Rick Blaine is a detached American nightclub owner in Nazi-occupied Morocco (where local prefect Renault only feigns allegiance to visiting SS-man Strasser). Rick’s friend Sam plays piano for the happy guests every night. A slimy guy named Ugarte gets Rick to hold onto two letters of transit that will let anyone leave the city and flee the Nazis. Ugarte is killed just as Rick’s old love Elsa shows up, along with her husband, a freedom fighter named Victor Laslo. Rick realizes that Elsa was married throughout their pre-war romance in Paris, but she proves to be blameless. Rick plans to run off with her, but realizes that Victor needs Elsa, and the resistance needs Victor so he reluctantly sends them off together. Rick shoots Strasser and runs off with Renault to join the resistance.
| 
PART
  #1: CONCEPT 18/19 | |
| 
The Pitch: Does this concept excite everyone who
  hears about it?  | |
| 
Is the
  one sentence description uniquely appealing?  | 
  In an exotic city filled with intrigue, an amoral American
  nightclub owner must decide between joining the fight against the Nazis or
  pursuing his true love. | 
| 
Does
  the concept contain an intriguing ironic contradiction?  | 
  The least patriotic American has to save the
  Allied cause. | 
| 
Is this a story anyone can identify with, projected onto
  a bigger canvas, with higher stakes? | 
  Yes, we’ve all
  pined for an ex, and wondered what we would actually do if given a second
  chance, but this time the war is on the line. | 
| 
Story Fundamentals: Will this concept generate a
  strong story? | |
| 
Is the
  concept simple enough to spend more time on character than plot?  | 
  Yes, the plot is
  very simple. | 
| 
Is
  there one character that the audience will choose to be their “hero”? | 
  Yes, Rick. | 
| 
Does
  the story follow the progress of the hero’s problem, not the hero’s daily
  life?   | 
  Not strictly.  It’s not very linear.  The camera wanders through some
  tangentially related minor storylines on its way back to Rick. | 
| 
Does
  the story present a unique relationship?  | 
  Yes, an expatriate
  bar-owner and his corrupt police chief friend. | 
| 
Is at
  least one actual human being opposed to what the hero is doing? | 
  Yes, pretty much
  everyone, especially Major Strasser. | 
| 
Does
  this challenge represent the hero’s greatest hope and/or greatest fear and/or
  an ironic answer to the hero’s question? | 
  Yes, it’s his
  greatest hope, and an ironic answer to his question (Of all the bars in the
  world…) | 
| 
Does
  something inside the hero have a particularly volatile reaction to the
  challenge?  | 
  Very much so.  His cool exterior finally cracks. | 
| 
Does
  this challenge become something that is the not just hard for the hero to do (an obstacle) but hard for the hero
  to want to do (a conflict)? | 
  Very much so. | 
| 
In the
  end, is the hero the only one who can solve the problem? | 
  Yes. Only he has
  the letters of transit. | 
| 
Does
  the hero permanently transform the situation and vice versa? | 
 Yes. | 
| 
The
  Hook: Will this be marketable and generate word of mouth? | |
| 
Does
  the story satisfy the basic human urges that get people to buy and recommend
  this genre?  | 
  Yes and no.  It’s got exciting romance and
  international intrigue. | 
| 
Does
  this story show us at least one image we haven’t seen before (that can be
  used to promote the final product)? | 
  Yes: the bar, Sam,
  the airport finale. | 
| 
Is
  there at least one “Holy Crap!” scene (to create word of mouth)?  | 
  Yes, the shocking
  decision at the end.  | 
| 
Does
  the story contain a surprise that is not obvious from the beginning? | 
  Yes, see above. | 
| 
Is the
  story marketable without revealing the surprise? | 
  Yes. | 
| 
Is the
  conflict compelling and ironic both before and after the surprise? | 
  Well, it ends
  pretty much after, but yes, there’s still another fun climax, so yes. | 
| 
PART
  #2: CHARACTER 21/22 | |
| 
Believe:
  Do we recognize the hero as a human being? | |
| 
Does
  the hero have a moment of humanity early on? (A funny, or kind, or oddball,
  or out-of-character, or comically vain, or unique-but-universal “I thought I
  was the only one who did that!” moment?) | 
  Yes. His funny
  insults to Ugarte.  Or when he
  stands up for Sam. | 
| 
Is the
  hero defined by ongoing actions and attitudes, not by backstory? | 
  Yes, although,
  after we’ve come to love his current actions and attitudes, his ironic
  backstory proves to be equally interesting. | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a well-defined public identity? | 
  Yes.
