Is Chalmers really necessary in the movie? He's not the bad guy, but why is he the bad guy Part III
This additional thread has been started simply to respond in an area with more room to recent replies in what's become a long-running discussion.
"You're not accepting my point of what Baker said that he was just calling his girl friend."
- That's what Baker thinks, but we soon learn he's wrong, when it turns out to be much more than just "calling his girl friend." After the hit men are killed, that phone call is Bullitt's only remaining lead, and it proves to be an important one. Where there are hit men, there's someone who ordered it, and Bullitt's a smart enough cop to suspect there's more behind that call than Baker's hasty assumption suggests.
"How is what Bullitt has a hot lead when Bullitt is already in trouble for doing something stupid?"
- I'm not sure what you're referring to by "something stupid," but Bullitt being "in trouble" has nothing to do with the value of the lead. As stated above, it's the only one he's got, and as long as he hasn't been removed from the case, he's got to follow it.
"All Chalmers did at this point was hand the Captain Bennet the habeas corpus. Certainly, he's entitled to know what happened to his witness."
- And Chalmers learns exactly that, after Bullitt informs Bennett and Baker that the witness is dead and in the morgue listed as a John Doe.
"Mrs. Renick could have just stepped out of her room and gone somewhere. She may still be alive b/c Ross was still trying to make sure Renick was dead. He may have heard the hit men were dead. The whole point is Bullitt was lucky that Ross killed Mrs. Renick before he went to the hotel."
- I don't know what the point of all these hypothetical "could haves" and "may haves" is. That's not what happens in the film. Bullitt would have been "lucky" if he'd gotten to Mrs. Renick before Ross killed her. As it was, he missed her by only minutes after losing time having to explain himself to Bennett and Baker, and then having to get Cathy to drive him to San Mateo because there were no cars left in the department pool.
"If you thought this was a good movie, then I would criticize you for not noticing Bullitt doesn't do much in his investigation. Prior to this, he was lucky for find the Sunshine Cabs taxi driver so fast."
- He "doesn't do much?" He supervises the questioning of the hotel desk clerk, which leads to the cab driver, through whom he retraces the witness's steps, which leads to the phone call, Mrs. Renick, the passport application, the impersonation, the plane reservations and the real Ross himself. And questioning Eddy, the informant, reveals the theft of $2 million and explains why Ross was on the run in the first place. That's investigation, not luck. And all on one Sunday. Not a bad day's work.
"It's simply more of the plot device while Chalmers can't do anything like use other SFPD to search for the hospital report and the black doctor and his doctor."
- Why would Chalmers waste time doing that? As I've said before, the medical chart (what you call "the hospital report") is of no urgency. All Chalmers wants to know is the whereabouts of his witness, which Bullitt reveals that very day.
"All Bullitt is doing is getting a finger print check on Renick. He doesn't even know about the real Ross."
- No, he's getting a fingerprint check on the man everyone has assumed to be Ross, because he's begun to doubt that identity. At the same time, he's also ordered Renick's passport application, and both of these confirm the corpse's true identity as that of Al Renick, revealing the real Ross to be alive and on the loose. That's smart police work.
"Since Bullitt's and his detective's fingerprints are all over the evidence, he can't tie the real Ross to the murder of Mrs. Renick. Some detective. A real piece of work lol."
- All over what evidence? The items in the trunks that Bullitt and Delgetti are handling came from the airport (as Tony tells Bullitt: "Miss Simmons's luggage has just arrived from the airport"). They weren't at the hotel when she was killed, and Ross was never anywhere near them. They're being examined not for forensic evidence in her murder, but to understand her connection to the man they think is Ross. You have to pay attention to what the film tells you.
"I think all of the above shows that we do not need Chalmers in this movie."
- Okay, that's an opinion, but one I believe is misguided. Mine was stated way back at the beginning of the first thread:
"Without Chalmers' presence, we'd be left with a rather dry investigative procedural generating little dramatic conflict or emotion.
Bullitt's run-ins with Chalmers, occasioned by his single-minded focus on his own job and refusal to sell out for career advancement, reveal aspects of his character that would otherwise have remained obscure. And that his most frequent episodes of conflict occur with one who is supposed to be on his side, rather than with the "outlaws," makes for a richer and more complexly-layered story."