Plot Synopsis (continued)
Again pledging his attachment to alcohol, Brick affirms
his means of dealing with adult responsibilities by leaning on the
dual crutches of "clicks" and
"whiskey." Brick's refusal to reconcile with his estranged
wife triggers Big Daddy's fears that his favorite son will produce
no heir to inherit the Pollitt plantation and carry on the family name.
By default, everything in the inheritance will pass on to Gooper's
brood of offspring. Although Big Daddy loves his son, he doesn't want
to turn his property over to Brick - in effect, he refuses to subsidize
an alcoholic:
Brick: Oh, yes sir. (Lifting his glass) You can live
with this.
Big Daddy: That's not livin', that's a-dodgin away from life.
Brick: I want to dodge away from it.
Big Daddy: Then son, why don't you kill yourself?
Brick: 'Cause I like to drink.
Big Daddy: I can't talk to you.
Brick: I'm sorry.
Big Daddy: You expect me to turn over twenty-eight thousand acres
of the richest land this side of valley Nile to a fool on the bottle?
Brick: No sir.
Big Daddy: I like you son, but why should I subsidize worthless behavior?
Rot? Corruption?
Brick: Then turn it over to Gooper and Mae.
Big Daddy: I can't stand Gooper and Mae and those five screamin'
monkeys.
Now that Big Daddy feels less pressure about deciding
his will and inheritance because death seems further away, he doesn't
feel such an urgent, driving need to straighten out his family affairs
- both on personal and business levels. He feels he can adopt a "wait
and see" attitude rather than feeling compelled to give the
Pollitt estate over to Gooper by default. Yet he still wants to search
for what went wrong in his younger son's life:
You know, I don't have to turn it over to any of
ya. This day, I ain't made no will. And now I don't have to. The
pressure's off. I can just wait and see if you pull yourself together
or if you don't... (tenderly) Let's don't leave it like this, like
all them other talks we've had. We always seem to talk around things.
We seem to leave things unsaid and unspoken. But now we gotta talk
straight.
After relentless questioning and his refusal to accept
Brick's "ninety-proof bull" excuses for his drinking, Big
Daddy touches Brick's vulnerable spot by recalling that his tormented
son started drinking at the time of his friend Skipper's death:
You started drinkin' with your friend Skipper's death.
(A loud thunderbolt claps)
Having his detachment to life broken through, Brick
becomes fiercely defensive of his noble, incorruptible, idealized
relationship with his deceased friend [a veiled defense of innuendo
regarding his homosexual relationship]. Brick disavows any "shameful" or "filthy" interpretation:
Brick: Skipper and I were friends. Can you understand
that?
Big Daddy: Gooper and Mae said that Skipper...
Brick: (interrupting) Skipper is the only thing that I've got left
to believe in. And you are draggin' it through the gutter!
Big Daddy: Now just a minute!
Brick: You are making it shameful and filthy, you...!
Brick lashes out at his father and misses - and falls
to the floor. His sincere, affectionate devotion to his friend was
just a friendship, he claims, but he appears to protest too much:
Big Daddy: You and Skipper played football together.
Made a few touchdowns. Does that make him God Almighty?
Brick: I could depend on him.
Big Daddy: On the football field?
Brick: At any time, anywhere, anyplace, I could depend on him.
Big Daddy: Are you sure of that?
Brick: Yes sir. Sure.
Big Daddy: Bull. Why did your big strong man fall apart? Why did
Skipper crack up?
Brick: All right. You're askin' for it. We're gonna have that talk.
That straight true talk. It's too late to stop now.
To Brick, Skipper was a necessary crutch: "He
was someone for me to lean on, in school and out of it." Naturally,
Brick's marriage to Maggie was altered by his unnatural affection
for Skipper (a "great and true friendship"). Big Daddy
suggests that Skipper's suicide occurred when he cracked up:
What did she do? Chase him out of the 11th story
window of that Chicago hotel? Did that little-bitty girl shove
your hero out all by herself? Why? What was goin' on between Skipper
and Maggie?
Maggie is summoned during Big Daddy's investigation
of his son's problems. She is asked to remember the role she played
in her husband's relationship with Skipper when they played pro football
together on the Dixie Stars team. Playing pro-football kept Brick
in an immature, semi-adolescent frame of mind - he never grew up,
faced the responsibilities of his marriage, or entered a stable business
career. Brick depended on his "hero" to keep him from growing
up or facing the realities of adult life - the relationship stunted
his emotional growth and kept him a boyish-athletic hero beyond his
time.