  Cynical-but-witty power broker | 
| 
Does
  the surface characterization ironically contrast with a hidden interior self? | 
  Yes. Heartbroken
  romantic | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a consistent metaphor family (drawn from his or her job,
  background, or developmental state)? | 
  Yes. Makes
  everything political in a satirical way. (“When it comes to women, you’re a
  true democrat.”  “You wore blue,
  the Germans wore grey.”) | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a default personality trait? | 
  Yes. Sharp-witted,
  breezy, withering sarcasm | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a default argument tactic? | 
  Yes. Tells
  insultingly bland lies (“I came for the waters.” Q: “Where were you last
  night?” A: “That’s so long ago, I don’t remember.”) | 
| 
Is the
  hero’s primary motivation for tackling this challenge strong, simple, and
  revealed early on? | 
  All of these
  except simple: First, he wants to keep the peace with the Nazis, then he
  (maybe) wants to use the letters of transit himself, then he wants his ex
  back. | 
| 
Care:
  Do we feel for the hero? | |
| 
Does
  the hero start out with a shortsighted or wrongheaded philosophy (or accept a
  false piece of advice early on)?  | 
  Yes. “I stick my
  neck out for no one.”  | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a false or shortsighted goal in the first half?  | 
  Yes, stay out of
  politics. | 
| 
Does
  the hero have an open fear or anxiety about his or her future, as well as a
  hidden, private fear? | 
  Yes. Fear of
  attachments, fear of losing control of his bar.  Hidden: That he’ll have to face what happened in Paris. | 
| 
Is the
  hero physically and emotionally vulnerable? | 
  Yes, although more
  the former than the latter: no one successfully lays a finger on him. | 
| 
Does
  the hero have at least one untenable great flaw we empathize with? (but…) | 
  Yes, he’s become
  too cold-blooded and apolitical. | 
| 
Invest:
  Can we trust the hero to tackle this challenge? | |
| 
…Is that great flaw (ironically) the natural
  flip-side of a great strength we admire? | 
  Yes, he’s cool and
  in control.  | 
| 
Is the
  hero curious? | 
  Yes, he’s always
  asking around as to the secrets of the town. | 
| 
Is the
  hero generally resourceful? | 
  Very much so.  | 
| 
Does
  the hero have rules he or she lives by (either stated or implied)?  | 
  Yes. Don’t
  get involved, everything is amusing, don’t buy and sell human beings. | 
| 
Is the
  hero surrounded by people who sorely lack his or her most valuable quality?  | 
  Yes, they’re all
  lowlife schemers who lack his sophistication, (until Ilsa and Victor come in,
  who lack his sketchy connections). | 
| 
…And
  is the hero willing to let them know that, subtly or directly? | 
  Yes, he has a razor-sharp
  rapier wit | 
| 
Is the
  hero already doing something active when we first meet him or her? | 
  No.  He seems half-awake. 
  Of course, we gradually realize that he doing a tense and skillful
  juggling act any time his club is open. | 
| 
Does
  the hero have (or claim) decision-making authority? | 
  Yes, very much so. | 
| 
Does
  the hero use pre-established special skills from his or her past to solve
  problems (rather than doing what anybody would do)? | 
  Yes. Both his
  shady associates and his history with the resistance will be useful to him. | 
| 
PART
  #3: STRUCTURE (If the story is about the solving of a large problem) 18/21 | |
| 
1st
  Quarter: Is the challenge laid out in the first quarter? | |
| 
When
  the story begins, is the hero becoming increasingly irritated about his or
  her longstanding social problem (while still in denial about an internal
  flaw)? | 
  Yes, he’s losing
  control: the Nazis are intruding on his bar more and more and he can stomach
  them less and less, (and he can no longer stomach other women, either) | 
| 
Does
  this problem become undeniable due to a social humiliation at the beginning
  of the story? | 
  Yes, he gets
  heckled for letting the Nazis pull Ugarte out of his arms, then he sees his
  ex-love is now with a war hero. | 
| 
Does
  the hero discover an intimidating opportunity to fix the problem? | 
  Yes, he gets the
  letters of transit, but will he use them to escape alone, to help them
