Der in Los Angeles lebende Privatdetektiv Philip Marlowe wird von Moose Malkoy, der auf Bewährung aus dem Gefängnis entlassen wurde, engagiert, um dessen Freundin Velma zu finden, eine zwiel... Alles lesenDer in Los Angeles lebende Privatdetektiv Philip Marlowe wird von Moose Malkoy, der auf Bewährung aus dem Gefängnis entlassen wurde, engagiert, um dessen Freundin Velma zu finden, eine zwielichtige ehemalige Nachtklubtänzerin.Der in Los Angeles lebende Privatdetektiv Philip Marlowe wird von Moose Malkoy, der auf Bewährung aus dem Gefängnis entlassen wurde, engagiert, um dessen Freundin Velma zu finden, eine zwielichtige ehemalige Nachtklubtänzerin.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 1 Gewinn & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Georgie
- (as Jimmie Archer)
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The hard-boiled detective fictions of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler were created in conscious opposition to the reactionary puzzles of the English Golden Age (eg Agatha Christie), which were exercises in asserting order and social control. Chandler tried to express a bleaker reality, one where arbitrary violence and corruption is not so easily contained, where smaller crimes may be solved, but society itself is rotten, diseased, irredeemable. Chandler pits his hero Philip Marlowe against this malaise, tough, solitary, misanthropic, frequently compared to medieval knights, as hopelessly out of his time as Don Quixote.
Chandler's novels are completely filtered through the prejudiced narration of Marlowe, so instead of realism we get a barely controlled expressionism, riddled with ideology. Marlowe is unable to trust anyone, and defines himself against everyone else, the Other, especially women and blacks. This is a subtext in the novel, but RIchards foregrounds it in the early scenes of this film. When Marlowe enters a black neighbourhood investigating Velma, he is very uncomfortable in an alien environment. Although, as a detective, he has the freedom to navigate the city, to access both poor black neighbourhoods and obscenely wealthy white mansions in a way neither one of these nor the other can, he is still constrained by ideology, the ideology of his times - he is not as apart from the corruption as he thinks. And so we frequently see him indoors, even imprisoned, by cops and criminals alike - like a conservative, everything is connected for Marlowe, except everything stinks.
This making mental states physical is important for a narrative seen through its hero's head. It puts us on our guard, distances us from Marlowe in a way Chandler never lets us, allows us to be more critical. Another device is the bizarre use of narrative voiceover. This seems conventional enough, Marlowe telling us the story, controlling, interpreting, often verbatim from the book. But his voiceover is broken - he starts addressing us, then, within that, he tells Nulty a story; so that the viewer is at two removes from a story that we only have it's teller's word for its veracity. In its modest way, the film DOES have revisionist aspirations.
Unlike Altman's film, 'Farewell' is purely enjoyable on the level of a murder-mystery thriller - the plot is satisfyingly, Chandlerianly (sic?) opaque; there are sufficient interesting supporting characters; the violence seems quaintly 1940s; the music is exciting. The film, therefore, would be pleasant, but harmless, except for one crucial element: Robert Mitchum, America's greatest actor. His aging Marlowe might be more appropriate to 'The Long Goodbye', but this is an astonishing portrait of middle- giving on to old-age, a study of a man struggling with cynicism, trying to maintain order (wisecracks; narration; frequent references to baseball, a game with rules) and humanity (the kid) in a world that only offers diabolic inversions of each.
Even more resonantly, the film is a film about film noir, about acting, about Robert Mitchum, soon to become famous in the period represented, soon the embodiment of the doomed noir hero. The Chandlerian dialogue that works wonderfully on the page can seem corny and stilted when spoken, but Mitchum pulls it off with melancholy beauty. He is the only screen Marlowe that seems like an actual human being who has lived - not even Bogie quite managed that.
In the closing scene an atmosphere of rising crisis that seems to hang in the air; created by the soulful musical score. Marlow with the case all wrapped up and himself at a loose end; in the amusement centre playing the machines, picks up a discarded newspaper with "Tokyo" in bold print as the front page headline. Was this the late hours of the 6th of December in Los Angeles? A sailor and his girl, and a soldier in the background makes it seem so. Both the sailor and the soldier, and the whole of America blissfully unaware, that a Japanese armada has shaped a easterly course
across the North Pacific. That scene coupled with the soulful musical score is like a forlorn-sounding and doom-laden overture to what is about to happen with surprising and devastating suddenness on the following but quiet Sunday morning in Hawaii. It is not surprising that one of the songs is titled, "Sunday".
This adaptation of Raymond Chandler novel features action, suspense, humor, mystery and Robert Mitchum in one of his best performances as a man struggling with cynicism, hatred, and betrayal.
Ah yes, and Charlotte Rampling and the sometime Thelma really was "cuter than lace pants"
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesIn the novel, Philip Marlowe was in his 30s. Robert Mitchum, who plays him in this film, was 57.
- PatzerWhen Marlowe (Robert Mitchum) drives up to Mrs. Grayle's home (Charlotte Rampling), the front entrance is obviously double doors but when the butler is shown opening it from the inside, it is clearly a single door.
- Zitate
Philip Marlowe: [voiceover] The house itself wasn't much. It was smaller than Buckingham Palace and probably had fewer windows than the Chrysler building.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Morning Patrol (1987)
- SoundtracksI've Heard That Song Before
Words and Music by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn
Sung in the dance hall at the opening.
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- Budget
- 2.500.000 $ (geschätzt)






