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To Have and Have Not (film)

To Have and Have Not is a 1944 American romantic war adventure film directed by Howard Hawks, loosely based on Ernest Hemingway's 1937 novel of the same name. It stars Humphrey Bogart, Walter Brennan and Lauren Bacall; it also features Dolores Moran, Hoagy Carmichael, Sheldon Leonard, Dan Seymour, and Marcel Dalio. The plot, centered on the romance between a freelancing fisherman in Martinique and a beautiful American drifter, is complicated by the growing French resistance in Vichy France.

To Have and Have Not
Theatrical release poster
Directed byHoward Hawks
Screenplay byJules Furthman
William Faulkner
Based onTo Have and Have Not
1937 novel
by Ernest Hemingway
Produced byHoward Hawks
Jack L. Warner
StarringHumphrey Bogart
Walter Brennan
Lauren Bacall
Dolores Moran
Hoagy Carmichael
CinematographySidney Hickox
Edited byChristian Nyby
Music byFranz Waxman
William Lava (one cue, uncredited)
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,684,000[1]
Box office$3.65 million (US)[2] or $5,257,000 (worldwide)[1]

Ernest Hemingway and Howard Hawks were close friends and, on a fishing trip, Hawks told Hemingway, who was reluctant to go into screenwriting, that he could make a great movie from his worst book, which Hawks admitted was To Have and Have Not. Jules Furthman wrote the first screenplay, which, like the novel, was set in Cuba. However, the screenplay was altered to be set in Martinique, because the portrayal of Cuba's government was believed to be in violation of the United States' Good Neighbor policy. Hawks's friend William Faulkner was the main contributor to the screenplay, including and following the revisions. Because of the contributions from both Hemingway and Faulkner, it is the only film story on which two winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature worked. Filming began on February 29, 1944, while Faulkner continued to work on the script, and ended on May 10.

The film premiered in New York City on October 11, 1944. Audience reception was generally good. Critic reviews were mixed, with many claiming the film was a remake of Casablanca (1942). Critics specifically mentioned Lauren Bacall's performance or the chemistry between Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall on screen. Bogart and Bacall began an off-screen relationship during production and married in 1945, after the film's release. To Have and Have Not was one of the top 10 grossing films of 1944 and received an award from the National Board of Review.

Plot Edit

 
Bacall, Dalio and Bogart together in Bogart's hotel room

In the summer of 1940, world-weary Harry Morgan operates a sport-fishing boat, the Queen Conch, in Fort-de-France, on the French colony of Martinique. It is not long since the fall of France and the island is under the heavy-handed control of pro-German Vichy France. Harry makes a modest living chartering out to tourists, crewed by his blithering friend Eddie. Harry affectionately looks after Eddie, a one-time top mate reduced to a rummy by alcohol. The island is a tinderbox of dissent, harboring many people sympathetic to Free France.

Harry's current charter client, Johnson, owes Harry $825. Johnson insists he hasn't enough ready money to square his account, but promises to get the funds when the banks open the next day.

Back at his hotel home Harry is approached by its owner, Gérard (known as "Frenchy" to English speakers), who urges Harry to help the French Resistance by smuggling some people onto the island. Harry steadfastly refuses, choosing to keep out of the current political situation. Also at the hotel, Harry first sees Marie ("Slim") Browning, a young American wanderer who has recently arrived on the plane from Rio. Seeking to avoid the advances of a drunken Johnson she volunteers a duet of "Am I Blue" with pianist Cricket and his ensemble in the hotel bar.

A keen observer, Harry notices Slim pick Johnson's pocket, and follows her to her room directly across the hall from his own. He forces her to hand over the wallet, which is found to contain $1,400 in traveler's cheques and a plane ticket for early the next morning before the banks open. On returning the wallet to Johnson, Harry demands that he sign the traveler's cheques to pay him immediately. Just then a shootout in front of the hotel between police and the Resistance spills over into the bar, and Johnson is killed by a stray bullet. The police take Harry and several others for questioning, seizing Johnson's wallet, Harry's passport, and his own money when he proves combative.

Back at the hotel, Gérard offers to hire the now effectively penniless Harry to transport Resistance members Paul de Bursac and his wife Hélène from a nearby islet to Martinique. Harry reluctantly accepts. Meanwhile, a sexually charged romance has been developing between Harry and Slim, who feels Harry is starting to fall for her. Her hopes are shattered when he uses the bulk of the money he earned in transporting the fugitives to buy her a ticket back home to America on the next plane out.

 
Bogart and Bacall, whose onscreen attraction led to an affair, then a long-term marriage

Harry picks up the de Bursacs, but his boat is seen and fired upon by a navy patrol vessel. De Bursac is wounded, but Harry manages to escape and transfer his passengers to a pre-arranged rowboat. When he returns to the hotel, he finds Slim still there, having chosen to stay with him. The de Bursacs are hidden in the basement of the hotel; at Frenchy's request, Harry removes the bullet from Paul's shoulder. He learns the couple have come to Martinique to help a man escape from the penal colony at Devil's Island in order to aid the Free French. De Bursac asks for Harry's assistance in this operation, but Harry respectfully turns him down.

The police return to the hotel and reveal that they recognized Harry's boat the previous night. They also reveal that they have Eddie in custody again, this time withholding liquor from him to get him to reveal the details of the smuggling plot. Cornered in his hotel room by the Vichy authorities, Harry turns the tables, killing one and holding police captain Renard at gunpoint. He forces him to order Eddie's release and sign harbor passes. Harry, Eddie, and Slim then head together for the Queen Conch, with the intention of meeting up with Frenchy and the de Bursacs, to free the man from Devil's Island.

Cast Edit

 
Left to right: Dan Seymour, Aldo Nadi, Humphrey Bogart, Sheldon Leonard, Marcel Dalio and Lauren Bacall in To Have and Have Not
  • Humphrey Bogart as Harry "Steve" Morgan. A nearly immediate casting choice, Bogart was cast by Warner Bros in early 1943.[3]
  • Walter Brennan as Eddie. Hawks met with Brennan for a pre-production conference in December 1943. Brennan's contract was loaned from Goldwyn for $2,500 per week from March to May 1944 to play Eddie. The agreement included that Brennan's name would appear 60 percent of the size of Bogart's name in the credits.[4]
  • Lauren Bacall as Marie "Slim" Browning. At the time of casting, Bacall was an 18-year-old model. She had appeared on the cover of Harper's Bazaar, and was noticed by Hawks' wife, Nancy "Slim" Keith, who showed the cover photo to her husband. Hawks sought Bacall out in April 1943 and signed her for the role, her first movie appearance. In the film, Harry calls her by the nickname "Slim", and she calls him "Steve", the nicknames used between Keith and Hawks.[3] Hawks shot her screen test with contract player John Ridgely in January 1944. Her screen test was the seduction and "whistle" scene.[5] This scene wasn't originally meant to go in the film, but Jack L. Warner told Hawks that he needed to integrate it into the film, and so it was later adapted into the film.[6] After the screen test, Hawks signed his first personal contract with an unknown actress with Bacall.[7] After she turned nineteen, Hawks changed her name from Betty Perske, using a variation of her mother's maiden name "Bacal" for her new surname.[8] Hawks had to decide whether the love interest in the film would be split between two female actresses or rest alone on Bacall. Warner Bros was uninterested in Hawks using Bacall and required Hawks to screen test some of the studio's actresses such as Dolores Moran and Georgette McKee.[9] After the success of Bacall's screen test, however, Hawks was confident in Bacall and believed he just needed to convince Feldman, Warner, and Bogart.[10] Bacall was offered the part in early 1944, with half of her contract belonging to Hawks, half belonging to Warner.[11]
  • Dolores Moran as Mme Hélène de Bursac. Ann Sheridan was considered for the part of Sylvia/Helen when her character had a larger role in the film. With the part of Sylvia/Helen smaller, Moran was cast as a more voluptuous contrast to slender Bacall.[10]
  • Hoagy Carmichael as Cricket. A prominent songwriter, Carmichael was discovered by Hawks at a party. This was his first credited film role.[12] He had previously appeared in Topper.
  • Sheldon Leonard as Lieutenant Coyo.
  • Walter Surovy as Paul de Bursac.
  • Marcel Dalio as Gérard (Frenchy). French actor Dalio had appeared with Bogart as Emil the Croupier in Casablanca.[13]
  • Walter Sande as Johnson, Harry's inept charter client.[14]
  • Dan Seymour as Capitaine Renard. Seymour who played Abdul in Casablanca signed up to play as a Cuban revolutionary and was shocked to notice his character wasn't in the script. Instead, he was given the role of a Vichy policeman, and Hawks insisted he gain weight (he was 300 pounds at the time) as well as sport a slight French accent.[13]
  • Aldo Nadi as Renard's bodyguard
  • Paul Marion as Beauclère
  • Eugene Borden as Quartermaster
  • Patricia Shay as Mrs. Beauclère
  • Emmett Smith as Bartender
  • Pat West as Bartender
  • Cee Pee Johnson as Drummer at Bar du Zombie (uncredited)[15][16]

