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The Untouchables (1959): By the Summer of 1933, a new wave of crime has engulfed Chicago. Due to a public outcry for action, Willard Thornton is appointed as a new commissioner to clean up the town. At a press conference, Thornton arrogantly says his office does not publicly constitute criticism of any law enforcement agency-- while his tone of voice implies he privately does criticize them. Eliot Ness is standing right next to him, looking more dour than usual. Ness and his men go on a raid, they find a shipment of heroin in a hideout. Then small-time dope-pusher (and junkie himself) Joey Loomis shows up, sees the Feds, and runs. Loomis gets captured. After interrogating him, and getting nowhere, Ness releases him. Rico asks, "I know he's a small fish, but you just gonna throw him back?" Ness reveals his strategy: he's going to let the big fish find him. Willard Thornton is really a crook, in cohoots with lawyer Barney Lubin (czar of the enormous Chicago bail bond racket), Felix Varsack (representing the Capone mob), Wally Jater (former lieutenant of "Bugs" Moran) and Steve "Country Boy" Parrish (the Enforcer). Next day, the 5 of them are having a meet in a compartment of a train, heading south from Chicago. Thornton says that Loomis, by having Ness trail him, cost them $80,000 -- so Loomis has to be bumped off. Thornton tells Country Boy to do it. Steve balks, saying he is pulling out of the rackets. (He's actually naive enough to think he can just retire from the rackets; the Underworld never lets anyone retire, former members know too much.) Steve has already purchased a farm. Thornton tells him to do this "one last service," and Steve agrees. Then Thornton tells Steve to get off at Kankakee (51 miles south of Chicago) and take a train back to do the job. They will all get off at different stops, and head back to Chicago. When Lubin asks Thornton, "You have to go all the way to Springfield?" (175 miles south of Chicago) Thornton says yes -- he's having dinner with the governor there. Steve goes to a crummy apartment building, and sticks a shiv into Loomis. Ness and his men have been tailing Steve. They arrest him, and try to sweat it out of him-- but there were no witnesses to the murder, and Steve threw his knife out of the window. (in that part of town, derelicts pick up knives and anything valuable in alleys.) Thornton gives Barney Lubin $100,000 to have Steve sprung on bail, and tells Lubin to rub him out, saying "Dead birds don't sing." (the bail money won't be forfeited, since they can turn Steve's dead body over to the police to get the bail back; bail is for "dead or alive.") Barney Lubin tells Steve he has to get out of town for a while because he's too hot; that night, Lubin has Steve drive them in his car, ostensibly to go to Thornton's camp in Lovington, Illinois.  The trip is the infamous "one way ride," they've only been driving about half an hour when Lubin pulls a gun on him. But Steve wrecks the car, takes the gun from Lubin, and shoots him. Then Steve walks another 8-9 miles to (the fictitious town of) Five Points. Some time during the night Steve, exhausted, falls asleep in the back room of a gas station & diner run by Emmy Sarver. Emmy is 28, tall (5'8") and slim, and could be quite attractive if she dressed right; but she wears blue jeans, a work shirt and work shoes. She meets men all the time, but they are all married truckers; all they want from her is eats and gasoline-- they say she's "one of the boys." (a little teasing joke she doesn't like hearing.) Another thing about Emmy: there is a raccoon in a cage in front of her diner; Emmy has the bad habit of trying to keep wild things in a cage. Man-hungry Emmy has discovered Steve sleeping in the backroom-- Steve, 33, a big (6'2") strapping guy with Nordic good looks. Emmy knows Steve is wanted by the Feds, but she's not letting him go: now or ever. While he was asleep, she took his gun and wallet, so he's not going anywhere. Emmy serves him coffee and eats, like he's family. She tells him her folks are dead; Emmy perks up when Country Boy says he was a farm boy, and has a feeling for the country life. The headline of the local paper tells of a search going on for him. Emmy says, "Pa's room is real nice-- it's big." (nice and big seems to be her assessment of Steve, too.) (Friday, July 7, 1933) There will be a full moon tonight. That afternoon, Ness drops in on Emmy; Ness tells her about the $5,000 reward and gives her his card. Thornton's hitman Wally Jater comes to town, too. In the backroom, Steve is getting antsy to run away. Emmy lays out her plan to Steve, he should keep his head for a week or so; she says, "Comes a dark night, I sneak you out of here. And the next day I bring you back. You're my cousin Ames." (kissing cousins) Emmy says, "You stay with me-- for the rest of your life." When Steve balks, she says, "Me, or the police. Take your pick." Suddenly, Jater bursts in, with a gun; Emmy uses Steve's gun and shoots Jater in the back-- nobody is going to take Steve away from her. Later, Emmy tells Patrolman Pete Garrett that Jater tried to hold her up, and everybody believes her story. It's a Friday night and there's a full moon. Emmy goes to Steve. Emmy is wearing a pretty dress, a bow in her hair, and she's applied some eye shadow and lipstick; she is also wearing nylon stockings and dress shoes. Emmy fidgets with a necklace, drawing attention to her bosom. (and Steve doesn't even notice, the big lout.) Emmy makes her play, saying seductively, "Ain't like it used to be 'round here. We don't go to bed on the sun no more." Then she adds, "what with the radio and all." Emmy wants to go out back with him for a moonlight stroll; she softly puts her hand on his arm. But Steve gets angry, and yells, "You don't lock me up like some lousy raccoon!" Steve slaps her across the face, hard. Hell hath no fury as a woman scorned; Emmy goes outside to phone Ness long-distance. Ness gets the call, and says he'll contact the state troopers; Thornton is standing right next to him. Ness tells Thornton that Steve Parrish is small-time, he wants to get the big boss he's working for. (Ness doesn't know he's standing right next to him.) Thornton says he'll go to Five Points, and Ness should stay here. Later, Lee Hobson and Jack Rossman find a direct line in Lubin's office to Thornton's house. Ness and his men race down to Five Points. Thornton gets there first, with a couple of his goons; he tells Patrolman Pete Garrett they are "special officers" with his commission. When Steve sees Thornton and his hitmen, he knows he's as good as dead; he yells at Emmy, "You know who they are?!" Emmy realizes she made a horrible mistake; she only wanted Steve arrested, not killed. Ness and his men get there in 3 cars; they block the roads. There's a shootout. A hitman shoots Steve; Ness and Lee Hobson shoot the 2 hitmen. A gasoline tank gets hit, explodes, and starts a big fire. Thornton is captured. Steve Parrish is dead; another victim of the fire is the raccoon. Lee Hobson says, "I'm sorry about the raccoon, ma'am-- afraid he's dead." The grieving Emmy, referring to both Steve and the raccoon, says, "It don't matter. He never was much of a pet." Emmy is terribly lonely again, probably forever. (synopsis by: kdh)