  escape, or to steal her and escape together? | 
| 
Does
  the hero hesitate until the stakes are raised? | 
Yes, he’s very reluctant to take the
  letters, and to let her into the bar. | 
| 
Does the hero commit to pursuing the opportunity by the
  end of the first quarter? | 
  No, he drags it out, paralyzed with
  indecision, and lashes out at her when she tries to explain. | 
| 
2nd
  Quarter: Does the hero try the easy way in the second quarter? | |
| 
Does
  the hero’s pursuit of the opportunity quickly lead to an unforeseen conflict
  with another person? | 
 Yes, Lazlo, it turns out that Ilsa is married. Also, Strasser has guess he has the
  letters. | 
| 
Does
  the hero try the easy way throughout the second quarter? | 
  Yes, he gets
  drunk, then sobers up and makes a friendly pass at Ilsa, assuming that she’s
  having a fling with Lazlo. | 
| 
Does
  the hero have a little fun and get excited about the possibility of success? | 
  Not Rick, who’s miserable, but we do
  get a long flashback to happier times here, so the audience gets some relief
  from Rick’s misery. He does get excited about the possibility of success when
  he thinks he’s won her back. | 
| 
Does the
  easy way lead to a big crash around the midpoint, resulting in the loss of a
  safe space and/or sheltering relationship?  | 
  Yes, Ilsa rejects
  him, and he finds out Ugarte has been killed. The Germans have figured out
  from Ugarte that he has the letters, so they trash his place, and eventually
  close his café. | 
| 
3rd
  Quarter: Does the hero try the hard way in the third quarter? | |
| 
Does
  the hero try the hard way from this point on? | 
  Yes, he takes
  control of the situation. | 
| 
Does
  the hero find out who his or her real friends and real enemies are? | 
  Yes, he discovers
  he can trust Renault and Ilsa. | 
| 
Do the
  stakes, pace, and motivation all escalate at this point?  | 
  Yes, Lazlo is told
  he can no longer stay in Casablanca. | 
| 
Does
  the hero learn from mistakes in a painful way? | 
  Yes, he sees
  Lazlo’s heroism for himself and realizes he can’t compete. | 
| 
Does a
  further setback lead to a spiritual crisis? | 
  Actually, the opposite of a setback causes the crisis: Ilsa says she’ll
  come with him, and he realizes that it’s wrong. | 
| 
4th
  Quarter: Does the challenge climax in the fourth quarter? | |
| 
Does
  the hero adopt a corrected philosophy after the spiritual crisis? | 
  Yes: “The problems
  of three little people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world” | 
| 
After
  that crisis, does the hero finally commit to pursuing a corrected goal, which
  still seems far away? | 
  Yes, he takes them
  to the airport, but Renault warns Strasser. | 
| 
Before
  the final quarter of the story begins, (if not long before) has your hero
  switched to being proactive, instead of reactive? | 
  Yes. “You have to
  think for both of us.”  “All
  right, I will.” | 
| 
Despite
  these proactive steps, is the timeline unexpectedly moved up, forcing the
  hero to improvise for the finale? | 
  Yes. “I told you
  this morning you’d come around but you’re a little ahead of schedule.” | 
| 
Do all
  strands of the story and most of the characters come together for the
  climactic confrontation?  | 
  Yes, everybody’s
  at the airport (except Sam, whom Ricks sells to Ferrari after all, without
  getting permission or saying good-bye!) | 
| 
Does
  the hero’s inner struggle climax shortly after (or possible at the same time
  as) his or her outer struggle? | 
  Shortly before,
  but it’s okay that the final confrontation with Strasser “rolls downhill”. | 
| 
Is
  there an epilogue/ aftermath/ denouement in which the challenge is finally
  resolved (or succumbed to), and we see how much the hero has changed
  (possibly through reversible behavior) | 
  Yes, this time he
  stands up to the Nazis, then he goes off to join a Free French garrison in
  Braziville with Louis. | 
| 
PART
  #4: SCENEWORK 16/20 (Sketchy crook Ugarte asks cool club owner Rick
  to hold onto the letters of transit for him.) | |
| 
The
  Set-Up: Does this scene begin with the essential elements it needs? | |
| 
Were
  tense and/or hopeful (and usually false) expectations for this interaction
  established beforehand? | 
  Yes, we’d heard
  about how cool Rick is for ten minutes, and we’d formed high expectations,