Production Edit

 
Ernest Hemingway

On a ten-day fishing trip, independent director Howard Hawks tried to persuade Ernest Hemingway to write him a script, but Hemingway was not interested in working in Hollywood. Hawks insisted he could make a film from Hemingway's "worst story".[17] Although Hawks had a high regard for Hemingway's works in general, he considered To Have and Have Not a "bunch of junk" and told Hemingway so.[18][19] Hemingway and Hawks worked on the screenplay during the remainder of the fishing trip. They decided the film would not resemble the novel, but rather would tell the story of how Morgan met Marie. Marie's character was extensively altered for the film.[20]

In May 1939, Hemingway sold the book rights to the Hughes Tool Company, with whom Hawks had connections. Hawks bought the book rights in October 1943, then sold them to Warner Bros.[21] Because the rights to the novel bounced between sellers, Hawks made ten times more money selling the rights than Hemingway did. On learning this, Hemingway reportedly refused to speak to Hawks for "three months".[22] The screenplay for To Have and Have Not bears little resemblance to Hemingway's novel. The only similarities include the title, the name, and a few personality traits of Harry Morgan, the name of Marie, the name of Eddie, and the name and character traits of Johnson. Johnson is the only character that remained the same in the novel, in every revised screenplay, and in the film. The film bears resemblance to only the novel's first four chapters.[23]

Writing Edit

Howard Hawks recruited Jules Furthman to work on the screenplay. Completed on October 12, 1943, the initial screenplay was 207 pages.[24] It resembled the novel more than the final screenplay did.[25] By the end of December, Furthman had completed a revised screenplay with sixty fewer pages.[5] Hawks instructed Furthman to alter Marie's character to be more sultry and masculine like Marlene Dietrich. In the previous version of the script, Bacall's purse was stolen; after the revision, Bacall's character stole the purse.[6] Much of Bacall's character was based on Hawks's wife Slim Keith. Some of her lines reportedly came directly from Keith. According to Keith, Furthman even suggested she ask for script credit.[10] Hawks instructed Furthman to work on the final screenplay and stop writing the second version of the screenplay. The second version had Bacall as a minor character in case she proved to be poor for the role.[26] Furthman worked on the screenplay throughout January and February 1944 and recruited Cleve F. Adams and Whitman Chambers to help him with the work.[27] He completed it before February 14, 1944.[28]

Joseph Breen read the script and cited three dozen instances that violated the Production Code, citing that Morgan was portrayed as an unpunished murderer and the women as suggested prostitutes. He stated that the characters must be softened, the studio must remove all suggestions of inappropriate sexual relations between men and women, and that murder must be made clear to appear as self-defense.[29] As the movie was filmed during World War II, Hawks moved the setting from Cuba to Vichy-controlled Martinique as required by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs to placate the Roosevelt administration. They objected to the unfavorable portrayal of Cuba's government as against the U.S. government's "Good Neighbor" policy toward Latin American nations.[30] Writer William Faulkner was hired on by Hawks on February 22, 1944, to avoid recounting political conflict between Free France and the Vichy government in the story line and to satisfy the Production Code. It was reportedly Faulkner's idea to change the setting of the film to Martinique, because he had been working on an unproduced story line involving Charles de Gaulle, so he was familiar with the details.[31] Furthman stopped writing after Faulkner was brought on the project.[32]

Faulkner and Hemingway never met, but To Have and Have Not is considered by Charles M. Oliver the best adaptation for film of Hemingway's novels.[33] In order to satisfy the Production Code, Faulkner wrote that every character would sleep in the same hotel, but put Morgan and Marie's bedrooms across from each other to facilitate interactions between them as well as reducing Marie's drinking in the film. He also removed scenes in which Morgan appeared to be a murderer. Other additions included Marie becoming Morgan's sole romantic interest and Helen and her husband becoming fighters for the resistance.[29] Finally, Faulkner made the time frame for the film three days instead of the many months depicted in the novel.[34] Hawks intended to have the screenplay be loosely modeled on Casablanca, which also starred Humphrey Bogart, hoping for the same success Casablanca had met at the box office.[31]

Filming Edit

Production began on February 29, 1944, with only 36 pages of the screenplay written, due to changes required by the Production Code office.[35] Faulkner had very little time in between the rebuilding of sets to continue the screenplay, therefore, each scene was written three days before it was filmed.[31] The final cast reading was done on March 6, 1944, with final script changes finished by April 22. Line by line, Hawks and Bogart changed the script to create a more sexual and comedic film.[36] For example, the line "It's even better when you help" was not originally in the script and was added during filming.[5] After 62 days, filming was completed May 10, 1944.[37] Bogart and Hawks served as their own technical advisers because of their experience with fishing and sailing.[38]

After filming began, a romance developed between Bogart and Bacall, despite Hawks's disapproval. Bogart was married and 45 years old, more than twice Bacall's age. They kept their relationship a secret from Hawks.[38] This romance eventually led to Bogart divorcing Mayo Methot, his third wife.[39] He and Bacall married a year after To Have and Have Not and remained married until Bogart's death in 1957.[8] Hawks expanded Bacall's part to take advantage of the Bogart-Bacall chemistry. According to the documentary, "A Love Story: The Story of To Have and Have Not", included on the 2003 DVD release, Hawks recognized the star-making potential of the film for Bacall. He emphasized her role and downplayed Dolores Moran's role, the film's other female lead. (Hawks and Moran had their own affair during production).[40] Two weeks before the end of production, Bacall was called to Hawks's home. Hawks told her Bogart did not love her, and she was in danger of losing career opportunities. After he threatened to send her to B-list Monogram Pictures, Bacall was very upset. She told Bogart, and he became upset with Hawks.[41] This caused an argument between Hawks and Bogart, stunting production for two weeks. Bogart recognized his power and used negotiation to his advantage. After negotiating with Warner, Bogart received an extra $33,000 salary, as long as Bogart promised to no longer stall production.[42]

Direction Edit

In her autobiography, Lauren Bacall described what she called Hawks's "brilliantly creative work method" on set. She described that every morning on set, Hawks would sit with Bacall, Bogart, and whoever else was in the scene in chairs in a circle as a script girl read the scene. After reading through the scene, Hawks would add sexual dialogue and innuendo between Bacall and Bogart. After Hawks and Bogart felt the changes were adequate, Hawks would add one light on the set and they would go through the scene. Hawks would encourage them to move freely and do what felt comfortable for them. After going through the scenes a few times, cinematographer Sidney Hickox would discuss camera set ups with Hawks.[43]

According to biographer Todd McCarthy, To Have and Have Not is a quintessential Hawks film. It contains classic Hawksian characters such as the strong male and his female counterpart. He also states that although elements of Hemingway, Faulkner, and Casablanca can be found in the film, it represents Hawks's capacity for expression, claiming it is, "beyond doubt, exactly the work its director intended it to be, and would have been nothing like this in the hands of anyone else."[44]

Music Edit

Cricket, the piano player in the hotel bar, was played by the singer-songwriter Hoagy Carmichael. In the course of the movie, Cricket and Slim perform "How Little We Know", by Carmichael and Johnny Mercer, and "Am I Blue?", by Harry Akst and Grant Clarke. Cricket and the band also perform "Hong Kong Blues", by Carmichael and Stanley Adams. "The Rhumba Jumps", by Mercer and Carmichael, is performed by the hotel band. Bacall shimmies out at the end of the movie to a faster "How Little We Know".[45] The song "Baltimore Oriole" was intended to be Bacall's theme for the movie, but was merely added as background music on the soundtrack due to Bacall's vocal inexperience.[46] Background music or nondiegetic music is minimal in the picture.[47] However, the film score including the main title was composed by Franz Waxman.[48] One music cue, 7b, is credited to William Lava on the original cue sheet. William Lava was a music staffer at Warner Bros who regularly contributed additional cues.[49]

According to professor of film studies Ian Brookes, Howard Hawks uses jazz, particularly through interracial performance scenes, to underscore anti-fascism in the story line of the film.[50] A persistent myth is that a teenage Andy Williams, the future singing star, dubbed the singing for Bacall. According to authoritative sources, including Hawks and Bacall, this was not true. Williams and some female singers were tested to dub for Bacall because of fears she lacked the necessary vocal skills. But those fears were overshadowed by the desire to have Bacall do her own singing (perhaps championed by Bogart) despite her less than perfect vocal talent.[51] This myth is disputed in Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide entry for this film, but the myth is propagated in a 1986 episode of MacGyver, entitled "Three for the Road", when the character of a movie veteran asks his wife this particular question, whereupon she answers that Andy Williams, when 14, did dub the voice for Lauren Bacall.[52][53] Several sources on the film set have stated this myth is false.[54] In fact, Bacall's low singing voice in the film helps her character establish a form of masculine dominance.[55]

