Third Man Out | |
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Written by | |
Directed by | Ron Oliver |
Starring |
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Music by |
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Country of origin | Canada United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 98 minutes |
Original release | |
Release |
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Third Man Out is a 2005 gay-themed mystery film.[1] It is the first film adaptation of a Richard Stevenson novel[2] featuring fictional detective Donald Strachey.[3]
Plot
At the home of John Rutka and Eddie Santin, Rutka is apparently shot. Later, private eye Donald Strachey arrives at a hospital to meet with a client. While there, he sees his partner, Tim Callahan, who is escorting his boss, a prominent New York State senator who is there for a photo op with the comatose Catholic Bishop McFee. Santin reveals that the client is Rutka, who Strachey despises for his activities outing prominent local closeted homophobes. Strachey initially declines the assignment, but later accepts after Rutka is attacked and offers a large retainer.
Rutka shows Strachey his files on outing targets, one of which is Bruno Slinger, a prominent state politician who has voted against gay rights. When a fire breaks out at Rutka's house, Strachey puts it out. As he investigates, Strachey becomes convinced Rutka and Santin are staging the various attacks, quits the case, and returns the unused portion of the retainer. The next morning, a news program reports Rutka's death. When Santin indignantly calls him, Strachey apologizes, returns with Santin to retrieve Rutka's files for safekeeping, and retakes the case. Santin identifies three upcoming targets: Slinger, children's show host Ronnie Linklater, and an unidentified man.
Strachey finds a torn-off mudflap and initials for three persons Rutka paid off. Strachey tracks the first two to local hotel owners who spied on their guests for Rutka. They reveal that Slinger was sexually connected to Linklater and that Linklater had weekly sex with another man who possibly accidentally died. Strachey traces a license plate to Art Murphy, a used car dealer, who refuses to cooperate. The man who visited Rutka's hospital room attacks Callahan at their home. Strachey arrives in time to drive him away, but Callahan is hospitalized. The experience shakes Strachey enough to consider abandoning the case until Callahan, who has had a change of heart about Rutka, convinces him to continue.
Strachey interviews Linklater, but Linklater denies either he or Slinger had any involvement in Rutka's death. Linklater refuses to identify the unknown man, but Strachey believes he survived. As Strachey leaves, the man who attacked Callahan ambushes him, knocking him unconscious. When he wakes, he is greeted by the man's boss—Slinger, who also denies involvement in Rutka's murder and demands he hand over Rutka's file on him. Slinger allows Strachey to leave unharmed but tells him only that Linklater and Rutka were both involved in St. Michaels' choir.
As Callahan is discharged, the couple come across Art Murphy and his wife, visiting Bishop McFee. Callahan learns Murphy is McFee's brother-in-law and driver, and McFee is Linklater's injured lover. Callahan uses his seminary contacts to identify Father Morgan, the priest at St. Michael's when Rutka was in the choir. Strachey identifies Murphy's car, which is missing a mudflap, as the one used by McFee. Morgan is arrested for covering up McFee's sex crimes and Rutka's murder. At Rutka's funeral, Santin offers Strachey the remaining fee for his work. The name on Santin's proffered business card matches that of the final unidentified Rutka contact, David Resuto, the Rutka family's lawyer. Strachey asks Rutka's sister Ann why Resuto received such a large payoff, and she reluctantly explains that it was for a life insurance policy; Santin is the beneficiary.
Suspicious, Strachey follows Santin to an airport, only to find that Rutka is alive. Rutka explains that he faked his death, framed Father Morgan, and exposed McFee as a pedophile to use the life insurance money to fund cheap drugs for AIDS patients in Mexico. Strachey is outraged until Rutka reveals he was a victim of McFee's molestation. Strachey protests that Morgan will go to prison for a murder he did not commit, and Rutka agrees that Strachey can tell the authorities he is still alive. Strachey allows them to leave, and, later, Strachey and Callahan conclude that the world is not as black and white as they previously thought. As they toast their new perspective, they destroy a file Rutka kept on Strachey, who escaped controversy when his gay lover was made a scapegoat by the U.S. military.
Cast
Actor | Role |
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Chad Allen | Donald Strachey |
Sebastian Spence | Timmy Callahan |
Jack Wetherall | John Rutka |
Woody Jeffreys | Eddie Santin |
Sean Young | Ann Rutka |
April Telek | Alice Savage |
John Moore | Bishop McFee |
Alf Humphries | Father Morgan |
P. Lynn Johnson | Senator Dianne Glassman |
Guy Fauchon | Newspaper Photographer |
James Michalopolous | Dark Glasses |
Moneca Delain | Nurse |
Kirsten Williamson | Meredith |
David Palffy | Bruno Slinger |
Colin Lawrence | Cole |
Mary Belle McDonald | Eleanor |
Anthony O'Clery | Redd Koontz |
Daryl Shuttleworth | Detective Sean "Bub" Bailey |
Andrew Moxham | Dark Figure #1 |
Warren Takeuchi | Dark Figure #2 |
Sean Carey | Ronnie Linklater |
Claudine Grant | Newscaster |
Matthew Rush | Dik Steele |
Mark Acheson | Fake Dik Steele Male |
Lisa Dahling | Fake Dik Steele Female |
Nelson Wong | Kenny Kwon |
Kevin Blatch | Nathan Zenck |
Richard Cox | Howie Glade |
Giuseppe Abbruzzese | Man In Video |
Carrie Patershuck | Woman In Video |
Kevin O'Grady | Man #2 |
Scott Swanson | Art Murphy |
Sonja Bakker | Joan |
Kwesi Ameyaw | Reporter #1 |
Nicola Crosbie | Reporter #2 |
Rob deLeeuw | Puppeteer |
Sibel Thrasher | Diva Singer |
Carl McDonald | Drag Queen |
Continuity
This film reveals that before becoming a private investigator, Donald was in the armed services, but was forced out because of the ban on gay servicemembers. This subplot is explored further and in much more depth in the sequel, Shock to the System.
Production notes
Although this was the first film adaptation of one of Richard Stevenson's books about the gay private eye, Donald Strachey, it was not the first of his novels to be published. It appears then that the order of the films differs from that of the books, as characters such as Detective Bub Bailey and Kenny Kwon are introduced to Strachey in this film, and he sees them again in On the Other Hand, Death and Ice Blues, even though the novels the latter two are adapted from took place chronologically before the book version of Third Man Out.
In addition, some minor details are changed from the books. Since the internet was not widely known the year Third Man Out (the novel) was published, Queerscreed, which is the name of John Rutka's publication from which he outs prominent closeted homophobes, is something he passes out solely in print in the book version, while in the film it's renamed The Rutka Report and is also available on the web.
References
- ↑ Lee, Nathan (2007). "Third Man Out (2005)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2007-12-05. Retrieved 2008-08-25.
- ↑ Stevenson, Richard (1992). Third Man Out. New York: Southern Tier Editions. ISBN 0-312-07110-8.
- ↑ Chad Allen: From outed to "Third Man Out" Gay.com article