Anthologized
"When life gives you lemons, make [hardboiled] lemonade."
โSalvageโ opens with a woman in distress.
In these early scenes, Nancy Gates plays the unlucky Lois as someone on the brink of disaster, but her reaction to that disaster keeps shifting. At the local crime world watering hole, appealing to Lou Henry, sheโs frantic, hunched-over, cowering. With good reason: Dan Varrel (Gene Barry) is out of prison now, and heโs coming to kill her. Lois says that she can explain everything, but thatโs the insistence of someone who knows, deep down, that no explanation will make things better.
Louโnot exactly hostile towards Lois, more cold-blooded in his distasteโprovides the essentials, the bald facts that canโt be massaged away:
Danโs kid brother, Richie, was trouble โฆ and in trouble. Dan took the rap to save him, and he was in the middle of serving his brotherโs time when Lois convinced Richie to commit another robbery: โAnd who squealed to the cops when the caper backfired?โ Richie died shooting it out with the policeโdied at the hideout Lois told them where to find. In the hazy underworld โSalvageโ portrays, those are the only facts that matter. Lois might as well have killed Richie herself, and no one is interested in helping her convince Dan otherwise.
Lou sees Lois as Richieโs femme fatale, but the next big scene reveals a more pathetic truth: sheโs actually just someone elseโs schmuck. Sheโs desperately in love with the milquetoast Tim (Peter Adams), and as soon as sheโs with him, she melts into someone clingy and weepy as she pleads for his affection. Her nerves arenโt showing anymore, but neither is her backbone.
Tim is Loisโs homme fatal, and he doesnโt even realize it. She has to tell him that heโs the reason she manipulated Richie: โSo I could get half the money, so I could dress well to please you. โฆ You always liked me when you thought I had money, didnโt you?โ
But now he knows she doesnโt, so heโs planning a date with his latest big fish love interest. Heโs not interested in running off with Lois, and he even dismisses her fears, though, out of lukewarm kindness or simple self-interest, heโll pay for her to go away (from him). But in a key detail, he canโt even remember where sheโs from. He has no idea about her past, no interest in her present, and no investment in her future. Itโs a set-down thatโs all the more devastating because heโs not even trying to hurt her.
Loisโs distress takes on its final, bleakest shade: resignation. (โWhy run when you havenโt anywhere to go?โ) She heads home, where she knows Dan will find her, where she doesnโt even bother to lock the door against him. When she gets a hang-up call, the way Gatesโs flicker of expressiveness fades into deadened calm says she understands: that was only meant to check that she was there, as a prelude to her never being anywhere again. She lights a cigarette, knowing it could be her last.
Enter Dan. It takes him a minute to realize he canโt get much of a reaction out of herโan instant of remorse, yes, but no more terror. (Gates has some good physicality here, letting Lois drop onto the bed like a sack of potatoes, as if her body is already a corpse sheโs hauling around.) As it sinks in that Lois wonโt fight him, his performance changes too. Barryโs been playing him as so driven and goal-focused that heโs essentially a man in a dream, wrapped up in the archetypal fantasy of his revenge and only now awaking to the fact that itโs not going as planned. Heโs in a โdump,โ with a numbly lovelorn woman whose eyes are glazed over with a despair that has nothing to do with him. Thereโs no satisfaction to be found here.
โI never figured itโd be this way,โ Dan says. โThis is like doing you a favor.โ Lois agrees. If he doesnโt kill her, she says, sheโll probably do it herself.
Confronted with the bottomless well of her despair, Dan pivots. Barry delivers the next set of lines in a half-strangled voice, like he has to choke his feelings down to move forward, toโwith a nod to the titleโsalvage something from this mess. Instead of killing the hopeless Lois, he sets her up in the dressmaking business again. She has talent and a clean record, and he needs a legitimate business to look good while heโs out on parole.
Lois is initially dumbfounded by this proposal, understandably enough, but their odd partnership is key to the rest of the episode.