Cultural references Edit

In one scene, Marie says to Morgan, "I'm hard to get, Steve. All you have to do is ask me." This quote came from the earlier 1939 Hawks film Only Angels Have Wings in which Jean Arthur says to Cary Grant, "I'm hard to get, Geoff. All you have to do is ask me."[56]

Release Edit

Warner Bros. released To Have and Have Not on October 11, 1944.[57][58]

Reception Edit

The critical reception of To Have and Have Not at the time of release was mixed and often unflattering. Early publicity and much of the initial reaction focused on Lauren Bacall, either praising her or criticizing her part as merely a gimmick for attention from the press. Some also faulted the film's unfaithfulness to Hemingway, as only the first fifteen minutes resemble his novel. Further, Americans preoccupied with World War II may have had little interest in a hero (Morgan) who consistently rejects commitment and whose only interest in France's cause is financial, to help himself and his girl (Marie).[59] Overall, critics called the film a fast, witty romance whose plot was merely "an excuse for some good scenes".[60] Variety cited its inferiority to Casablanca and other Warner Bros. melodramas, but acknowledged the new film's success in its characterization.[61] Others even considered it a Casablanca remake; Time called it a "tinny romantic melodrama which millions of cinemaddicts have been waiting for ever since Casablanca."[60] New York Variety was more mixed, citing "nifty productional accoutrements" but "too unsteady" a story line.[60] The American film critic James Agee liked the film but felt Going My Way was better, because To Have and Have Not focused too much on "character and atmosphere" rather than on plot.[62] He was far more interested in Bacall's performance than the anti-Fascist themes in the film.[63]

The film was one of the top 10 grossing pictures of 1944. According to Warner Bros records the film earned $3,652,000 ($60,710,000 in 2023 terms) domestically and $1,605,000 ($26,680,000 in 2023 terms) foreign, coming close to the high earnings of Casablanca.[64]

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, To Have and Have Not has a 95% approval rating based on 37 reviews and an average rating of 8.10/10. The critical consensus states, "With Howard Hawks directing and Bogey and Bacall in front of the cameras, To Have and Have Not benefits from several levels of fine-tuned chemistry—all of which ignite on screen."[65]

Awards Edit

Analysis Edit

Screenwriter and film critic Paul Schrader classified the film as noir, made during the first or "wartime" period of film noir.[66] Some other scholars categorize the film as noir, while some don't believe Howard Hawks ever made a true "noir".[67] The names of the characters in To Have and Have Not are directly related to the quality of the characters. Characters that are meant to elicit sympathy from the viewer are known by their nicknames: Steve, Slim, Eddie, Frenchy, and Cricket. In this way, Hawks creates the illusion of a character by devoiding it of past and present social roles that may be associated with a surname. Villains or corrupted characters are called by their surnames such as Johnson.[68]

Anti-fascism Edit

According to English film critic Robin Wood, To Have and Have Not presents "one of the most basic anti-fascist statements the cinema has given us."[69] The film portrays anti-fascist themes common to the time period through its emphasis on individual liberty expressed through Bogart's character and through its representation of people progressing and working together well.[70] When he decides to join the resistance cause, Morgan reasons, "maybe because I like you and maybe because I don't like them." The power of this anti-fascist statement comes because it's instinctive rather than coming from an expected ideology.[71] More generally, Hawks expresses a protest of authoritarianism and infringement of individual rights. Hawks, however, claimed he wasn't interested in politics and the focus of the movie was on the relationship between Bogart and Bacall. Regardless, the anti-fascist themes come through in the relationship between Bogart and Bacall. They represent the individual standing up to those who abuse their power.[72] According to Ian Brookes, during the scene where Bacall sings "Am I Blue?" with Hoagy Carmichael, her low-voice establishes herself as "one of the boys" and thus a "soldier" in the anti-fascist cause.[73] Moreover, during this scene, the patrons at the bar represent different races and are racially integrated throughout the space, challenging the ideas of segregation and race during the time period.[74] The next song, Hong Kong Blues is reminiscent of Django Reinhardt's pre-war version. This represents French resistance spirit as swing music became a symbol of resistance in France, because it was the only available example of American culture in France at the time.[75]

Harry Morgan Edit

A common theme of war films such as To Have and Have Not is the conversion narrative. An individual who originally does not want to be involved in the war effort eventually becomes converted through a changed attitude and accepts their duty as a citizen to participate in the war efforts. Along with Harry Morgan's transformation, the Humphrey Bogart persona changed along the years, making him an important casting decision for the film.[76] Harry Morgan, the fisherman, represents the center of the story line of To Have and Have Not. According to Robin Wood, Harry Morgan represents, at the same time, the personality of Humphrey Bogart and the Hawksian hero.[77] Harry Morgan as a character represents a myth the audience accepts as real such as the heroes of Homer. Morgan represents the heroic ideal.[78] Morgan acts on his own interests, yet is not self-indulgent, minding his "own business". He does good because of the responsibility he feels he has for his personal alliances.[78] Morgan controls and establishes the morality of the film through the distinctness of what one does and what one is. Bogart's character establishes that one's personal identity is not determined by one's actions if they do not allow it to happen. In the film, Slim steals Johnson's wallet. Harry overlooks this to a point because he (Johnson) did not pay Morgan for his services as a boat captain. When they are both approached by Morgan, Slim shows no shame, indicating her morality was not affected by her actions. Johnson, however, shows shame and doesn't receive sympathy because he reveals he is defined by his actions.[79] Bogart's character is direct and blunt, yet makes an effort to not judge a person by their actions.[72] Harry Morgan encompasses the qualities of the "Hawksian" hero due to his personal integrity, and at the same time, could be described as a Hemingway code hero because of his courage and loyalty.[80]

One of the biggest differences between the film and the novel is the resolution of Harry Morgan. In the novel, Morgan is beaten down through the story line and perishes in the end. In the film, however, Morgan ends up a winner. This was specifically altered by Hawks because he did not like stories about "losers".[81]

Legacy Edit

With some regarding To Have and Have Not as one of Hawks's best, the film represents the only time two Nobel Prize winners, Faulkner and Hemingway, worked on the same film story.[82] Some of Bacall's lines became renowned as double entendre; for instance, "You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and ... blow ..." (said while looking at him provocatively). This quote is ranked at #34 on AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes list.[83] When Humphrey Bogart was buried, Bacall put a gold whistle with the inscription "If you want anything, just whistle" in his coffin, a nod to her line in their first film together.[84]

Influences and adaptations Edit

To Have and Have Not is noted for its similarity to earlier films Casablanca (1942), Morocco (1930), and Across the Pacific (1942).[85] There are some similarities to the plot of the earlier Casablanca, and both stories involve the French Resistance. Other changes from Hemingway tended in the same direction, such as the introduction of a sympathetic piano player as an important supporting character. Carmichael's Cricket was not in the Hemingway book, and parallels Dooley Wilson's Sam in Casablanca. Several cast members from Casablanca also appear in the film; apart from Bogart and Dalio (Emil in Casablanca), Dan Seymour (Abdul in Casablanca) plays Captain Renard, whose name and position resemble Captain Renault in Casablanca. As in Casablanca, Bogart's initially reluctant character assists husband-and-wife Resistance members.