  which he meets. There’s also been lots of talk of the dead German couriers. | 
| 
Does
  the scene eliminate small talk and repeated beats by cutting out the
  beginning (or possibly even the middle)?  | 
  No, it’s beginning to end. | 
| 
Is
  this an intimidating setting that keeps characters active?  | 
  It is for Ugarte,
  who knows he isn’t welcome.  Rick
  is very comfortable…until he realizes that the letters have made his beloved
  bar into an unsafe space. | 
| 
Is one
  of the scene partners not planning to have this conversation (and quite
  possibly has something better to do)? | 
  Well, Rick is
  “busy” playing chess with himself and would rather keep doing that. | 
| 
Is there
  at least one non-plot element complicating the scene?  | 
  Not really. | 
| 
Does
  the scene establish its own mini-ticking-clock (if only through subconscious
  anticipation)? | 
  Somewhat, we know
  the Germans are searching for the letters of transit. | 
| 
The
  Conflict: Do the conflicts play out in a lively manner?  | |
| 
Does this scene both advance the plot and reveal
  character through emotional reactions? | 
  Just barely.  It’s mostly plot, but we see Rick’s
  first flickers of emotion when sees the letters. Ugarte
  clearly feels bad to hear Rick’s low opinion of him. | 
| 
Does
  the audience have (or develop) a rooting interest in this scene (which may
  sometimes shift)? | 
  Yes, we instantly
  like Rick and share his distaste for Ugarte. | 
| 
Are
  two agendas genuinely clashing (rather than merely two personalities)? | 
  Yes, both: Rick
  doesn’t like Ugarte or his plan. | 
| 
Does
  the scene have both a surface conflict and a suppressed conflict (one of
  which is the primary conflict in this scene)? | 
  Yes, surface over
  the letters, suppressed over their personal conflict (but that comes to the
  surface too) | 
| 
Is the
  suppressed conflict (which may or may not come to the surface) implied
  through subtext (and/or called out by the other character)?  | 
  Yes.  | 
| 
Are
  the characters cagy (or in denial) about their own feelings?  | 
  Yes, Rick doesn’t
  betray his interest in the letter, tries to hide his disgust for Ugarte until
  the end, Ugarte tries to hide his fear of the Germans. | 
| 
Do
  characters use verbal tricks and traps to get what they want, not just direct
  confrontation? | 
  Yes.  Ugarte tries to trick Rick into
  talking about his past.  Rick
  gets Ugarte to almost admit to killing the German couriers. | 
| 
Is
  there re-blocking, including literal push and pull between the scene partners
  (often resulting in just one touch)? | 
  Yes, Rick sits
  down to play chess with no one, Ugarte comes and goes, Rick gets up to
  confront him, stand over him. There’s one touch when Ugarte has interested
  Rick in looking at the letters but doesn’t want him to see them yet. | 
| 
Are
  objects given or taken, representing larger values? | 
  Yes, the letters
  of transit are shown and then exchanged.  Rick fingers chess pieces, Ugarte drinks and smokes. | 
| 
The
  Outcome: Does this scene change the story going forward?  | |
| 
As a
  result of this scene, does at least one of the scene partners end up doing
  something that he or she didn’t intend to do when the scene began?  | 
  Yes, Ugarte
  convinces Rick to take the letters. | 
| 
Does
  the outcome of the scene ironically reverse (and/or ironically fulfill) the
  original intention? | 
  No, Ugarte unironically gets what he
  wanted. | 
| 
Are
  previously-asked questions answered and new questions posed? | 
  Yes, who has the
  letters, who is Rick?  Will
  Ugarte’s plan work?  Will Rick be
  caught with the letters? | 
| 
Does
  the scene cut out early, on a question (possibly to be answered instantly by
  the circumstances of the next scene)? | 
  No, it goes until they both leave. | 
| 
Is the
  audience left with a growing hope and/or fear for what might happen next?
  (Not just in the next scene, but generally) | 
  Yes, we like Rick so we hope
  that the letters won’t get him in trouble, and we fear that Ugarte will bring
  violence into the bar.  | 
| 
PART
  #5: DIALOGUE 15/16 | |
| 
Empathetic:
  Is the dialogue true to human nature? | |
| 
Does the
  writing demonstrate empathy for all of the characters? | 
  Yes (except
  Strasser, but that’s okay). 