Once she has the dress shop, Lois blossoms. Sheโs a completely new woman: lively, thriving, and in charge. Thereโs even a new note of romantic tension between her and Dan, with Barry playing their scenes together with a sense of palpable yearning; Lois canโt shake Tim, which provides a thin layer of Teflon between her and Danโs intensity. But even if she canโt fall in love with him, sheโs enchanted by his devotion: every time he comes to her rescue, his help still feels fresh and unexpected. Sheโs never had someone who says, โI just want you to be happy,โ and means it. She went to see Tim, but Dan comes to see her; Tim would give her a little money, if he had some lying around, but Dan goes out and gets a $5000 loan for her, catching some derision from the crime world in the process. (Iโll just use that scene to wave at Elisha Cook Jr.) Tim went after other women; Dan, his potential suit rejected, goes and gets her the man of her dreams. Tim is, of course, more amenable to the idea how the Dan drives home that Lois will have money.
I suspect one’s opinion of this episode mostly depends on the reception of the ending, so I’ll leave it at that as we move on to the spoilers.
The Twist: Dan only wanted Lois to be happy to he could feel he was taking something away from her when he killed her. He was playing the long game the entire time, and when, with his help, sheโs at the peak of her successโnewly engaged to the man of her dreams, owner of a thriving businessโhe finally gets his revenge.
It’s a mean-spirited twist, but its over-the-top nature wins me over, even though it made the second half of the episode incredibly hard to discuss in a spoiler-free but not obnoxiously misleading way. (Will I cave and allow myself to be obnoxiously misleading in the future? Only time will tell.) It’s not an especially good episode overall, and I’m more interested in the gentler story it discards than the revenge narrative it pursues. Still, I have a soft spot for characters whose commitment leads them to absurd and extreme places, and Dan certainly qualifies. This guy is the definition of goal-oriented.
Suspense and horror exist on a shared spectrum, and while โSalvageโ opens as suspense, the way Danโs patient sadism builds up Loisโs dream life only to turn it into a nightmare makes it wind up squarely in the horror genre, with plausibility deliberately sacrificed for effect. This isn’t the genre the show does best, but the turn here is well-executed, and director Justus Aldiss leans into it with that final shot of Loisโs face melting into a scream. Thereโs even a bit of blocking that feels like it marks the transition between genres, where an exuberant Lois is framed in a doorway, spreading out her arms, and it keeps us from seeing Dan draw his gun. When she turns around and sees it, the story she thought she was in is over.
Directed by: Justus Aldiss
Written by: Fred Freiberger (story), Fred Freiberger & Dick Carr (teleplay)
Up Next: โBreakdownโ
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Lauren James
Lauren James is a writer who wears many different hats (and pen names). She lives in Connecticut with her wife and two cats.
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I actually really liked this one! The build up is compelling, the characters are good and the twist is… brutal. I had a vague idea that the plot might be going in that direction but the sheer cruelty of the reveal still hit pretty hard for me. Could have used more Elisha Cook Jr. though.
I like the initial idea of the two of them forming a strange, poignant bond, so the twist does make me a bit wistful on that front, but yeah, the sheer brutal commitment of it makes this stand out for me. (There’s an Inside No. 9 episode like this too: cruel and powerful.) And I love the execution of the reveal. The episode as a whole feels like it misses the mark a bit for me, but it’s a memorable one and I like it. (And I think we both like it a lot more than Simon, based on his comments the other day.)
Could have used more Elisha Cook Jr. though.
That’s always true.
This one just left me cold. I didn’t really find anyone here that interesting or well rounded, I saw the twist coming from miles away, and I just didn’t feel like the twist made a ton of sense. I’m trying to accept it at the level of “man so obsessed with revenge that he spends all his money and gives his freedom” but it does not resonate much. It’s too over the top for my tastes. It might also be that I don’t care much for Gene Barry, back so soon and not really impressing me.
I was thinking more about this one while I was writing up “The Long Shot,” which we’ll get to in a few weeks, and I feel like part of the reason it feels off to me is that it’s not really a suspense story: it’s a bit more noir (dipping into horror at the end, like I said above), and it doesn’t feel like the show is as comfortable constructing that kind of tale.
BTW, if you thought this twist was a reach–which I agree with, even though I kind of like it–look up the Inside No. 9 episode “The Last Weekend,” which is what I was referencing with vomas. Again, I kind of like it anyway, but no way in hell.
As some consolation, this is the last time we’ll see Barry for a long while. He’ll show up again on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, but not before then.
Hey, we didn’t mention the intro and outro, where Hitch praises his crew and the crew seems to be out to kill him. A funny gag that is more ironic when you know how many actresses found him to be cruel and sexist and who might have not been too upset to see a target on his chair.