Viking Night: Dirty Harry

By Bruce Hall

June 22, 2010

Call me punk. I love when you call people punk.

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These days, anybody who pitched this stuff to a room full of studio brass would get laughed out of the building. However, back in the day when Archie Bunker was still scaring the pants off of television censors, this was pretty groundbreaking. But unlike Archie, Harry Callahan was meant to be more symbolic than realistic. People with his psychological profile don’t usually become cops; they join motorcycle gangs, start talk radio shows or end up filling a cot in a federal penitentiary. Yet Harry was meant to represent a cultural backlash of sorts; a by product of the social change America was experiencing at that time was a renewed focus on the fair treatment of those accused of a crime. And though one of the strengths of our society is that everyone is given the presumption of innocence, sometimes in the rush to ensure fairness the most important person in the process – the victim – becomes an afterthought. It’s the classic argument of justice versus liberty – and if you add to this a new kind of criminal for which the police have no answer and the public has no defense, you have the genesis of Dirty Harry.

The movie opens with a stunning aerial shot of San Francisco, and the shocking murder of a beautiful woman by a sniper’s bullet. Homicide Inspector Callahan is assigned to the case, and quickly discovers that the murderer is an attention starved psychopath who wants the police on his trail and is determined to kill again. Patterned in part on the real life Zodiac killer – who was still active at the time – Scorpio, as the sniper calls himself, openly taunts the police and soon develops an affinity for his pursuer.




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It isn’t long before the most important aspect of any cat and mouse thriller is revealed – the fact that despite their disproportionate assets, the cat and the mouse are equally cunning! As an illustration of this, Harry foils an unrelated bank robbery after leaving the crime scene and famously asks the lone survivor how lucky he feels – you know the words. The moment is flashy but not necessarily superfluous; Harry and Scorpio are both strange people who tend to get what they want in violently abnormal ways, and as such have a unique ability to understand one another. Of course, this is the sort of thing that only happens in films – the Zodiac was never caught, and while the motivations of real serial killers are tragic and complex, Scorpio turns out to be motivated by far more ordinary things. And real detectives are considerably more astute than their movie counterparts; despite his knack for blowing things up Harry ultimately makes his collar as the result of dumb luck rather than brilliant police work. Most police dramas suffer from such things, but unlike most police dramas the tension driving Dirty Harry isn’t in the hunt for the killer, no doubt to the surprise of first time viewers.

Callahan manages to track down Scorpio surprisingly early in the film, but the detective’s slash and burn methods have unintended consequences. Without meaning to, he raises the stakes and hands Scorpio a shocking victory. Suddenly, Harry is the one on the defensive, being raked across the coals over a legal technicality. It’s one of the most important scenes in the film and you shouldn’t overlook it because it’s really the meat of the action sandwich that is Dirty Harry. For one incredibly profound moment, the meanest man in San Francisco is the only one who has the empathy to question the welfare of Scorpio’s latest victim over that of her murderer. And when Callahan finally snarls back at his superiors “What about her rights?” you might feel as though he’s taken the words right out of your mouth. Eventually we discover that Harry wasn’t always this way – his wife was lost to a drunk driver, and his inability to fully cope is the source of his determination, as well as his charming personality.


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