I'll take it.
Where's my desk?
The one by the door. You may
be out of here by Saturday.
The sooner the better.
Thanks, Geronimo. Take these
over to the engraver's.
What's this mess?
They haven't got any
chopped chicken livers.
I brought you some chicken tacos.
Chicken tacos?
They're not gonna chop the
livers any more for you.
Nobody else will buy them.
And no more garlic pickles.
When the history of this
sun-baked Siberia is written,
these shameful words
will live in infamy.
"No chopped chicken liver."
"No garlic pickles."
No Lindy's. No Madison
Square Garden.
No Yogi Berra.
What do you know about
Yogi Berra, Miss Deverich?
- I beg your pardon?
- Yogi Berra!
Yogi? Why, it's a sort
of religion, isn't it?
You bet it is. A belief
in the New York Yankees.
You know what's wrong with
New Mexico, Mr Wendel?
Too much outdoors.
Give me those eight spindly trees in
front of Rockefeller Center any day.
That's enough outdoors for me.
No subways smelling sweet-sour.
What do you use for
noise around here?
No beautiful roar from
eight million ants,
fighting, cursing, loving.
No shows. No South Pacific.
No chic little dames
across a crowded bar.
And worst of all, Herbie,
no 80th floor to jump from
when you feel like it.
Is this one of your
long-playing records, Chuck?
Let's hear the other side.
All right. I'll play it for you.
When I came here, I thought this was
gonna be a 30-day stretch, maybe 60.
Now it's a year.
It looks like a life sentence.
Where is it? Where's the loaf
of bread with a file in it?
Where's that big story
to get me out of here?
One year, and what's our hot news?
A soapbox derby.
A tornado that double-crossed
us and went to Texas.
An old goof who said he
was the real Jesse James,
until they found out he was
a chicken thief from Gallup
by the name of Schimmelmacher.
I'm stuck here, fans.
Stuck for good!
Unless, of course,
you, Miss Deverich,
Unless, of course,
you, Miss Deverich,
instead of writing household hints
about how to remove chilli
stains from blue jeans,
get yourself involved
in a trunk murder.
How about it, Miss Deverich?
I could do wonders with
your dismembered body.
Oh, Mr Tatum. Really.
Or you, Mr Wendel.
If you'd only toss that
cigar out of the window,
real far, all the
way to Los Alamos,
and boom!
Now there would be a story.
I told you no liquor in the office.
I thought I could trust you.
What a suspicious nature
you have, Mr Boot.
Pretty, isn't it?
I make those things
every night when I go home out
of matches and toothpicks.
Calms my nerves.
Sorry, Tatum.
- Maybe you do need a change.
- Do I.
And I got news for you. You're going
out of town for a couple of days.
- How far and in what direction?
- Los Barrios county.
They're having a rattlesnake hunt,
and I want you to cover it.
- A rattlesnake hunt?
- That's right.
And take Herbie along.
Let's get some art.
A rattlesnake hunt. Well,
isn't that ginger-peachy?
A real "stop the press,
pull out the front page",
"get ready to re-plate" assignment.
Have a nice time, Chuck.
See the country.
And don't worry, I'll
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"Ace in the Hole" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/ace_in_the_hole_2187>.
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