10 / 10
Casablanca is the Warner Bros. wartime romance that became the most-quoted American film of its century. Michael Curtiz directed. Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein, and Howard Koch wrote, adapting an unproduced stage play called Everybody Comes to Rick’s. Humphrey Bogart plays Rick Blaine, the cynical owner of a nightclub and gambling house in Vichy-controlled Casablanca. Ingrid Bergman plays Ilsa Lund, the woman Rick loved in Paris and lost when the Germans arrived. Paul Henreid plays Victor Laszlo, her husband and a Czech resistance leader. Claude Rains plays Captain Louis Renault, the corrupt French police prefect. Conrad Veidt plays Major Strasser of the Third Reich. Sydney Greenstreet plays Signor Ferrari, the local black market operator. Peter Lorre plays Ugarte, a thief murdered in the first act for the letters of transit that drive the plot.
The film made approximately seventy-five thousand dollars in its initial 1942 release on a budget under one million. The commercial performance grew through wartime rerelease and postwar prestige programming. The film won three Academy Awards including Best Picture. It is consistently ranked among the greatest American films ever made and has remained in active circulation for eight decades. Casablanca is the canonical case study for how a workmanlike studio production with a finished-during-shooting script can become a permanent cultural fixture.
The Script That Wrote Itself
The Casablanca script was famously unfinished when shooting began. The Epsteins and Koch were writing pages while the production rolled. Ingrid Bergman did not know until late in production whether Ilsa would leave with Rick or with Victor. The uncertainty shows in her performance and helps it. She plays Ilsa as a woman who genuinely does not know what she will do. The audience reads this directly. The production constraint became character truth.
The dialogue is the script’s permanent gift. “Here’s looking at you, kid.” “Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.” “We’ll always have Paris.” “Round up the usual suspects.” “I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here.” Each line emerged from the back-and-forth between three writers under deadline pressure. The lines work because they are specific to their speakers and their moments. None of them feels written. They feel said.
For Writers
Production constraints can produce character truth that polished scripts cannot. Casablanca’s writers did not know their ending. Their lead actress did not know her decision. The performance carries the uncertainty as honest emotional work. The lesson is that fiction sometimes benefits from the writers not having figured everything out yet. Endings worked out late can land as discoveries rather than as deliveries. The audience can tell the difference between a character making a choice and a character executing a decision the writer made for them.
Rick and Louis
The film’s most-loved relationship is not the Rick-Ilsa romance. It is the Rick-Louis friendship. Bogart and Claude Rains play two cynics who have arrived at corruption by different routes. Rick has chosen retreat after losing Ilsa. Louis has chosen accommodation as a French official under Vichy occupation. They drink together, gamble together, share women, and observe each other’s hypocrisies with affectionate clarity. The friendship is the warmest thing in the film and the source of its final line.
The Louis character arc is one of the cleanest in American cinema. Rains plays Louis as a man whose corruption is a comfortable mask he has stopped questioning. The arc consists of small moments where the mask slips. The closing line, “Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship,” resolves the arc by acknowledging that Louis has chosen sides without admitting it. The performance is calibrated for exactly this resolution. Rains is the film’s secret protagonist.
For Writers
The relationship at the center of a story is sometimes not the romance the marketing sells. Casablanca’s deepest connection is the friendship between two men who recognize each other’s compromises. The lesson is to pay attention to which characters the script returns to for warmth. The audience reads warmth. The relationship that generates it carries the film whether or not the story formally frames it as the central bond.
The Airport
The final airport sequence is the film’s permanent emotional architecture. Rick gives Ilsa the letters of transit she came to get. He delivers the speech that ends “the problems of three little people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.” Louis lets him go after shooting Major Strasser. The fog rolls in. Rick and Louis walk away into uncertain wartime employment together. The sequence runs about ten minutes and sets the gold standard for film endings.
The construction is precise. Every line in the airport scene pays off a setup earlier in the film. The letters of transit Ugarte stole in act one. Rick’s Paris memory. Louis’s Vichy compromises. Victor Laszlo’s resistance mission. The German pursuit. Each thread converges and resolves in the same fog-shrouded location. The audience experiences the resolution as inevitable because every component was prepared. The film teaches a generation of screenwriters what payoff means.
For Writers
An ending that lands cleanly is an ending whose components were planted earlier in the story. Casablanca’s airport sequence works because every emotional beat connects back to something the audience already understands. The lesson is that ending craft is setup craft performed in reverse. Strong endings require strong middles. Plant the elements. Trust the audience to remember them. Let the resolution arrive on the prepared ground.
Craft Note
The Marseillaise sequence is the film’s most committed individual passage. The Germans gather at Rick’s piano and begin singing Die Wacht am Rhein. Victor Laszlo orders the house band to play La Marseillaise. The entire club joins. The Germans are drowned out. Many of the extras singing in the scene were actual European refugees from the war. Their tears in the closeups are real. The sequence captures something the script alone could not engineer: the actual emotional weight of displacement performed by people who were displaced. The Marseillaise is the moment Casablanca stops being a Warner Bros. production and becomes a wartime document.
The Verdict
10/10. A workmanlike studio production that became the canonical American film of its century through specific craft decisions made under deadline pressure. The Epsteins, Koch, Curtiz, Bogart, Bergman, Rains, and the European extras singing through tears in the Marseillaise sequence all contributed. The result is the rare film whose every component remains in active conversation eight decades later. Watch it. Watch it again. The craft holds.
FAQ
Was the script really being written during production?
Yes. The Epsteins and Howard Koch were writing pages while the production rolled. The ending was not finalized until late in shooting.
Did Ingrid Bergman really not know who Ilsa would choose?
Bergman has said in interviews that she did not know throughout much of production. The uncertainty shows in her performance and serves it.
Is the Marseillaise scene improvised?
The scene is scripted. The emotional intensity of the European refugees among the extras is not. Many were actual displaced persons. Their reactions are not performance.
How did the film win Best Picture?
The film qualified for the 1943 Academy Awards by release date. It won Best Picture, Best Director (Curtiz), and Best Adapted Screenplay (Epsteins and Koch).
Who plays Sam?
Dooley Wilson, an American actor and musician. Wilson did not play piano. The piano work was performed by Elliot Carpenter off camera while Wilson mimed.
What are the letters of transit?
Fictional documents the script invented to drive the plot. The letters supposedly cannot be questioned or rescinded. No such documents existed in actual wartime France.
Should I watch this?
Yes. Casablanca is one of the films every viewer of American cinema should see at least once. The craft justifies the reputation.