To Have and Have Not was adapted as an hour-long radio play for Lux Radio Theater, with Bogart and Bacall reprising their screen roles. It was broadcast on October 14, 1946.[86]

Warner Brothers adapted the novel a second time with the film The Breaking Point (1950) directed by Michael Curtiz, who was also credited for Casablanca. This screenplay stayed closer to the novel; it bore little resemblance to the 1944 film.[87] Screenwriter Ranald MacDougall and Curtiz were interested in creating a film better modeled after Hemingway's novel. The film did not remotely resemble Casablanca.[88] Despite the film's faithfulness to the novel, it remains less popular than To Have and Have Not, though Hemingway said the remake, "suited him".[89] The film was remade another time in 1958 by director Don Siegel as The Gun Runners. Siegel was reluctant to remake the film, but "needed the money".[90] The film was shot quickly and cheaply. According to author Gene D. Phillips, The Gun Runners was nothing more than a "crass exploitation of the Hemingway book".[91]

From 1951 to 1952, Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall participated in a weekly, half-hour radio adventure series called Bold Venture, intended to be a spin-off of To Have and Have Not.[92][93]

Bacall to Arms is a 1946 Looney Tunes short, spoofing scenes from To Have and Have Not, and featuring "Bogey Gocart" and "Laurie Bee Cool." It is included as a Special Feature on the DVD release of To Have and Have Not.[94]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 25 doi:10.1080/01439689508604551
  2. ^ Schatz, Thomas (1999). Boom and Bust: American Cinema in the 1940s. Uni of California Press. p. 220. ISBN 0-520-22130-3.
  3. ^ a b Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 18; Bacall 1978, p. 18
  4. ^ Rollyson 2015, p. 109.
  5. ^ a b c McCarthy 1997, p. 366.
  6. ^ a b Schickel 1975, pp. 116–117.
  7. ^ Bacall 1978, p. 83.
  8. ^ a b "Lauren Bacall: A Screen Goddess of the Shadows" (PDF). Kuwait Times. August 14, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2018.
  9. ^ Behlmer 1985, p. 236.
  10. ^ a b c McCarthy 1997, p. 367.
  11. ^ Bacall 1978, p. 92.
  12. ^ Mast 1982, p. 256.
  13. ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 368; Sperber & Lax 1997, p. 254
  14. ^ Mast 1982, p. 255.
  15. ^ "Cee Pee Johnson at Warners with Bogart". The California Eagle. March 16, 1944. Page 13. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  16. ^ "Jazz On the Screen: A Jazz and Blues Filmography". Library of Congress. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  17. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, pp. 15–16.
  18. ^ Hawks telling Hemingway he could film his worst book and this one was "a bunch of junk": interview with Hawks by Joseph McBride for the Directors' Guild of America, October 21–23, 1977, private publication of the Directors' Guild, p. 21; quoted at length in Mast, p. 243.
  19. ^ You Must Remember This (retrospective for Warner Brothers' 85th anniversary), American Masters, PBS, broadcast September 23, 2008.
  20. ^ Bacall 1978, p. 18.
  21. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 16.
  22. ^ Phillips 1980, p. 51.
  23. ^ Mast 1982, p. 245.
  24. ^ McCarthy 1997, p. 362.
  25. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 19.
  26. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, pp. 18–19.
  27. ^ McCarthy 1997, p. 369.
  28. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 27.
  29. ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 370.
  30. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 31.
  31. ^ a b c Phillips 1980, p. 52.
  32. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 28.
  33. ^ Oliver 1999, p. 95.
  34. ^ McCarthy 1997, p. 371.
  35. ^ Sperber & Lax 1997, p. 254.
  36. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, pp. 32, 35.
  37. ^ Sperber & Lax 1997, p. 268; Furthman & Faulkner 1980, pp. 32, 35
  38. ^ a b Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 39.
  39. ^ Behlmer 1985, p. 245.
  40. ^ Thomson 2012, p. 173.
  41. ^ Sperber & Lax 1997, p. 263.
  42. ^ Sperber & Lax 1997, p. 264.
  43. ^ Bacall 1978, p. 96.
  44. ^ McCarthy 1997, p. 756.
  45. ^ rauloparedes (November 1, 2010). "Lauren Bacall "To Have and Have Not"". Archived from the original on December 13, 2021 – via YouTube.
  46. ^ Sudhalter 2002, pp. 237–238.
  47. ^ Neumeyer 2004.
  48. ^ Behlmer, Rudy. "Music For Performance: To Have and Have Not 1944". Franz Waxman. Fidelio Music Publishing Company. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  49. ^ Neumeyer, David (2015). Meaning and Interpretation of Music in Cinema. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 274 n53.
  50. ^ Brookes 2016, p. 177.
  51. ^ McBride, Joseph. Hawks on Hawks. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1982. p. 130.
  52. ^ "To Have and Have Not". Turner Classic Movies. Turner Classic Movies, Inc. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  53. ^ Zlotoff, Lee David; Lenhart, Kerry; Sakmar, John J. (December 1986). "'Three for the Road'". MacGyver. ABC.
  54. ^ Hagen, Ray (January 2, 2000). "'Dubbing' Bacall; It Says It Right Here". The New York Times. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  55. ^ McLean 1993, p. 4.
  56. ^ Dibbern 2016, pp. 232, 239.
  57. ^ Oliver 1999, p. 327
  58. ^ "Adverstisement". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. October 11, 1944. Retrieved July 31, 2018.
  59. ^ Wood 1981, p. 25.
  60. ^ a b c Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 50.
  61. ^ "To Have and Have Not". Variety. October 11, 1944. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  62. ^ a b Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 51.
  63. ^ Sinyard 1986, p. 88.
  64. ^ Glancy 1995, p. 64.
  65. ^ "To Have and Have Not". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
  66. ^ Schrader 1972.
  67. ^ Brook 2009; Wood 1973; Lennard 2012, p. 19
  68. ^ Wood 1976, p. 299.
  69. ^ Wood 1981, p. 86.
  70. ^ Furthman & Faulkner 1980, p. 53; Wood 1981, p. 26
  71. ^ Brookes 2009, p. 209.
  72. ^ a b Wood 1981, p. 29.
  73. ^ Brookes 2016, p. 209.
  74. ^ Brookes 2016, p. 210.
  75. ^ Brookes 2016, p. 211.
  76. ^ Brookes 2016, p. 207.
  77. ^ Wood 1981, p. 26.
  78. ^ a b Wood 1981, p. 27.
  79. ^ Wood 1981, p. 28.
  80. ^ Phillips 1980, p. 54.
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  82. ^ Branson 1987, p. 154; Phillips 1980, p. 50
  83. ^ "AFI's 100 Greatest Movie Quotes of All Time". American Film Institute. American Film Institute. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
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  86. ^ "Bacall & Bogart Lux Theatre Stars". Harrisburg Telegraph. Harrisburg Telegraph. October 12, 1946. p. 17. Retrieved October 1, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  87. ^ Valladares, Carlos (October 25, 2017). "'The Breaking Point' is a more brutally honest 'Casablanca'". The Stanford Daily. Stanford University, Stanford, Cal. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
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General bibliography Edit

  • Bacall, Lauren (1978). Lauren Bacall by myself. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0394413082.
  • Behlmer, Rudy (1985). Inside Warner Bros. (1935-1951). New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 978-0670804788.
  • Branson, Clark (1987). Howard Hawks; A Jungian Study. Los Angeles: Garland Projects. ISBN 978-0884962618.
  • Brook, Vincent (2009). Driven to Darkness: Jewish Emigre Directors and the Rise of Film Noir. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813546292.
  • Brookes, Ian (2016). "'More Than Just Dance Music':Hawks and Jazz in the 1940s". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. Palgrave. p. 177. ISBN 9781844575411.
  • Brookes, Ian (2009). Lock, Graham; Murray, David (eds.). Thriving on a Riff: Jazz & Blues Influences in African American Literature and Film. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195337099.
  • Dibbern, Doug (2016). "Irresolvable Circularity: Narrative Closure and Nihilism in Only Angels Have Wings". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. Palgrave. ISBN 9781844575411.
  • Furthman, Jules; Faulkner, William (1980). Kawin, Bruce F. (ed.). To Have and Have Not. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299080945.
  • Glancy, H. Mark (1995). "Warner Bros Film Grosses, 1921-51: the William Schaefer ledger". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. 15 (1): 64. doi:10.1080/01439689500260031.
  • Lennard, John (2012). Reading William Faulkner: 'Go Down, Moses' and 'Big Woods'. Penrith, CA: Humanities-Ebooks. p. 19. ISBN 9781847601988. Retrieved September 25, 2018.
  • Mast, Gerald (1982). Howard Hawks, Storyteller. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195030914.
  • McCarthy, Todd (1997). Howard Hawks: The Grey Fox of Hollywood. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 978-0802115980.
  • McLean, Adrienne L. (Fall 1993). ""It's Only That I Do What I Love and Love What I Do": "Film Noir" and the Musical Woman". Cinema Journal. 33 (1): 4. doi:10.2307/1225631. JSTOR 1225631. ProQuest 1298009864.
  • Neumeyer, David (Spring 2004). "Merging Genres in the 1940s: The Musical and the Dramatic Feature Film". American Music. 22 (1): 129. doi:10.2307/3592971. JSTOR 3592971.
  • Oliver, Charles M. (1999). Ernest Hemingway A to Z: The Essential Reference to the Life and Work. New York: Checkmark Books. ISBN 978-0816034673.
  • Phillips, Gene D. (1980). Hemingway and Film. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0804426954.
  • Rollyson, Carl (2015). A Real American Character: The Life of Walter Brennan. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781628460476.
  • Schickel, Richard (1975). The Men Who Made The Movies. New York: Atheneum. ISBN 978-0689106316.
  • Schrader, Paul (Spring 1972). "Notes on Film Noir". Film Comment. 8 (1). ProQuest 210264800.
  • Sinyard, Neil (1986). Filming Literature: The Art of Screen Adaptation. Kent, UK: Croom Helm. p. 88. ISBN 978-0709933465. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  • Sperber, A.M.; Lax, Eric (1997). Bogart. New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 978-0688075392.
  • Sudhalter, Richard M. (2002). Stardust Melody: The Life and Music of Hoagy Carmichael. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195131207.
  • Thomson, David (October 16, 2012). The Big Screen: The Story of the Movies. Macmillan. ISBN 9780374191894 – via Google Books.
  • Wood, Robin (1976). "To Have (Written) and Have Not (Directed)". In Nichols, Bill (ed.). Movies and Methods: An Anthology. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520031517. Retrieved July 27, 2018.
  • Wood, Robin (1981). Howard Hawks. United Kingdom: British Film Institute. ISBN 978-0851701110.
  • Wood, Robin (1973). "To Have (Written) and Have Not (Directed)". Film Comment. 9 (3).

