

He lies on a bed surrounded with money, suggesting both his wealth and lack of concern with it. The establishing shot of children playing on the street suggest innocence, but this idea gives way quickly as we cut to canted angles closer to our subject.

A landlady (Constance Purdy) babies Uncle Charlie and looks after him.Uncle Charlie’s money lays on the floor.Uncle Charlie (Joseph Cotten) lies in bed.The object of these men’s investigation is unknown. This shot dissolves to a view of two detectives eating underneath the Pulaski Skyway in New Jersey. A waltz is characterized as being a triple time A rhythym characterized by three beats to a bar,so it makes sense that this shot of the couples dancing will be be used 3 more times during the film’s run-time, each occasion marking one of 3 pivotal movements in the narrative: the start of the mystery, the mystery’s reveal, and the final conclusion. The title card opens on a shot of couples waltzing to the “Merry Widow Waltz”. It’s from this scene that we dissolve into the view of two detectives looking for a subject. The opening sets up the waltz that will serve as the movie’s key refrain, set to pop up at the key moments of the film. Two detectives, Graham (Macdonald Carey) and Saunders (Ford) look across for a missing subject.The waltz refrain dissolves to a view of the Pulaski Skyway.The “Merry Widow Waltz” plays as the title sequence goes on.