According to Brick, the emotional relationship between
Skipper and Brick aroused Maggie's jealousy - she was a jealous intruder
in their close friendship that monopolized much of her husband's
life. Ill-advised, she tried to keep Skipper from coming between
her and her husband. She was with Skipper in a Chicago hotel room
following a disastrous football game loss:
Brick: ...That's what you hated. Bein' shut out.
Maggie: Not by the crowds, baby. By you, by the man I worshipped.
That's why I hated Skipper.
Brick: You hated him so much that you got him drunk and went to bed
with him.
Big Daddy: (After a long pause) Well, is that true?
Maggie: Oh Big Daddy, you don't think I ravished a football hero?
Brick: Skipper was drunk.
Maggie: So were you most of the time. I don't seem to make out so
well with you.
Brick: Are you? Are you trying to say that nothing happened between
you and Skipper?
Maggie: You know what happened!
Brick: I don't know what happened. I don't know, Maggie. Now I wasn't
there. I couldn't play that Sunday. I wasn't in Chicago. I was in
the hospital...
Maggie: But Skipper played. Oh, he played all right. Played his first
professional game without Brick...Without you, Skipper was nothin'.
Outside - big, tough, confident. Inside - pure jelly. You saw the
game on TV. You saw what happened.
Brick: But I didn't see what happened in Skipper's hotel room. That
little episode was not on TV. Go ahead, tell Big Daddy why you were
in Skipper's room.
Maggie reveals the circumstances of Skipper's last
night before his suicidal death. She encouraged Skipper to leave
the adolescent world in which he and Brick co-existed:
He was sick, sick with drink and he wouldn't come
out. He busted some furniture and the hotel manager said to stop
him before he called the police. So I went to his room. I scratched
on his door and begged him to let me in. He was half-crazy, violent
and screamin' one minute and weak and cryin' the next. And all
the time, scared stiff about you. So I said to him, maybe it was
time we forgot about football. Maybe he ought to get a job and
let me and Brick alone. I thought he'd hit me. He walked toward
me with a funny sort of smile on his face. Then he did the strangest
thing. He kissed me. That was the first time he'd ever touched
me. And then I knew what I was gonna do. I'd get rid of Skipper.
I'd show Brick that their deep true friendship was a big lie. I'd
prove it by showin' that Skipper would make love to the wife of
his best friend. He didn't need any coaxin'. He was more than willin'.
He even seemed to have the same idea.
To end the strong affection between Skipper and Brick
[and to test her suspicions about an unnatural (homosexual) relationship
between them], Maggie thought she could lead Skipper to sleep with
her to arouse her husband's anger at his best friend [and to prove
that her suspicions were untrue - that Skipper was indeed heterosexual]
- but then she had second thoughts:
Maggie: I was tryin' to win back my husband. It didn't
matter how. I would have done anythin' - even that. At the last
second, I-I got panicky. Supposin' I lost you instead. Supposin'
you'd hate me instead of Skipper. So I ran. Nothin' happened. I've
tried to tell him [Brick] a hundred times but he won't let me.
Nothin' happened.
Brick: Hallelujah - Saint Maggie! (He raises his drinking glass)
Maggie: I wanted to get rid of Skipper but not if it meant losin'
you. (To Big Daddy) He (Brick) blames me for Skipper's death. Maybe
I got rid of Skipper. Skipper went out anyway. I didn't get rid of
him at all. Isn't it an awful joke, honey? I lost you anyway.
Big Daddy presses Brick for the rest of the story,
learning from Maggie that Brick was the last person to speak to Skipper
on the phone. Skipper's suicidal jump came shortly after Brick hung
up on him, but Brick won't tell Maggie why he rejected his friend:
When they put his [Skipper's] poor broken body in
the ambulance, I rode with him to the hospital. And all the time,
he kept on sayin', 'Why did Brick hang up on me? Why?' Why Brick?
After Maggie leaves the scene, Big Daddy hammers away
further in the interrogation of his son, accusing him of being an
irresponsible, immature thirty-year old man. Brick admits that he
feels responsibility for Skipper's despairing death because he rejected
his friend and ruthlessly hung up on his anguished call. That night,
a drunk and scared Skipper phoned, revealing his abject emotional
dependence on Brick and shattering Brick's idolizing image of his
adolescent-hero:
Big Daddy: What are you runnin' away from? Why'd
you hang up on Skipper when he called you? Answer me. What did
he say? Was it about him and Maggie?