External links Edit

Streaming audio Edit

have, have, film, have, have, 1944, american, romantic, adventure, film, directed, howard, hawks, loosely, based, ernest, hemingway, 1937, novel, same, name, stars, humphrey, bogart, walter, brennan, lauren, bacall, also, features, dolores, moran, hoagy, carmi. To Have and Have Not is a 1944 American romantic war adventure film directed by Howard Hawks loosely based on Ernest Hemingway s 1937 novel of the same name It stars Humphrey Bogart Walter Brennan and Lauren Bacall it also features Dolores Moran Hoagy Carmichael Sheldon Leonard Dan Seymour and Marcel Dalio The plot centered on the romance between a freelancing fisherman in Martinique and a beautiful American drifter is complicated by the growing French resistance in Vichy France To Have and Have NotTheatrical release posterDirected byHoward HawksScreenplay byJules FurthmanWilliam FaulknerBased onTo Have and Have Not1937 novelby Ernest HemingwayProduced byHoward HawksJack L WarnerStarringHumphrey BogartWalter BrennanLauren BacallDolores MoranHoagy CarmichaelCinematographySidney HickoxEdited byChristian NybyMusic byFranz Waxman William Lava one cue uncredited Distributed byWarner Bros Release datesOctober 11 1944 1944 10 11 New York City premiere Running time100 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 684 000 1 Box office 3 65 million US 2 or 5 257 000 worldwide 1 Ernest Hemingway and Howard Hawks were close friends and on a fishing trip Hawks told Hemingway who was reluctant to go into screenwriting that he could make a great movie from his worst book which Hawks admitted was To Have and Have Not Jules Furthman wrote the first screenplay which like the novel was set in Cuba However the screenplay was altered to be set in Martinique because the portrayal of Cuba s government was believed to be in violation of the United States Good Neighbor policy Hawks s friend William Faulkner was the main contributor to the screenplay including and following the revisions Because of the contributions from both Hemingway and Faulkner it is the only film story on which two winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature worked Filming began on February 29 1944 while Faulkner continued to work on the script and ended on May 10 The film premiered in New York City on October 11 1944 Audience reception was generally good Critic reviews were mixed with many claiming the film was a remake of Casablanca 1942 Critics specifically mentioned Lauren Bacall s performance or the chemistry between Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall on screen Bogart and Bacall began an off screen relationship during production and married in 1945 after the film s release To Have and Have Not was one of the top 10 grossing films of 1944 and received an award from the National Board of Review Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Writing 3 2 Filming 3 3 Direction 3 4 Music 3 5 Cultural references 4 Release 5 Reception 6 Awards 7 Analysis 7 1 Anti fascism 7 2 Harry Morgan 8 Legacy 9 Influences and adaptations 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 General bibliography 11 External links 11 1 Streaming audioPlot Edit nbsp Bacall Dalio and Bogart together in Bogart s hotel roomIn the summer of 1940 world weary Harry Morgan operates a sport fishing boat the Queen Conch in Fort de France on the French colony of Martinique It is not long since the fall of France and the island is under the heavy handed control of pro German Vichy France Harry makes a modest living chartering out to tourists crewed by his blithering friend Eddie Harry affectionately looks after Eddie a one time top mate reduced to a rummy by alcohol The island is a tinderbox of dissent harboring many people sympathetic to Free France Harry s current charter client Johnson owes Harry 825 Johnson insists he hasn t enough ready money to square his account but promises to get the funds when the banks open the next day Back at his hotel home Harry is approached by its owner Gerard known as Frenchy to English speakers who urges Harry to help the French Resistance by smuggling some people onto the island Harry steadfastly refuses choosing to keep out of the current political situation Also at the hotel Harry first sees Marie Slim Browning a young American wanderer who has recently arrived on the plane from Rio Seeking to avoid the advances of a drunken Johnson she volunteers a duet of Am I Blue with pianist Cricket and his ensemble in the hotel bar A keen observer Harry notices Slim pick Johnson s pocket and follows her to her room directly across the hall from his own He forces her to hand over the wallet which is found to contain 1 400 in traveler s cheques and a plane ticket for early the next morning before the banks open On returning the wallet to Johnson Harry demands that he sign the traveler s cheques to pay him immediately Just then a shootout in front of the hotel between police and the Resistance spills over into the bar and Johnson is killed by a stray bullet The police take Harry and several others for questioning seizing Johnson s wallet Harry s passport and his own money when he proves combative Back at the hotel Gerard offers to hire the now effectively penniless Harry to transport Resistance members Paul de Bursac and his wife Helene from a nearby islet to Martinique Harry reluctantly accepts Meanwhile a sexually charged romance has been developing between Harry and Slim who feels Harry is starting to fall for her Her hopes are shattered when he uses the bulk of the money he earned in transporting the fugitives to buy her a ticket back home to America on the next plane out nbsp Bogart and Bacall whose onscreen attraction led to an affair then a long term marriageHarry picks up the de Bursacs but his boat is seen and fired upon by a navy patrol vessel De Bursac is wounded but Harry manages to escape and transfer his passengers to a pre arranged rowboat When he returns to the hotel he finds Slim still there having chosen to stay with him The de Bursacs are hidden in the basement of the hotel at Frenchy s request Harry removes the bullet from Paul s shoulder He learns the couple have come to Martinique to help a man escape from the penal colony at Devil s Island in order to aid the Free French De Bursac asks for Harry s assistance in this operation but Harry respectfully turns him down The police return to the hotel and reveal that they recognized Harry s boat the previous night They also reveal that they have Eddie in custody again this time withholding liquor from him to get him to reveal the details of the smuggling plot Cornered in his hotel room by the Vichy authorities Harry turns the tables killing one and holding police captain Renard at gunpoint He forces him to order Eddie s release and sign harbor passes Harry Eddie and Slim then head together for the Queen Conch with the intention of meeting up with Frenchy and the de Bursacs to free the man from Devil s Island Cast Edit nbsp Left to right Dan Seymour Aldo Nadi Humphrey Bogart Sheldon Leonard Marcel Dalio and Lauren Bacall in To Have and Have NotHumphrey Bogart as Harry Steve Morgan A nearly immediate casting choice Bogart was cast by Warner Bros in early 1943 3 Walter Brennan as Eddie Hawks met with Brennan for a pre production conference in December 1943 Brennan s contract was loaned from Goldwyn for 2 500 per week from March to May 1944 to play Eddie The agreement included that Brennan s name would appear 60 percent of the size of Bogart s name in the credits 4 Lauren Bacall as Marie Slim Browning At the time of casting Bacall was an 18 year old model She had appeared on the cover of Harper s Bazaar and was noticed by Hawks wife Nancy Slim Keith who showed the cover photo to her husband Hawks sought Bacall out in April 1943 and signed her for the role her first movie appearance In the film Harry calls her by the nickname Slim and she calls him Steve the nicknames used between Keith and Hawks 3 Hawks shot her screen test with contract player John Ridgely in January 1944 Her screen test was the seduction and whistle scene 5 This scene wasn t originally meant to go in the film but Jack L Warner told Hawks that he needed to integrate it into the film and so it was later adapted into the film 6 After the screen test Hawks signed his first personal contract with an unknown actress with Bacall 7 After she turned nineteen Hawks changed her name from Betty Perske using a variation of her mother s maiden name Bacal for her new surname 8 Hawks had to decide whether the love interest in the film would be split between two female actresses or rest alone on Bacall Warner Bros was uninterested in Hawks using Bacall and required Hawks to screen test some of the studio s actresses such as Dolores Moran and Georgette McKee 9 After the success of Bacall s screen test however Hawks was confident in Bacall and believed he just needed to convince Feldman Warner and Bogart 10 Bacall was offered the part in early 1944 with half of her contract belonging to Hawks half belonging to Warner 11 Dolores Moran as Mme Helene de Bursac Ann Sheridan was considered for the part of Sylvia Helen when her character had a larger role in the film With the part of Sylvia Helen smaller Moran was cast as a more voluptuous contrast to slender Bacall 10 Hoagy Carmichael as Cricket A prominent songwriter Carmichael was discovered by Hawks at a party This was his first credited film role 12 He had previously appeared in Topper Sheldon Leonard as Lieutenant Coyo Walter Surovy as Paul de Bursac Marcel Dalio as Gerard Frenchy French actor Dalio had appeared with Bogart as Emil the Croupier in Casablanca 13 Walter Sande as Johnson Harry s inept charter client 14 Dan Seymour as Capitaine Renard Seymour who played Abdul in Casablanca signed up to play as a Cuban revolutionary and was shocked to notice his character wasn t in the