  Victor or Ilsa, despite being obstacle characters, are particularly
  well-handled, allowed to hold their own even in scenes where we get
  frustrated by them. | 
| 
Does
  each of the characters, including the hero, have a limited perspective? | 
  Yes, until the
  very end, when Rick finally learns to really
  see all the angles. | 
| 
Do the
  characters consciously and unconsciously prioritize their own wants, rather
  than the wants of others?  | 
  Yes.  Everybody, even Strasser and Victor,
  who have strong ideologies, are beholden to (and somewhat frustrated with)
  their organizations and threading difficult needles.   | 
| 
Are
  the characters resistant to openly admitting their feelings (to others and
  even to themselves)?  | 
  Very much so. | 
| 
Do the
  characters avoid saying things they wouldn’t say and doing things they
  wouldn’t do? | 
  Yes, Rick and
  Renault are both great at evading certain topics. | 
| 
Do the
  characters interrupt each other often? | 
  Yes. Rick keeps
  asking Sam for advice and then failing to hear it. Rick is the master of the
  interjected insult. | 
| 
Specific: Is the dialogue specific to this world
  and each personality? | |
| 
Does
  the dialogue capture the jargon and tradecraft of the profession and/or
  setting? | 
 Yes and
  no.  Jargon: Not
  really, no one involved in the movie had ever been anywhere near Casablanca,
  so the argot isn’t particularly authentic.  Tradecraft: Yes, for each
  profession: “Round up the usual suspects.” | 
| 
Are
  there additional characters with distinct metaphor families, default
  personality traits, and default argument strategies from the hero’s? | 
  Yes and no: Metaphor family: not
  really, Default personality trait: , Argument strategy: | 
| 
Heightened:
  Is the dialogue more pointed and dynamic than real talk? | |
| 
Is the
  dialogue more concise than real talk? | 
  Yes, very much so.
  “He’s like any other man, only more so.” | 
| 
Does
  the dialogue have more personality than real talk? | 
  Very much so, see
  above. | 
| 
Are
  there minimal commas in the dialogue (the lines are not prefaced with Yes,
  No, Well, Look, or the other character’s name)? | 
  Yes. | 
| 
Do
  non-professor characters speak without dependent clauses, conditionals, or
  parallel construction? | 
  Yes. | 
| 
Are
  the non-3-dimensional characters impartially polarized into head, heart and
  gut? | 
  Everybody’s
  three-dimensional. | 
| 
Strategic: Are certain dialogue scenes withheld
  until necessary?  | |
| 
Does
  the hero have at least one big “I understand you” moment with a love interest
  or primary emotional partner? | 
 Yes,
  they have it out.  | 
| 
Is
  exposition withheld until the hero and the audience are both demanding to
  know it? | 
  Yes.  They don’t even reveal Rick until we’re eager to meet him,
  and they tease that long flashback for a long time before they deliver it. | 
| 
Is
  there one gutpunch scene, where the subtext falls away and the characters
  really lay into each other? | 
  Yes, the night
  scene in Rick’s apartment. | 
| 
PART
  #6: TONE 10/10 | |
| 
Genre:
  Does the story tap into pre-established expectations? | |
| 
Is the
  story limited to one genre (or multiple genres that are merged from the
  beginning?) | 
  Somewhat, a short-lived genre:
  the international-intrigue-romance | 
| 
Is the
  story limited to sub-genres that are compatible with each other, without
  mixing metaphors? | 
  Yes, the World War
  2 resistance movie | 
| 
Does
  the ending satisfy most of the expectations of the genre, and defy a few
  others? | 
  Yes, they admit
  they love each other and kiss…but then he sends her away.  They shoot one Nazi…but forgive the
  other. | 
| 
Separate
  from the genre, is a consistent mood (goofy, grim, ‘fairy tale’, etc.)
  established early and maintained throughout? | 
  Yes, a veneer of
  witty sophistication with a grim reality poking through. This
  is extablished right away when a man is shot dead in streets, but locals
  don’t lose their good-humor with the aghast tourists. | 
| 
Framing:
  Does the story set, reset, upset and ultimately exceed its own expectations? | |
| 
Is
  there a dramatic question posed early on, which will establish in the
  audience’s mind which moment will mark the end of the story?  | 
  Yes, we also see a
  plane leaving and people wondering who’s on it. | 
| 
Does the story use framing devices to establish
  genre, mood and expectations? | 
  Yes, we see a
  globe, maps, and brief omniscient narration, then we see Nazis
  asking who has the letters of transit, then people wondering who Rick is. | 
| 
Are
  there characters whose situations prefigure various fates that might await
  the hero?  | 
  Yes, Rick is
  worried that he’s as bad as Ugarte, or as corrupt as Renault.  He also sees that he’ll never be as
  good as Victor. | 
| 
Does
  foreshadowing create anticipation and suspense (and refocus the audience’s
  attention on what’s important)? | 
  Yes, see above. | 
| 
Are
  reversible behaviors used to foreshadow and then confirm change? | 
  Yes, he refuses to
  shield a customer from the Nazis. 
