RED HARVEST
:''This article deals with the Dashiell Hammett novel called Red Harvest. For the Norwegian heavy metal band, see: Red Harvest (band). For the bloodsimple album, see Red Harvest(album).''
'''Red Harvest''' (1929) is a novel by Dashiell Hammett. The story is narrated by a nameless detective, The Continental Op, a frequent character in Hammett's fiction. It is structured as a fix-up, a series of separate short stories linked by new material. Hammett based the anarchic background on his own experiences in Butte, Montana during the labor troubles.
The Continental Op finds himself called to Personville (which is known as "Poisonville" by the locals) by Donald Willson, who is murdered before the Op has a chance to meet with him. The Op begins to work on the murder case and meets with Willson's father, Elihu, a local industrialist who has found his control of the city's economy threatened by several competing gangs whom he himself had originally invited into his city to "resolve" a labor dispute.
The Op extracts a promise and a signed letter from Elihu that pays the Op $10,000 in exchange for cleaning up the city. When the Op solves Donald's murder, Elihu tries to renege on the deal, but the Op won't allow him to do so.
In the meantime, the Op finds himself spending time with Dinah Brand, a possible love interest of Donald Wilson's as well as a moll for the local gangster Max "Whisper" Thaler. Between Brand and the crooked chief of police, Noonan, the Op manages to extract and spread most of the information he needs to set off a gang war among the four major local factions.
One night at Brand's apartment, the Op passes out from a combination of alcohol and laudanum. He wakes up the next morning to find Brand stabbed to death with the icepick the Op had used that evening, with no visible signs of forced entry. The Op ends up a suspect sought by the police for this murder, and one of his fellow operatives ends up leaving Personville because he is unsure of the Op's innocence.
The story ends as the Op finds Reno Starkey, the only one of the four main gangsters still alive, bleeding from a four-bullet gunshot wound. Reno reveals that it was he who stabbed Brand, and that when she fell she collided with the semi-conscious Op, coincidently landing in a position which made the Op look like the culprit. Reno has also just killed Whisper, and after his own death, Elihu can restore his control over the town.
The story is believed to have been based in part upon Hammett's own experiences with violent labor strife, and its aftermath, in Butte, Montana and other Western boom towns.
''Red Harvest'' has been directly adapted into a film only one time, as ''Roadhouse Nights'' (1930), starring Jimmy Durante. Many major elements of the book have been changed in the film, including most of the characters' names, and the film is not considered a faithful adaptation.
Akira Kurosawa scholar David Desser and critic Manny Farber, among others, state categorically that ''Red Harvest'' was the inspiration for the Akira Kurosawa film Yojimbo; however, other scholars, such as Donald Richie, believe the similarities are coincidental.[1] Kurosawa himself stated that a major source for the plot was the ''film noir'' classic ''The Glass Key'' (1942), an adaption of Dashiell Hammett's 1931 novel. In ''Red Harvest'', ''The Glass Key'' and ''Yojimbo'', corrupt officials and businessmen are seen to stand behind and profit from the rule of the gangsters. A number of films have been specifically based on ''Yojimbo'', including Sergio Leone's ''A Fistful of Dollars'' and Walter Hill's ''Last Man Standing''.
The film ''Miller's Crossing'' (1990) by the Coen brothers contains stylistic and narrative elements of Hammett's ''The Glass Key'', ''Red Harvest'' and several other Hammett works. The Coens' film ''Blood Simple'' (1984) takes its title from a line in ''Red Harvest'' where the Op tells Brand that the escalating violence has affected his mental state: "This damned burg's getting me. If I don't get away soon I'll be going blood-simple like the natives." Another erstatz adaptation of Red Harvest was Death Wish 4: The Crackdown. In the Book Bronson's Loose by Paul Talbot, screenplay writer Gail Morgan Hickman on page 84 admits the influence of Yojimbo and A Fistful of Dollars.
★ was codenamed "Blue Harvest" during filming, referencing ''Red Harvest''.