script Instead he was given the role of a Vichy policeman and Hawks insisted he gain weight he was 300 pounds at the time as well as sport a slight French accent 13 Aldo Nadi as Renard s bodyguard Paul Marion as Beauclere Eugene Borden as Quartermaster Patricia Shay as Mrs Beauclere Emmett Smith as Bartender Pat West as Bartender Cee Pee Johnson as Drummer at Bar du Zombie uncredited 15 16 Production Edit nbsp Ernest HemingwayOn a ten day fishing trip independent director Howard Hawks tried to persuade Ernest Hemingway to write him a script but Hemingway was not interested in working in Hollywood Hawks insisted he could make a film from Hemingway s worst story 17 Although Hawks had a high regard for Hemingway s works in general he considered To Have and Have Not a bunch of junk and told Hemingway so 18 19 Hemingway and Hawks worked on the screenplay during the remainder of the fishing trip They decided the film would not resemble the novel but rather would tell the story of how Morgan met Marie Marie s character was extensively altered for the film 20 In May 1939 Hemingway sold the book rights to the Hughes Tool Company with whom Hawks had connections Hawks bought the book rights in October 1943 then sold them to Warner Bros 21 Because the rights to the novel bounced between sellers Hawks made ten times more money selling the rights than Hemingway did On learning this Hemingway reportedly refused to speak to Hawks for three months 22 The screenplay for To Have and Have Not bears little resemblance to Hemingway s novel The only similarities include the title the name and a few personality traits of Harry Morgan the name of Marie the name of Eddie and the name and character traits of Johnson Johnson is the only character that remained the same in the novel in every revised screenplay and in the film The film bears resemblance to only the novel s first four chapters 23 Writing Edit Howard Hawks recruited Jules Furthman to work on the screenplay Completed on October 12 1943 the initial screenplay was 207 pages 24 It resembled the novel more than the final screenplay did 25 By the end of December Furthman had completed a revised screenplay with sixty fewer pages 5 Hawks instructed Furthman to alter Marie s character to be more sultry and masculine like Marlene Dietrich In the previous version of the script Bacall s purse was stolen after the revision Bacall s character stole the purse 6 Much of Bacall s character was based on Hawks s wife Slim Keith Some of her lines reportedly came directly from Keith According to Keith Furthman even suggested she ask for script credit 10 Hawks instructed Furthman to work on the final screenplay and stop writing the second version of the screenplay The second version had Bacall as a minor character in case she proved to be poor for the role 26 Furthman worked on the screenplay throughout January and February 1944 and recruited Cleve F Adams and Whitman Chambers to help him with the work 27 He completed it before February 14 1944 28 Joseph Breen read the script and cited three dozen instances that violated the Production Code citing that Morgan was portrayed as an unpunished murderer and the women as suggested prostitutes He stated that the characters must be softened the studio must remove all suggestions of inappropriate sexual relations between men and women and that murder must be made clear to appear as self defense 29 As the movie was filmed during World War II Hawks moved the setting from Cuba to Vichy controlled Martinique as required by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter American Affairs to placate the Roosevelt administration They objected to the unfavorable portrayal of Cuba s government as against the U S government s Good Neighbor policy toward Latin American nations 30 Writer William Faulkner was hired on by Hawks on February 22 1944 to avoid recounting political conflict between Free France and the Vichy government in the story line and to satisfy the Production Code It was reportedly Faulkner s idea to change the setting of the film to Martinique because he had been working on an unproduced story line involving Charles de Gaulle so he was familiar with the details 31 Furthman stopped writing after Faulkner was brought on the project 32 Faulkner and Hemingway never met but To Have and Have Not is considered by Charles M Oliver the best adaptation for film of Hemingway s novels 33 In order to satisfy the Production Code Faulkner wrote that every character would sleep in the same hotel but put Morgan and Marie s bedrooms across from each other to facilitate interactions between them as well as reducing Marie s drinking in the film He also removed scenes in which Morgan appeared to be a murderer Other additions included Marie becoming Morgan s sole romantic interest and Helen and her husband becoming fighters for the resistance 29 Finally Faulkner made the time frame for the film three days instead of the many months depicted in the novel 34 Hawks intended to have the screenplay be loosely modeled on Casablanca which also starred Humphrey Bogart hoping for the same success Casablanca had met at the box office 31 Filming Edit Production began on February 29 1944 with only 36 pages of the screenplay written due to changes required by the Production Code office 35 Faulkner had very little time in between the rebuilding of sets to continue the screenplay therefore each scene was written three days before it was filmed 31 The final cast reading was done on March 6 1944 with final script changes finished by April 22 Line by line Hawks and Bogart changed the script to create a more sexual and comedic film 36 For example the line It s even better when you help was not originally in the script and was added during filming 5 After 62 days filming was completed May 10 1944 37 Bogart and Hawks served as their own technical advisers because of their experience with fishing and sailing 38 After filming began a romance developed between Bogart and Bacall despite Hawks s disapproval Bogart was married and 45 years old more than twice Bacall s age They kept their relationship a secret from Hawks 38 This romance eventually led to Bogart divorcing Mayo Methot his third wife 39 He and Bacall married a year after To Have and Have Not and remained married until Bogart s death in 1957 8 Hawks expanded Bacall s part to take advantage of the Bogart Bacall chemistry According to the documentary A Love Story The Story of To Have and Have Not included on the 2003 DVD release Hawks recognized the star making potential of the film for Bacall He emphasized her role and downplayed Dolores Moran s role the film s other female lead Hawks and Moran had their own affair during production 40 Two weeks before the end of production Bacall was called to Hawks s home Hawks told her Bogart did not love her and she was in danger of losing career opportunities After he threatened to send her to B list Monogram Pictures Bacall was very upset She told Bogart and he became upset with Hawks 41 This caused an argument between Hawks and Bogart stunting production for two weeks Bogart recognized his power and used negotiation to his advantage After negotiating with Warner Bogart received an extra 33 000 salary as long as Bogart promised to no longer stall production 42 Direction Edit In her autobiography Lauren Bacall described what she called Hawks s brilliantly creative work method on set She described that every morning on set Hawks would sit with Bacall Bogart and whoever else was in the scene in chairs in a circle as a script girl read the scene After reading through the scene Hawks would add sexual dialogue and innuendo between Bacall and Bogart After Hawks and Bogart felt the changes were adequate Hawks would add one light on the set and they would go through the scene Hawks would encourage them to move freely and do what felt comfortable for them After going through the scenes a few times cinematographer Sidney Hickox would discuss camera set ups with Hawks 43 According to biographer Todd McCarthy To Have and Have Not is a quintessential Hawks film It contains classic Hawksian characters such as the strong male and his female counterpart He also states that although elements of Hemingway Faulkner and Casablanca can be found in the film it represents Hawks s capacity for expression claiming it is beyond doubt exactly the work its director intended it to be and would have been nothing like this in the hands of anyone else 44 Music Edit Cricket the piano player in the hotel bar was played by the singer songwriter Hoagy Carmichael In the course of the movie Cricket and Slim perform How Little We Know by Carmichael and Johnny Mercer and Am I Blue by Harry Akst and Grant Clarke Cricket and the band also perform Hong Kong Blues by Carmichael and Stanley Adams The Rhumba Jumps by Mercer and Carmichael is performed by the hotel band Bacall shimmies out at the end of the movie to a faster How Little We Know 45 The song Baltimore Oriole was intended to be Bacall s theme for the movie but was merely added as background music on the soundtrack due to Bacall s vocal inexperience 46 Background music or nondiegetic music is minimal in the picture 47 However the film score including the main title was composed by Franz Waxman 48 One music cue 7b is credited to William Lava on the original cue sheet William Lava was a music staffer at Warner Bros who regularly contributed additional cues 49 According to professor of film studies Ian Brookes Howard Hawks uses jazz particularly through interracial performance scenes to underscore anti fascism in the story line of the film 50 A persistent myth is that a teenage Andy Williams the future singing star dubbed the singing for Bacall According to authoritative sources including Hawks and Bacall this was not true Williams and some female singers were tested to dub for Bacall because of