two-paths-structure-dressed-to-kill Dressed to Kill
Protagonist read. The framework's protagonist-switch problem is handled by treating Liz Blake (with Peter Miller as an integrated junior partner) as the joint protagonist of the main arc, and Kate Miller's pre-death stretch as setup that delivers the Inciting Incident. Kate's arc has no midpoint in the framework's sense; the film's structural spine bends around Liz's trajectory from prime suspect to bait to survivor.
Quadrant. Better tools, insufficient — sound-tools-defeated, the De Palma signature. Liz's asymmetric approach is the right play given what she knows, but it is not enough on its own; she survives because of an institutional surveillance she did not know was in place, and the wind-down is a nightmare rather than a triumph.
Initial approach. Work the legitimate channels. Tell the police what she saw, find the alibi witness, run her business as usual, treat the threats as nuisances the system will eventually address.
Post-midpoint approach. Bypass the institutions. Form a working alliance with the dead woman's son. Break into the killer's office. Use her own body as bait inside a fabricated therapy session. Trust the asymmetric tools because the institutional ones have been shown to be structurally blocked.
Equilibrium. Liz, mid-route between clients, presses the elevator button on a Manhattan apartment-building floor. A call girl in motion, ending one job and heading to the next, no help needed, no problem she cannot route around herself. The opening seconds of beat 11, before the doors open.
Inciting Incident. The elevator doors open on Kate Miller's body. Liz steps in, picks up the fallen straight razor, glimpses the tall blonde reflected in the convex ceiling mirror, and stands in the hallway screaming for someone to call the police. Her fingerprints are now on the murder weapon and the killer has seen her face.
Resistance / Debate. Liz tries the legitimate playbook. She tells Marino she was visiting a friend, watches him pull her solicitation arrest record, accepts a 48-hour deadline to produce her alibi witness, and calls the escort service for Ted's number — Norma refuses to release it. She continues running her business: stock tips, escort jobs, deflecting Bobbi's answering-machine threats as background noise. The institutional approach is being executed in good faith; the film is showing it fail in real time.
Commitment. Liz's apartment, after Peter has saved her from the subway attacker. Peter shows her his time-lapse photographs from staking out Elliott's office and proposes the office break-in. Liz agrees to try Marino first but accepts Peter as a partner: "I'll be the best cover you ever had." The scene where she stops working alone — beat 25.
Rising Action. The investigation as joint operation begins to take shape. Liz redirects a taxi to throw a pursuer at Columbus Circle while Elliott calls his answering service trying to reach Bobbi. The Donahue television interview about transsexualism plays in Liz's room as she tosses off "Thank God straight fucks are still in style," pre-loading the vocabulary the audience will need later. Bobbi's answering-machine threats escalate — "I'm gonna cut those spying eyes out!" — while Liz juggles Auditron stock and escort bookings, the routine and the menace stacked on the same soundtrack.
Escalation 1. The subway. Liz descends to escape Bobbi, gets surrounded by a gang of young men, and is failed by transit cops who arrive too late and see nothing. Peter, who has been tailing the blonde from Elliott's office, sprays the attacker with the homemade mace from his science-project kit. The institutional protection (the police) is shown breaking down at the same moment the asymmetric protection (a teenager with a chemistry-class can of mace) proves it works.
Midpoint. Liz confronts Marino with the subway attack. He is skeptical, then admits he cannot get a warrant for Elliott's office because "judges take a long time before they let you start snooping around some shrink's office." He plants the asymmetric option without endorsing it: "That wouldn't prevent a paranoid murder suspect from, uh, breaking in. You know, searching for some evidence to defend her case." He threatens to book her tomorrow if she does nothing. Liz walks in expecting protection and walks out conscripted — the institutional approach is named-and-buried and the asymmetric approach is named-and-adopted in a single scene. Beat 26.
Falling Action / new approach. Peter develops his time-lapse photographs and identifies the blonde as Elliott's last appointment; the plan crystallizes around getting the appointment book. In parallel, Elliott visits Dr. Levy and warns him that a patient named Bobbi is dangerous, methodically describing his own crimes in the third person without recognizing the confession for what it is. Peter visits Elliott's office as a grieving patient to scout the layout, exploiting the card Elliott handed him at the precinct.
Escalation 2. Liz fabricates the therapy session. Lightning flashes through the office windows as she spins a graphic nightmare about a man with a razor, drops the patient mask, reveals her profession, tests Elliott's attraction, and escalates to the proposition. She undresses in front of him, tells him to do the same while she powders her nose, and leaves the room. The asymmetric approach is now fully operationalized — body as bait, bathroom as Peter's window of access, arousal as the trigger Levy will later explain.
Climax. Liz returns from the bathroom and walks through the darkened office. Elliott's chair faces her, empty. She calls his name three times, lets out a nervous laugh, and Peter pounds on the window from outside — too late, separated by glass. The blonde appears behind her with the razor raised. The post-midpoint approach is at its absolute limit: Liz has nothing in her hand, no exit, no leverage. The test of "use yourself as bait" reaches the moment where bait is what you actually are. Within beat 32.
Wind-Down. Betty Luce's bullet finishes what Liz's tools could not — the institutional surveillance Liz did not know was in place arrives as the rescue she did not choose. The wig falls and the psychiatrist is the killer. Levy delivers the diagnosis, Marino confesses he conscripted her because he was at his kid's football game, and Peter retreats to his computer. The film does not end there. Liz showers at Peter's house and a nightmare replays Kate's elevator murder transposed to the shower — Elliott in a stolen nurse's uniform, the razor at Liz's throat. Liz wakes screaming. Peter rushes in and holds her. The new equilibrium is not "the case is closed" but "the trauma persists, and the surrogate family is what answers it" — the better-tools-insufficient quadrant's signature wind-down, where the institutions have processed the case but the protagonist still needs someone in the room.