1. Allen Barra, 'From Red Harvest to Deadwood', ''Salon'' (2005)
'''Red Harvest''' (1929) is a novel by Dashiell Hammett. The story is narrated by a nameless detective, The Continental Op, a frequent character in Hammett's fiction. It is structured as a fix-up, a series of separate short stories linked by new material. Hammett based the anarchic background on his own experiences in Butte, Montana during the labor troubles.
| Contents |
| Plot |
| Film adaptations |
| Trivia |
| References |
Plot
The Continental Op finds himself called to Personville (which is known as "Poisonville" by the locals) by Donald Willson, who is murdered before the Op has a chance to meet with him. The Op begins to work on the murder case and meets with Willson's father, Elihu, a local industrialist who has found his control of the city's economy threatened by several competing gangs whom he himself had originally invited into his city to "resolve" a labor dispute.
The Op extracts a promise and a signed letter from Elihu that pays the Op $10,000 in exchange for cleaning up the city. When the Op solves Donald's murder, Elihu tries to renege on the deal, but the Op won't allow him to do so.
In the meantime, the Op finds himself spending time with Dinah Brand, a possible love interest of Donald Wilson's as well as a moll for the local gangster Max "Whisper" Thaler. Between Brand and the crooked chief of police, Noonan, the Op manages to extract and spread most of the information he needs to set off a gang war among the four major local factions.
One night at Brand's apartment, the Op passes out from a combination of alcohol and laudanum. He wakes up the next morning to find Brand stabbed to death with the icepick the Op had used that evening, with no visible signs of forced entry. The Op ends up a suspect sought by the police for this murder, and one of his fellow operatives ends up leaving Personville because he is unsure of the Op's innocence.
The story ends as the Op finds Reno Starkey, the only one of the four main gangsters still alive, bleeding from a four-bullet gunshot wound. Reno reveals that it was he who stabbed Brand, and that when she fell she collided with the semi-conscious Op, coincidently landing in a position which made the Op look like the culprit. Reno has also just killed Whisper, and after his own death, Elihu can restore his control over the town.
The story is believed to have been based in part upon Hammett's own experiences with violent labor strife, and its aftermath, in Butte, Montana and other Western boom towns.
Film adaptations
''Red Harvest'' has been directly adapted into a film only one time, as ''Roadhouse Nights'' (1930), starring Jimmy Durante. Many major elements of the book have been changed in the film, including most of the characters' names, and the film is not considered a faithful adaptation.
Akira Kurosawa scholar David Desser and critic Manny Farber, among others, state categorically that ''Red Harvest'' was the inspiration for the Akira Kurosawa film Yojimbo; however, other scholars, such as Donald Richie, believe the similarities are coincidental.[1] Kurosawa himself stated that a major source for the plot was the ''film noir'' classic ''The Glass Key'' (1942), an adaption of Dashiell Hammett's 1931 novel. In ''Red Harvest'', ''The Glass Key'' and ''Yojimbo'', corrupt officials and businessmen are seen to stand behind and profit from the rule of the gangsters. A number of films have been specifically based on ''Yojimbo'', including Sergio Leone's ''A Fistful of Dollars'' and Walter Hill's ''Last Man Standing''.
The film ''Miller's Crossing'' (1990) by the Coen brothers contains stylistic and narrative elements of Hammett's ''The Glass Key'', ''Red Harvest'' and several other Hammett works. The Coens' film ''Blood Simple'' (1984) takes its title from a line in ''Red Harvest'' where the Op tells Brand that the escalating violence has affected his mental state: "This damned burg's getting me. If I don't get away soon I'll be going blood-simple like the natives." Another erstatz adaptation of Red Harvest was Death Wish 4: The Crackdown. In the Book Bronson's Loose by Paul Talbot, screenplay writer Gail Morgan Hickman on page 84 admits the influence of Yojimbo and A Fistful of Dollars.
Trivia
★ was codenamed "Blue Harvest" during filming, referencing ''Red Harvest''.
References
1. Allen Barra, 'From Red Harvest to Deadwood', ''Salon'' (2005)
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