Brick: He said they'd made love.
Big Daddy: And you believed him.
Brick: Yes.
Big Daddy: Then why haven't you thrown her out? Somethin's missin'
here. Now, now why did Skipper kill himself?
Brick: 'Cause somebody let him down. I let him down. When he called
that night, I couldn't make much sense out of...There was one thing
that was sure. Skipper was scared. Scared! It would happen that day
on the football field, that I'd blame him, scared that I'd walk out
on him. Skipper afraid - I couldn't believe that. I mean inside,
he was real deep-down scared. And he broke like a rotten stick. He
started cryin': 'I need you.' He kept babblin': 'Help me! Help me!'
Me help him? How does one drownin' man help another drownin' man?
Big Daddy: So you hung up on him.
Brick: And then that phone started to ring again. And it rang and
it rang and it wouldn't stop ringin'. And I lay in that hospital
bed. I was unable to move or run from that sound and still, it kept
ringin' louder and louder! And the sound of that was like Skipper
screamin' for help. And I couldn't pick it up.
Big Daddy: So that's when he killed himself.
Brick: Yep. 'Cause I let him down. (Tears well up in his eyes) So
that disgust with mendacity is really disgust with myself. And when
I hear that click in my head, I don't hear the sound of that phone
ringin' anymore. And I can stop thinkin'. I'm ashamed, Big Daddy.
That's why I'm a drunk. When I'm drunk, I can stand myself.
It is not, as Brick contends, the general level of "mendacity" in
the world around him that causes his suffering. Instead, he drowns
himself in self-pity, drinks heavily, and suffers disillusionment
because of his own self-disgust for passing the buck. He indulges
himself in self-deception to avoid facing the truth - he projects
onto Maggie his own guilt about Skipper's death. He rejects his own
manhood and alienates himself from her in their marriage.
Brick is unwilling to listen to his father and wants
to run away. As Big Daddy pursues Brick (who hobbles on his crutch
in the rain to the garage to get into his convertible and drive
off), he delivers a lesson on truth - his boy must relinquish his
adolescent world and face life's problems squarely. Brick hung up
on his friend (and life) because he had lived in a illusionary world
with Skipper where they could hold off the painful process of growing
up:
But it's always there in the morning, ain't it -
the truth? And it's here right now. You're just feelin' sorry for
yourself. That's all it is - self-pity. You didn't kill Skipper.
He killed himself. You and Skipper and millions like ya are livin'
in a kid's world, playin' games, touchdowns, no worries, no responsibilities.
Life ain't no damn football game. Life ain't just a bunch of high
spots. You're a thirty-year old kid. Soon you'll be a fifty-year
old kid, pretendin' you're hearin' cheers when there ain't any.
Dreamin' and drinkin' your life away. Heroes in the real world
live twenty-four hours a day, not just two hours in a game. Mendacity,
you won't...you won't live with mendacity but you're an expert
at it. The truth is pain and sweat and payin' bills and makin'
love to a woman that you don't love anymore. Truth is dreams that
don't come true and nobody prints your name in the paper 'til you
die...(He draped his coat over Brick) The truth is, you never grow'd
up. Grown-ups don't hang up on their friends...and they don't hang
up on their wives...and they don't hang up on life. Now that's
the truth and that's what you can't face!
After Big Daddy continues to harangue Brick and accuses
him of not facing the truth with his friend, Brick feels cornered
and goaded beyond reason and wishes to leave. In spiteful revenge,
he turns the tables on his father by telling him the "truth" about
his medical condition:
Brick: Can you face the truth...?
Big Daddy: Try me!
Brick: ...you or somebody else's truth?
Big Daddy: Bull. You're runnin' again.
Brick: Yeah, I am runnin'. Runnin' from lies, lies like birthday
congratulations and many happy returns of the day when there won't
be any...
Big Daddy stands shocked and devastated by the revelation
of his own imminent death - he refuses to believe he will soon die: "I'll
outlive you. I'll bury you. I'll buy your coffin." When he realizes
that the false report from the clinic is a sham, the pain he experiences
adds further proof of his ill health: "This pain - keeps grabbin'
at me. It's death, ain't it? Answer me! The truth!" Brick
causes his father enormous pain when he tells him that he has been
lied to:
You said it yourself, Big Daddy, mendacity is a system
we live in.
