Movie |
Precognition | Warning
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Gail Russell's car, a Chrysler convertible, is shown entering her driveway, and the license plate "40 R 116" is visible. In the film SUNSET BOULEVARD, William Holden's car, a Plymouth convertible, is described by Finance Man #2 as a "1946 Plymouth convertible, California license 40 R 116"
Early in the picture, a very humble John Triton is shown climbing stairs to his tenement. In the background is clearly shown the Los Angeles funicular railway, Angels Flight, a feature of Bunker Hill in downtown from 1901, running between the close-spaced buildings from Hill to Olive St, south of the entrance to the 3rd St tunnel. The tenements were eventually to fall to re-development, as did Angels Flight, which after a hiatus of about 27 years, was restored to service nearby on the hill.
The title comes from a well-known poem by FW Bourdillon (1852-1921), "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes": "The night has a thousand eyes, And the day but one; Yet the light of the bright world dies With the dying sun.The mind has a thousand eyes, And the heart but one: Yet the light of a whole life dies When love is done."
Triton says that a poet once wrote a poem in which he said each man kills the thing he loves. He is referring to "The Ballad of Reading Gaol," by Oscar Wilde.
"Screen Director's Playhouse" broadcast a 30 minute radio adaptation of the movie on February 27, 1949 with Edward G. Robinson and William Demarest reprising their film roles.
"John Triton aka 'The Mental Wizard': I'd become a sort of a reverse zombie. I was living in a world already dead, and I alone knowing it."
"John Triton aka 'The Mental Wizard': This gift, which I never asked for and don't understand, has brought me only unhappiness!"