fears she lacked the necessary vocal skills But those fears were overshadowed by the desire to have Bacall do her own singing perhaps championed by Bogart despite her less than perfect vocal talent 51 This myth is disputed in Leonard Maltin s Movie Guide entry for this film but the myth is propagated in a 1986 episode of MacGyver entitled Three for the Road when the character of a movie veteran asks his wife this particular question whereupon she answers that Andy Williams when 14 did dub the voice for Lauren Bacall 52 53 Several sources on the film set have stated this myth is false 54 In fact Bacall s low singing voice in the film helps her character establish a form of masculine dominance 55 Cultural references Edit In one scene Marie says to Morgan I m hard to get Steve All you have to do is ask me This quote came from the earlier 1939 Hawks film Only Angels Have Wings in which Jean Arthur says to Cary Grant I m hard to get Geoff All you have to do is ask me 56 Release EditWarner Bros released To Have and Have Not on October 11 1944 57 58 Reception EditThe critical reception of To Have and Have Not at the time of release was mixed and often unflattering Early publicity and much of the initial reaction focused on Lauren Bacall either praising her or criticizing her part as merely a gimmick for attention from the press Some also faulted the film s unfaithfulness to Hemingway as only the first fifteen minutes resemble his novel Further Americans preoccupied with World War II may have had little interest in a hero Morgan who consistently rejects commitment and whose only interest in France s cause is financial to help himself and his girl Marie 59 Overall critics called the film a fast witty romance whose plot was merely an excuse for some good scenes 60 Variety cited its inferiority to Casablanca and other Warner Bros melodramas but acknowledged the new film s success in its characterization 61 Others even considered it a Casablanca remake Time called it a tinny romantic melodrama which millions of cinemaddicts have been waiting for ever since Casablanca 60 New York Variety was more mixed citing nifty productional accoutrements but too unsteady a story line 60 The American film critic James Agee liked the film but felt Going My Way was better because To Have and Have Not focused too much on character and atmosphere rather than on plot 62 He was far more interested in Bacall s performance than the anti Fascist themes in the film 63 The film was one of the top 10 grossing pictures of 1944 According to Warner Bros records the film earned 3 652 000 60 710 000 in 2023 terms domestically and 1 605 000 26 680 000 in 2023 terms foreign coming close to the high earnings of Casablanca 64 On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes To Have and Have Not has a 95 approval rating based on 37 reviews and an average rating of 8 10 10 The critical consensus states With Howard Hawks directing and Bogey and Bacall in front of the cameras To Have and Have Not benefits from several levels of fine tuned chemistry all of which ignite on screen 65 Awards EditAward Category Subject ResultNational Board of Review Awards 62 Best Actor Humphrey Bogart WonAnalysis EditScreenwriter and film critic Paul Schrader classified the film as noir made during the first or wartime period of film noir 66 Some other scholars categorize the film as noir while some don t believe Howard Hawks ever made a true noir 67 The names of the characters in To Have and Have Not are directly related to the quality of the characters Characters that are meant to elicit sympathy from the viewer are known by their nicknames Steve Slim Eddie Frenchy and Cricket In this way Hawks creates the illusion of a character by devoiding it of past and present social roles that may be associated with a surname Villains or corrupted characters are called by their surnames such as Johnson 68 Anti fascism Edit According to English film critic Robin Wood To Have and Have Not presents one of the most basic anti fascist statements the cinema has given us 69 The film portrays anti fascist themes common to the time period through its emphasis on individual liberty expressed through Bogart s character and through its representation of people progressing and working together well 70 When he decides to join the resistance cause Morgan reasons maybe because I like you and maybe because I don t like them The power of this anti fascist statement comes because it s instinctive rather than coming from an expected ideology 71 More generally Hawks expresses a protest of authoritarianism and infringement of individual rights Hawks however claimed he wasn t interested in politics and the focus of the movie was on the relationship between Bogart and Bacall Regardless the anti fascist themes come through in the relationship between Bogart and Bacall They represent the individual standing up to those who abuse their power 72 According to Ian Brookes during the scene where Bacall sings Am I Blue with Hoagy Carmichael her low voice establishes herself as one of the boys and thus a soldier in the anti fascist cause 73 Moreover during this scene the patrons at the bar represent different races and are racially integrated throughout the space challenging the ideas of segregation and race during the time period 74 The next song Hong Kong Blues is reminiscent of Django Reinhardt s pre war version This represents French resistance spirit as swing music became a symbol of resistance in France because it was the only available example of American culture in France at the time 75 Harry Morgan Edit A common theme of war films such as To Have and Have Not is the conversion narrative An individual who originally does not want to be involved in the war effort eventually becomes converted through a changed attitude and accepts their duty as a citizen to participate in the war efforts Along with Harry Morgan s transformation the Humphrey Bogart persona changed along the years making him an important casting decision for the film 76 Harry Morgan the fisherman represents the center of the story line of To Have and Have Not According to Robin Wood Harry Morgan represents at the same time the personality of Humphrey Bogart and the Hawksian hero 77 Harry Morgan as a character represents a myth the audience accepts as real such as the heroes of Homer Morgan represents the heroic ideal 78 Morgan acts on his own interests yet is not self indulgent minding his own business He does good because of the responsibility he feels he has for his personal alliances 78 Morgan controls and establishes the morality of the film through the distinctness of what one does and what one is Bogart s character establishes that one s personal identity is not determined by one s actions if they do not allow it to happen In the film Slim steals Johnson s wallet Harry overlooks this to a point because he Johnson did not pay Morgan for his services as a boat captain When they are both approached by Morgan Slim shows no shame indicating her morality was not affected by her actions Johnson however shows shame and doesn t receive sympathy because he reveals he is defined by his actions 79 Bogart s character is direct and blunt yet makes an effort to not judge a person by their actions 72 Harry Morgan encompasses the qualities of the Hawksian hero due to his personal integrity and at the same time could be described as a Hemingway code hero because of his courage and loyalty 80 One of the biggest differences between the film and the novel is the resolution of Harry Morgan In the novel Morgan is beaten down through the story line and perishes in the end In the film however Morgan ends up a winner This was specifically altered by Hawks because he did not like stories about losers 81 Legacy EditWith some regarding To Have and Have Not as one of Hawks s best the film represents the only time two Nobel Prize winners Faulkner and Hemingway worked on the same film story 82 Some of Bacall s lines became renowned as double entendre for instance You know how to whistle don t you Steve You just put your lips together and blow said while looking at him provocatively This quote is ranked at 34 on AFI s 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes list 83 When Humphrey Bogart was buried Bacall put a gold whistle with the inscription If you want anything just whistle in his coffin a nod to her line in their first film together 84 Influences and adaptations EditTo Have and Have Not is noted for its similarity to earlier films Casablanca 1942 Morocco 1930 and Across the Pacific 1942 85 There are some similarities to the plot of the earlier Casablanca and both stories involve the French Resistance Other changes from Hemingway tended in the same direction such as the introduction of a sympathetic piano player as an important supporting character Carmichael s Cricket was not in the Hemingway book and parallels Dooley Wilson s Sam in Casablanca Several cast members from Casablanca also appear in the film apart from Bogart and Dalio Emil in Casablanca Dan Seymour Abdul in Casablanca plays Captain Renard whose name and position resemble Captain Renault in Casablanca As in Casablanca Bogart s initially reluctant character assists husband and wife Resistance members To Have and Have Not was adapted as an hour long radio play for Lux Radio Theater with Bogart and Bacall reprising their screen roles It was broadcast on October 14 1946 86 Warner Brothers adapted the novel a second time with the film The Breaking Point 1950 directed by Michael Curtiz who was also credited for Casablanca This screenplay stayed closer to the novel it bore little resemblance to the 1944 film 87 Screenwriter Ranald MacDougall and Curtiz were interested in creating a film better modeled after Hemingway s novel The film did not remotely resemble Casablanca 88 Despite the film s faithfulness to the novel