The broken old man, with a drenched shirt, walks slowly
into the house (past Maggie). Brick attempts to drive off, but his car's
rear wheels spin in the mud and he becomes mired there. Maggie rushes
to his side as Brick notes his broken crutch in the car's door: "Look
at us, Maggie. The great Pollitt Enterprises, stuck in the..." - and
then he admits his cruelty to his father: "I hurt him, Maggie.
I hurt him really bad."
Meanwhile, Big Daddy retreats
to the mansion's cellar - a musty, cobweb-filled storage area. After
offering morphine and a syringe to him as a painkiller, the
doctor tells him: "It's
no use pretendin' anymore. When that pain hits, it'll hit hard. Make
it easy on yourself." Family
members gather around Big Mama who doesn't know the truth, but believes: "There
ain't nothin' wrong with Big Daddy but nerves...He's as sound as
a dollar, and now he knows he is. That's why he ate such a supper.
He had a load off his mind, knowin' he wasn't doomed to what he'd
thought he was doomed to."
To comfort his mother when she is told of her husband's
condition, Maggie pleads with Brick to come downstairs:
Maggie: Oh please, Brick, I just can't stand the
way that Mae and Gooper...
Brick: What? Try to grab off this place for themselves. Well, let
'em. Let 'em have it all. And if you want to fight for a piece of
the old man's carcass, why you go right ahead, but you're gonna do
it without me.
Maggie: All right, I deserve that. But not this time, this time you're
wrong. What I can't stand is not losing this place, it's-it's Big
Mama. I know what it's like to lose somebody you love.
Brick: Careful Maggie, your claws are showin'.
Surrounded by the family, Gooper asks for the doctor
to tell Big Mama "the complete truth about the report we got
from the clinic." Maggie describes the "truth" as
deceitful:
Truth! Truth! Everybody keeps hollerin' about the
truth. Well, the truth is as dirty as lies.
Big Mama slowly senses that something is being kept
from her: "Is there something I don't know, Doc?" The news
of her husband's "hopeless" diagnosis is revealed. Big
Mama agonizes: "Why didn't they cut it out of him, huh?"
As she gasps, she cringes from Mae: "You get away from me, Mae,
get away from me." Big Mama cries out for Brick - she expresses
partiality toward her absent, second-born son. Big Mama commiserates
with Maggie: "Nothin's ever the way you plan, is it?" Both
Gooper and Mae avariciously argue that Big Daddy's holdings should
be turned over to them. Although Maggie comes to Brick's defense, Mae
and Goober maliciously slander her husband during their greedy argument
as Gooper reminds everyone that he is the eldest son and not merely
a football player:
Mae: Gooper is your first born. Why, he always had
to carry a bigger load of the responsibilities than Brick. Brick
never carried a thing in his life but a football or a highball.
Gooper: ...The point is, I'm not gonna see this place run into the
ground by a drunken ex-football hero.
Having endured a life-long resentment of favoritism
toward his younger brother, Gooper admits that Big Daddy has shown
partiality toward Brick. To protect his own interests and the implied
threat against his share in the estate, he has diligently worked
to please his father, establish a law practice of his own, and keep
the plantation running. With the imminent death of his father, he
intends on rewarding himself for his own hard work and loyalty:
For him, it was always Brick, always. From the day
he was born, he was always partial to Brick. Why? Big Daddy wanted
me to become a lawyer. I became a lawyer. He said: 'Get married.'
I got married. He said: 'Have kids.' I had kids. He said: 'Live
in Memphis.' I lived in Memphis. Whatever he said: 'Do!' I did
all right. I don't give a damn whether Big Daddy likes me or don't
like me, or did or never did or will or will never. I've appealed
for common decency and fair-play. Well, now I'm tellin' ya. I intend
to protect my interests. I'm not a corporation lawyer for nothin'...
In the cellar of the mansion filled with cobwebs and
discarded possessions, Brick finds his father doubled over in pain.
Although he has come to apologize to Big Daddy in the midst of their
love-hate discussion, Brick is told that his apology is unnecessary: "I
hate apologies, especially for the truth."
