March 16 movie: Key Largo. Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall and John Barrymore are held hostage by gangster Edward G. Robinson during a hurricane. As Georg pointed out, after Casablanca many if not most of Bogart's characters were basically Rick, the embittered loner who "sticks his neck out for no one," until something happens that makes him remember his values and willingness to sacrifice for the greater good.
One thing in this movie really bothered me. [minor spoilers:] Robinson kills a police officer, and then tells the sheriff it was two Native American petty crooks who did it. The sheriff promptly kills the Native Americans. When everything comes out in the end, the sheriff and Barrymore wring their hands a bit about how the deaths were just too bad, and then that seems to be the end of it. So apparently, in the 40s a police officer could shoot two people in the back because some random (and highly shifty) stranger said they might have committed a crime, and there would be no consequences aside from a vague statement of remorse. Or maybe that's only if the victims were a minority.

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