The Public Eye
- R
- Year:
- 1992
- 99 min
- 482 Views
FADE IN:
BEGIN TITLESIn murky light, a piece of paper sinks in a shallow tin tub.
By degrees, faces and forms appear on the page: a swooning
woman, (circa 1940) a cop who tries to catch her, a crowd of
onlookers standing in the shadows of a tenement house in the
aftermath of a murder. Before the photograph has completely
developed, it seems to fade in a dreamy
DISSOLVE TO:
Another submerged page. A new images begins to appear: a
thick-ankled stripper (again, 1940) sleeping between shows
in her dingy dressing room. Before it has fully developed,
this photo also
DISSOLVES TO:
A new page on which appears a billboard attached to a burning
building. It advertises a 1930's sunburn medication: "Put
out the flames with SunzoCaine!" Painted flames rises from a
sunbather's burnt back, mixing with the real ones.
We continue sensuously to DISSOLVE THROUGH black and white,
high-contrast photos as they come hauntingly to life (all of
them depicting New York, at night, in the late 30's or early
40's) till we END TITLES.
We PAN TO the dim red darkroom bulb, under which we begin to
DISSOLVE TO:
...another red bulb, this one atop a patrol car.
EXT./INT. POLICE CAR [APRIL, 1942] - NIGHT
We hear a Dispatcher's monotonous voice over a hissing police
radio.
DISPATCHER (V.O.)
Signal 30. Two-three-six Thompson
Street.
Inside the car, the Young Cop who's driving angles forward
in his seat, pressing heavily on the gas.
His older partner stares forward, blankly.
CUT TO:
EXT. 236 THOMPSON STREET - SAME
A respectable working-class block. Neighbors are clustered
by the stoop in robes, pajamas, undershirts. A woman with
young children holds them to her nightgown. All watch as The
Cops pull up by the curb and rush from their squadcar. They
push their way through the crowd.
TEENAGER:
(in an undershirt,
grinning)
Third floor.
The Cops continue into the building.
INT. STAIRWELL - 236 THOMPSON
The Cops move stealthfully up the dim stairwell, guns drawn.
On the third-floor landing, a door is ajar. Light spills out
onto the floorboards.
As they ascend, the Cops can see the corpse of a smartly
dressed young man inside:
It lies face down, its features rudely pressed and bloody
against the floor. A freshly-blocked hat lies a few feet
from the dead man; he was shot as he came home.
On the landing, the Cops move carefully to the door, hugging
the wall.
They hear someone moving inside the apartment. They freeze,
barely breathing.
The older Cop c*cks his gun, crosses himself, wraps his hand
around the doorframe. He jumps into
THE APARTMENT:
crouching, gun drawn. A crackling, blistering sound is heard
as a flash of light fills the room, blinding him.
COP:
(blinking as he stands)
Jesus.
REVERSE:
A flashbulb hits the floor hollowly.
BERNZY (whose real name is Leon Bernstein and whose
professional name is "The Great Bernzini") inserts a new
bulb in the giant chrome flash attachment of his Speed Graphic
press camera. A cigar is planted in the corner of his mouth.
Bernzy cuts a curious figure: He wears an oddly oversized
suit that has capacious pockets to accommodate camera lenses,
film plates and flashbulbs. His thick-soled shoes are sensible
to a fault. He wears a hat but no tie.
His face is alert and ironic, his movements rapid and
purposeful.
BERNZY:
(to the Cop, deadpan)
You scared me.
He reaches into his jacket to extract a new 4 x 5 glass film
plate (from a bag of plates hung over his shoulder) with a
well-practised, unhurried speed.
The older cop, O'BRIEN, is annoyed; his comment sounds like
an accusation.
O'BRIEN
We weren't six blocks from here when
it come over the radio.
Bernzy is lining up another shot; he speaks from behind both
cigar and camera.
BERNZY:
I killed him. To get the pictures.
The Young Cop has entered. Bernzy waves him back.
BERNZY:
You're casting a shadow.
He backs up, obligingly. Bernzy takes his shot.
The Young Cop kneels by the corpse. He finds a gun in the
waist-band of its suit trousers.
YOUNG COP:
(to O'Brien)
Second one this week.
O'BRIEN
(to Bernzy)
Who'd this guy work for, Bernzy?
But Bernzy hears a car pulling up outside, a car door
slamming. He peers down into the street through the window.
BERNZY'S POV:
Another Photographer is arriving. He crosses the street,
lugging a press camera.
O'BRIEN
Bernzy!
BERNZY:
I think Farinelli. But he's not
lookin' his best tonight... Could
you move his hat closer?
O'BRIEN
What?
BERNZY:
His hat. The hat. People like to see
a dead guy's hat.
O'Brien grudgingly picks up the hat, drops it closer to the
corpse.
The flashbulb fires.
CUT TO:
EXT. ALLEY - NIGHT
Bernzy, in the alley alongside the building, is hunched over
the open trunk of his sedan on a camp stool.
The car trunk has been turned into a darkroom. The truck
lamp has been replaced with a darkroom bulb. A drying line
is suspended over a shallow tub. (Also in the trunk are two
dozen boxes of Wabash super-flash photo lamps, an open box
of cigars, a pot of glue, various cameras and lenses, and a
tiny, battered typewriter.)
Bernzy looks up into the apartment window as the explosion
of a flashbulb-fills the window.
Bernzy unpins four nearly dry photos on the line, fans them
in the air, lays them face down on the trunk floor, and stamps
their backs with his identifying imprint:
Deco lettering is surround by the stamped outline of an eye,
like something on an optometrist's sign. Around the upper
and lower lids of the eye it says "CREDIT PHOTO TO - THE
GREAT BERNZINI". In the center of the eye it says "THE PUBLIC
EYE"
CUT TO:
INT. DAILY NEWS BUILDING - NIGHT
CLOSE ON a Daily News check, made out to Leon Bernstein. On
a stub, the check is carefully accounted for.
1 Corpse (2 bullets @ $1.50 each)............$3.00
Bernzy, riding down in an elevator, folds the check into his
pocket.
The elevator doors open, Bernzy steps out.
The Photographer we saw leaving Thompson St. steps into the
lobby.
He only has to see Bernzy to know he's too late.
PHOTOGRAPHER:
Sh*t.
CUT TO:
INT./EXT. BERNZY'S SEDAN/STREET - NIGHT
Bernzy drives, his eyes intently scanning the nighttime
street.
A steady, low hiss is emitted from a police radio, that is
gerry-rigged under his dusty dashboard, swaying on its wires.
A metal plate on the radio says FOR POLICE VEHICLES ONLY.
Bernzy's Speed Graphic, with flash, sits on the seat next to
him.
As Bernzy reads every shadow and doorway for potential
pictures,
We see what he sees out the window (buildings and people) in
black and white, slightly overcranked: the POV of Bernzy's
trained eye.
CUT TO:
On the landing of the stairwell, a young Puerto Rican Woman
wails hysterically as two Cops try to calm her down. She's
in her nightgown. A flashbulb fires over her.
The narrow stairway is packed with Policemen and Puerto Rican
neighbors in their T-shirts, pajamas and robes.
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"The Public Eye" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_public_eye_1014>.
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