Big Daddy demands a cigar and a drink: "I've got a million clicks
in my guts. Knives sharpenin' themselves. You know about clicks, don't
ya, boy?" While looking at the discarded relics and property of
his life in the cellar, Big Daddy philosophizes about his financial
and human worth - despite his wealth, he cannot buy his life when it
is nearly finished:
Close around ten million dollars in cash and blue-chip
stocks. Besides, with twenty-eight thousand acres of the richest
land this side of the valley Nile...But there's one thing you can't
buy in a Europe firesale or in any other market on earth. And that's
your life. You can't buy back your life when it's finished...The
human animal is a beast that eventually has to die. And if he's
got money, he buys and he buys and he buys. The reason why he buys
everything he can is because his crazy hope is one of the things
he buys will be life everlasting - which you never can be.
And then Big Daddy notices that his son no longer calls
him Big Daddy. Some of the reason for Brick's inability to grow up
stems from Big Daddy's failure as a parent to instill emotional strength
in his son. The plantation owner has been successful by virtue of
his own hard work and accumulation of things - not because of his
paternal strength and love for the family. Brick smashes symbols
of the affluent Pollitt life, an environment that was spiritually
and emotionally impoverished:
Big Daddy: I suddenly noticed that you don't call
me Big Daddy anymore. Ah, if you needed a Big Daddy, why didn't
you come to me? You wanted somebody to lean on, why Skipper and
why not me? I'm your father! I'm Big Daddy. Me! Why didn't you
come to your kinfolks - the peoples that love ya?
Brick: You don't know what love means. To you, it's just another
four letter word.
Big Daddy: Why you've got a mighty short memory. What was there that
you wanted that I didn't buy for ya...
Brick: You can't buy love! You bought yourself a million dollars
worth of junk. Look at it. Does it love you?
Big Daddy: Who'd you think I bought it for? Me? It's yours. The place,
the money, every rotten thing is yours!
Brick: I don't want things! (He pushes down and smashes vases, an
old athletic trophy and other accumulated objects)...Waste! Worthless!
Worthless! ...(He destroys a life-sized poster of himself throwing
a football and then breaks down in a fit of uncontrollable tears)
Big Daddy: Don't son. Please don't cry, boy. That's funny. I never
saw you cry before. How's that? Did you ever cry...?
Brick: Can't you understand? I never wanted your place or your money
or any-...I don't wanna own anything. All I wanted was a father,
not a boss - I wanted you to love me.
Big Daddy: I did and I do.
Brick: No. Not me, and not Gooper, and not even Mama.
Big Daddy: That's a lie. I did love her. I give her anything, everything
she wanted...
Brick: Things. Things, Papa. You gave her things. A house, a trip
to Europe, all this junk, some jewelry, things. You gave her things,
Papa, not love.
Big Daddy: I gave, I gave her an empire, boy...
Brick: The men who build empires die, and empires die too.
Big Daddy: No. No it won't. That's why I've got you and Gooper.
Brick entreats his father to realize his preoccupation
with material possessions, the unrealistic aspirations that he can
never meet, and his father's unloving attitude toward his family:
Brick: Look at Gooper. Look at what he's become.
Is that what you wanted him to be? And look at me. You put it very
well indeed. I'm a thirty year old kid and pretty soon, I'm gonna
be a fifty year old kid. I don't know what to believe in. Now what's
the good of livin' if you've got nothin' to believe in. There's
gotta be some, some purpose in life, some meanin'. Look at me,
for the sake of God, look at me before it's too late. For once
in your life, look at me as I really am. Look at me. I'm a failure.
I'm a drunk. On my own in the open market, I'm not worth the price
of a decent burial.
Big Daddy: You and Gooper and the rest of ya, blamin' me for everythin',
huh?
Brick: Nobody, just...We've known each other all my life, and we're
strangers. Now you own twenty-eight thousand acres of the richest...,
you own ten million dollars, you own a wife and two children, you
own us but you don't love us.
Big Daddy: In my own way, I've...
Brick: No sir. You don't even like people. You wanted Gooper to have
kids. You wanted me to have kids. Why?
Big Daddy: 'Cause I want a part of me to keep on living. I won't
have an end with the grave.
Big Daddy sentimentally recalls his own "tramp" father,
the love he was given, and the rich legacy that was left to him:
Look. This is what my father left me. A lousy old
suitcase. Now on the inside was nothin'. Nothin' but his uniform
from the Spanish-American War. This was his legacy to me. Nothin'
at all. And I built this place from nothin'.