  (He also has another thing he won’t do but he breaks that rule early:
  he never sits with customers…until Ilsa comes in) | 
| 
Is the
  dramatic question answered at the very end of the story? | 
  Yes, we find out
  who’s on that plane. | 
| 
PART
  7: THEME 13/14 | |
| 
Difficult:
  Is the meaning of the story derived from a fundamental moral dilemma? | |
| 
Can
  the overall theme be stated in the form of an irreconcilable good vs. good
  (or evil vs. evil) dilemma? | 
  Yes, love vs.
  country. | 
| 
Is a
  thematic question asked out loud (or clearly implied) in the first half, and
  left open? | 
  From Ferrari, of
  all people: “When will you realize that isolationism is no longer a practical
  policy?” | 
| 
Do the
  characters consistently have to choose between goods, or between evils,
  instead of choosing between good and evil? | 
  Yes, is it worth
  accommodating the Nazis to keep the peace, is Ugarte worth saving, should you
  leave your new love if your husband turns up alive, etc… | 
| 
Grounded:
  Do the stakes ring true to the world of the audience? | |
| 
Does
  the story reflect the way the world works? | 
  Yes, the answers
  to all of the above questions are realistic. | 
| 
Does
  the story have something authentic to say about this type of setting (Is it
  based more on observations of this type of setting than ideas about it)?  | 
  No.  It’s based on the idea of Casablanca, not the actual
  place. | 
| 
Does
  the story include twinges of real life national pain? | 
  Very much so.  It’s all about the pain of the war. | 
| 
Are
  these issues and the overall dilemma addressed in a way that avoids moral
  hypocrisy? | 
  Very much so. | 
| 
Do all
  of the actions have real consequences? | 
  Very much so. | 
| 
Subtle: Is the theme interwoven throughout so
  that it need not be discussed often? | |
| 
Do
  many small details throughout subtly and/or ironically tie into the thematic
  dilemma? | 
  Yes, the song, the
  Vichy water, etc. | 
| 
Are
  one or more objects representing larger ideas exchanged throughout the story,
  growing in meaning each time? | 
  Yes, the letters of transit,
  the song (if that counts) | 
| 
Untidy:
  Is the dilemma ultimately irresolvable? | |
| 
Does
  the ending tip towards one side of the thematic dilemma without resolving it
  entirely? | 
  Yes, it comes down
  strongly on the side of country, but love is clearly more appealing.  | 
| 
Does
  the story’s outcome ironically contrast with the initial goal? | 
  Very much so: he
  gets her back only so that he can send her away. | 
| 
In the
  end, is the plot not entirely tidy (some small plot threads left unresolved,
  some answers left vague)? | 
  Yes, we don’t find
  out the fate of the other couple trying to get free, for example. | 
| 
Do the
  characters refuse (or fail) to synthesize the meaning of the story, forcing
  the audience to do that? | 
  Pretty much.  He tries to say what it all means,
  but that’s just to get her on the plane, he hasn’t really processed the pain
  yet. | 
Final Score: 111 out of 122
 

 
1 comment:
"Does the hero enjoy some success and have some fun? Is the promise of the premise fulfilled?"
Rick does enjoy some success, even if he's not having much fun at all the wheeling and dealing. But I'd say even more so that the promise of the premise is fulfilled by all the machinations at his club. We're set up for intrigue and that's what the film delivers.
In light of the way this step seems to work in CASABLANCA, ALIEN and THE SHINING, maybe it's time to revise the phrasing of this point slightly? Or perhaps maybe to start thinking of each part of it in isolation: 1) success (though sometimes defined negatively in horror films where a hero's failure = audience fun); 2) fun (for the audience if not the hero) and 3) the promise of the premise (the potential for interesting stuff to happen in the story world given our narrative and genre expectations)
"Q:Do you withhold exposition until the character and the audience are both demanding to know it? A: Yes. They don’t even reveal Rick until we’re eager to meet him."
I'd argue that this actually qualifies as a kind of special case for exposition. In a way, there's a ton of exposition about Rick before we meet him. It's just all very mysterious, sometimes contradictory and lacking in detail. But part of the reason we're eager to meet him is because he's been deliberately, expositionally, built up in our minds. Orson Welles referred to such roles -- like his own famous turn as Harry Lime -- as "Mr. Wu" parts, after a character he once played in the theater, who the audience didn't get to meet till halfway through the play, but who all the other characters talked endlessly about.
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