it remains less popular than To Have and Have Not though Hemingway said the remake suited him 89 The film was remade another time in 1958 by director Don Siegel as The Gun Runners Siegel was reluctant to remake the film but needed the money 90 The film was shot quickly and cheaply According to author Gene D Phillips The Gun Runners was nothing more than a crass exploitation of the Hemingway book 91 From 1951 to 1952 Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall participated in a weekly half hour radio adventure series called Bold Venture intended to be a spin off of To Have and Have Not 92 93 Bacall to Arms is a 1946 Looney Tunes short spoofing scenes from To Have and Have Not and featuring Bogey Gocart and Laurie Bee Cool It is included as a Special Feature on the DVD release of To Have and Have Not 94 References EditCitations Edit a b Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger See Appendix 1 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 1995 15 sup1 1 31 p 25 doi 10 1080 01439689508604551 Schatz Thomas 1999 Boom and Bust American Cinema in the 1940s Uni of California Press p 220 ISBN 0 520 22130 3 a b Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 18 Bacall 1978 p 18 Rollyson 2015 p 109 a b c McCarthy 1997 p 366 a b Schickel 1975 pp 116 117 Bacall 1978 p 83 a b Lauren Bacall A Screen Goddess of the Shadows PDF Kuwait Times August 14 2014 Retrieved September 4 2018 Behlmer 1985 p 236 a b c McCarthy 1997 p 367 Bacall 1978 p 92 Mast 1982 p 256 a b McCarthy 1997 p 368 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 254 Mast 1982 p 255 Cee Pee Johnson at Warners with Bogart The California Eagle March 16 1944 Page 13 Retrieved February 25 2021 Jazz On the Screen A Jazz and Blues Filmography Library of Congress Retrieved February 25 2021 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 pp 15 16 Hawks telling Hemingway he could film his worst book and this one was a bunch of junk interview with Hawks by Joseph McBride for the Directors Guild of America October 21 23 1977 private publication of the Directors Guild p 21 quoted at length in Mast p 243 You Must Remember This retrospective for Warner Brothers 85th anniversary American Masters PBS broadcast September 23 2008 Bacall 1978 p 18 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 16 Phillips 1980 p 51 Mast 1982 p 245 McCarthy 1997 p 362 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 19 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 pp 18 19 McCarthy 1997 p 369 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 27 a b McCarthy 1997 p 370 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 31 a b c Phillips 1980 p 52 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 28 Oliver 1999 p 95 McCarthy 1997 p 371 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 254 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 pp 32 35 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 268 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 pp 32 35 a b Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 39 Behlmer 1985 p 245 Thomson 2012 p 173 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 263 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 264 Bacall 1978 p 96 McCarthy 1997 p 756 rauloparedes November 1 2010 Lauren Bacall To Have and Have Not Archived from the original on December 13 2021 via YouTube Sudhalter 2002 pp 237 238 Neumeyer 2004 Behlmer Rudy Music For Performance To Have and Have Not 1944 Franz Waxman Fidelio Music Publishing Company Retrieved September 21 2018 Neumeyer David 2015 Meaning and Interpretation of Music in Cinema Bloomington Indiana University Press p 274 n53 Brookes 2016 p 177 McBride Joseph Hawks on Hawks Berkeley University of California Press 1982 p 130 To Have and Have Not Turner Classic Movies Turner Classic Movies Inc Retrieved July 2 2018 Zlotoff Lee David Lenhart Kerry Sakmar John J December 1986 Three for the Road MacGyver ABC Hagen Ray January 2 2000 Dubbing Bacall It Says It Right Here The New York Times Retrieved July 2 2018 McLean 1993 p 4 Dibbern 2016 pp 232 239 Oliver 1999 p 327 Adverstisement The Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 11 1944 Retrieved July 31 2018 Wood 1981 p 25 a b c Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 50 To Have and Have Not Variety October 11 1944 Retrieved July 2 2018 a b Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 51 Sinyard 1986 p 88 Glancy 1995 p 64 To Have and Have Not Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved February 28 2022 Schrader 1972 Brook 2009 Wood 1973 Lennard 2012 p 19 Wood 1976 p 299 Wood 1981 p 86 Furthman amp Faulkner 1980 p 53 Wood 1981 p 26 Brookes 2009 p 209 a b Wood 1981 p 29 Brookes 2016 p 209 Brookes 2016 p 210 Brookes 2016 p 211 Brookes 2016 p 207 Wood 1981 p 26 a b Wood 1981 p 27 Wood 1981 p 28 Phillips 1980 p 54 McCarthy 1997 p 363 Branson 1987 p 154 Phillips 1980 p 50 AFI s 100 Greatest Movie Quotes of All Time American Film Institute American Film Institute Retrieved July 2 2018 Daugherty Greg October 29 2014 Nine Famous People and What They re Buried With Smithsonian Magazine Smithsonian Retrieved September 9 2019 Wood 1976 p 298 Bacall amp Bogart Lux Theatre Stars Harrisburg Telegraph Harrisburg Telegraph October 12 1946 p 17 Retrieved October 1 2015 via Newspapers com nbsp Valladares Carlos October 25 2017 The Breaking Point is a more brutally honest Casablanca The Stanford Daily Stanford University Stanford Cal Retrieved July 2 2018 Phillips 1980 p 59 Phillips 1980 p 62 Phillips 1980 p 63 Phillips 1980 p 65 Sperber amp Lax 1997 p 437 Bold Venture 57 episodes retrieved July 31 2018 Warner Bros Pictures Inc 1946 Bacall To Arms retrieved July 2 2018 General bibliography Edit Bacall Lauren 1978 Lauren Bacall by myself New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0394413082 Behlmer Rudy 1985 Inside Warner Bros 1935 1951 New York Viking Penguin ISBN 978 0670804788 Branson Clark 1987 Howard Hawks A Jungian Study Los Angeles Garland Projects ISBN 978 0884962618 Brook Vincent 2009 Driven to Darkness Jewish Emigre Directors and the Rise of Film Noir New Brunswick Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813546292 Brookes Ian 2016 More Than Just Dance Music Hawks and Jazz in the 1940s In Brookes Ian ed Howard Hawks New Perspectives Palgrave p 177 ISBN 9781844575411 Brookes Ian 2009 Lock Graham Murray David eds Thriving on a Riff Jazz amp Blues Influences in African American Literature and Film New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195337099 Dibbern Doug 2016 Irresolvable Circularity Narrative Closure and Nihilism in Only Angels Have Wings In Brookes Ian ed Howard Hawks New Perspectives Palgrave ISBN 9781844575411 Furthman Jules Faulkner William 1980 Kawin Bruce F ed To Have and Have Not Madison Wisconsin The University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0299080945 Glancy H Mark 1995 Warner Bros Film Grosses 1921 51 the William Schaefer ledger Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 15 1 64 doi 10 1080 01439689500260031 Lennard John 2012 Reading William Faulkner Go Down Moses and Big Woods Penrith CA Humanities Ebooks p 19 ISBN 9781847601988 Retrieved September 25 2018 Mast Gerald 1982 Howard Hawks Storyteller New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195030914 McCarthy Todd 1997 Howard Hawks The Grey Fox of Hollywood New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0802115980 McLean Adrienne L Fall 1993 It s Only That I Do What I Love and Love What I Do Film Noir and the Musical Woman Cinema Journal 33 1 4 doi 10 2307 1225631 JSTOR 1225631 ProQuest 1298009864 Neumeyer David Spring 2004 Merging Genres in the 1940s The Musical and the Dramatic Feature Film American Music 22 1 129 doi 10 2307 3592971 JSTOR 3592971 Oliver Charles M 1999 Ernest Hemingway A to Z The Essential Reference to the Life and Work New York Checkmark Books ISBN 978 0816034673 Phillips Gene D 1980 Hemingway and Film New York Frederick Ungar Publishing Co ISBN 978 0804426954 Rollyson Carl 2015 A Real American Character The Life of Walter Brennan Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781628460476 Schickel Richard 1975 The Men Who Made The Movies New York Atheneum ISBN 978 0689106316 Schrader Paul Spring 1972 Notes on Film Noir Film Comment 8 1 ProQuest 210264800 Sinyard Neil 1986 Filming Literature The Art of Screen Adaptation Kent UK Croom Helm p 88 ISBN 978 0709933465 Retrieved July 26 2018 Sperber A M Lax Eric 1997 Bogart New York William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0688075392 Sudhalter Richard M 2002 Stardust Melody The Life and Music of Hoagy Carmichael New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0195131207 Thomson David October 16 2012 The Big Screen The Story of the Movies Macmillan ISBN 9780374191894 via Google Books Wood Robin 1976 To Have Written and Have Not Directed In Nichols Bill ed Movies and Methods An Anthology Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520031517 Retrieved July 27 2018 Wood Robin 1981 Howard Hawks United Kingdom British Film Institute ISBN 978 0851701110 Wood Robin 1973 To Have Written and Have Not Directed Film Comment 9 3 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to To Have and Have Not film nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to To Have and Have Not film To Have and Have Not at IMDb To Have and Have Not at AllMovie To Have and Have Not at Rotten Tomatoes To Have and Have Not at the TCM Movie Database To Have and Have Not at the American Film Institute Catalog To Have and Have Not film trailer on YouTubeStreaming audio Edit To Have and Have Not on Lux Radio Theater October 14 1946 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title To Have and Have Not film amp oldid 1180029826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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