Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Real-Life Inspirations for The Third Man
The writer of The Third Man, Graham Greene, had a firm basis in espionage that the brought to bear in his piece. While the film is not explicitly a spy story, its portrait of the black market in Vienna gives it the same overall quality. The black market, like espionage, involves men in constantly perilous, extra-legal environments, dealing in goods and services beneath the table. Greene himself had worked as an intelligence officer for the British during World War II at the behest of his younger sister, an MI6 operative, and his elder brother had spied for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. Greene also employed contacts in the London Times and MI6 for background research on the occupation of Vienna and the criminal underworld it had spawned. Events in the film, like Harry Lime's penicillin racket, were not pulled out of a hat--they reflected the reality of an economy dominated by rationing and chronic shortages where criminals like Lime provided a useful and necessary public service.
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"The black market, like espionage, involves men in constantly perilous, extra-legal environments, dealing in goods and services beneath the table." Do you need a link to this definition? Also, what is the connection between black markets and post WWII European development? Will this be something that you will develop in your paper and inter-paper as a thematic? The impact of war and its consequences?
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