Big Daddy's father "died laughin'," probably
because he "was happy," according to Brick. "Happy
at having you with him. He took you everywhere and he kept you with
him." Big Daddy's father also left his son love.
When he is seized by pain from his terminal illness,
Big Daddy refuses to take pain medication:
I'm not gonna stupify myself with that stuff. I wanna
think clear. I wanna see everything and I wanna feel everything.
I won't mind goin'. I've got the guts to die. What I want to know
is, 'Have you got the guts to live?'
Both wounded (Brick's injured ankle and Big Daddy's
terminal spastic colon), they assist each other out of the cellar,
out of the past, and out of the depths of the house. They rise from
their gut-level talk.
Big Mama rejects legal papers that Gooper has drawn
up to run the estate and take control of Big Daddy's holdings. Maggie
announces that "nobody's gonna take nothin', not 'til Big Daddy
lets go." When Big Daddy rejoins the family's 'stormy' discussion,
and sees "important lookin' documents" strewn all over
the floor, Mae and Gooper deny their plan to take over as they scurry
to pick up the papers. Big Daddy notices a smell of mendacity in
the room:
What's that smell in this room? Didn't you notice
it, Brick? Didn't you notice a powerful and obnoxious odor of mendacity
in this room?...There ain't nothin' more powerful than the odor
of mendacity...You can smell it. It smells like death.
To help win Big Daddy's favor and inheritance for Brick
(and because of her genuine concern for Big Daddy and Brick), Maggie
shocks the assembled gathering around Big Daddy by announcing her
surprise birthday present for him. She has cunningly fabricated the
lie that she and Brick have reconciled and she has conceived Brick's
child - there is the coming of new life that Big Daddy had hoped
for. She helps bring a reconciliation between the dying man and his
estranged son:
I have an announcement to make....An announcement
of life beginning. A child is comin'. Sired by Brick out of Maggie
the Cat. I have Brick's child in my body and that is my present
to you.
Big Daddy accepts Maggie's "bald faced lie" (an accusation
made by Mae) - it is one of the few lies in the film that has a chance
of coming true: "Yes
indeed. This girl has life in her body. And that's no lie." He
orders Gooper to summon his lawyer in the morning, and then
tells Brick that he going to "look this place over before I
give it up - the place and the people on it." He asks Ida to
accompany him as he exits, now confident that he can rely on Brick
as a responsible successor and heir.
The jealous Mae despicably tries to discredit Brick
- thinking that he swayed Big Daddy against Gooper in their frank
cellar discussion ("You ripped him apart, your own brother"). With
new-found self-knowledge, a new perspective on his past relationship
with Skipper, and with promising moves toward reconciliation with
Maggie and toward greater responsibility for himself, Brick tells
everyone:
"Family crisis brings out the best and the worst in every member
of the family."
Maggie is taunted by Mae for making up the lie about her pregnancy
("You want to talk about the truth? - You're not pregnant!...Don't
you try to kid us, Maggie!").
Sobered
up by the realities of life and finding a new lease on life following
the discussion with his father, Brick backs Maggie up and confirms
for Mae that Maggie is going to bear his child: "She's
not kiddin' you." Mae continues to insist that due to her eavesdropping
on their non-existent love-making through thin adjoining walls, Maggie
is assuredly not pregnant ("We hear the nightly pleading and the nightly
refusals!"):
Brick: Why you heard what Big Daddy said? 'That girl's
got life in her body.'
Mae: That's a lie.
Brick: No. No, truth is somethin' desperate and Maggie's got it.
Believe me, it is desperate and she has got it.
Mae: (to Gooper) Why don't you say somethin', honey?
Gooper: All right, honey. SHUT-UP!
Brick: Maggie?
Maggie: Yes?
Brick: Come on up here.
Maggie: Yes, sir.
Brick commands her to join him in the bedroom, where
he has put on some music and dimmed the lights. At the door to the
bedroom, she thanks him for backing her up: "Thank you for keepin'
still, for backin' me up in my lie." Brick tells her that they
will make the lie come true:
Maggie, we are through with lies and liars in this
house. Lock the door!
The film fades out on their embrace and kiss as he
tosses his pillow from the couch onto their bed - the one that they
will now share. |