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IMDbPro

Philip Marlowe, détective privé

Original title: Philip Marlowe, Private Eye
  • TV Series
  • 1983–1986
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
514
YOUR RATING
Powers Boothe in Philip Marlowe, détective privé (1983)
ActionCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

Private detective Philip Marlowe solves many crimes in Los Angeles during the 1930s.Private detective Philip Marlowe solves many crimes in Los Angeles during the 1930s.Private detective Philip Marlowe solves many crimes in Los Angeles during the 1930s.

  • Stars
    • Powers Boothe
    • Billy Kearns
    • Kathryn Leigh Scott
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    514
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Powers Boothe
      • Billy Kearns
      • Kathryn Leigh Scott
    • 19User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 13 nominations total

    Episodes11

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    Powers Boothe
    Powers Boothe
    • Philip Marlowe
    • 1983–1986
    Billy Kearns
    Billy Kearns
    • Lt. Victor 'Violets' Magee
    • 1983
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    • Annie Riordan
    • 1983
    Ken Pogue
    Ken Pogue
    • Lt. Angus
    • 1986
    Frank Pellegrino
    Frank Pellegrino
    • Lt. Yberra
    • 1986
    Angelo Rizacos
    • Frisky…
    • 1986
    Billy J. Mitchell
    • Charlie
    • 1983
    Tony Sibbald
    Tony Sibbald
    • Police sergeant
    • 1983
    Jim Dunk
    • Detective Baker
    • 1983
    Michael Shannon
    Michael Shannon
    • Dr. Sutro
    • 1983
    Helen Shaver
    Helen Shaver
    • Belle Delaguerra
    • 1986
    Roxanne Hart
    Roxanne Hart
    • Jean Adrian
    • 1986
    Melody Anderson
    Melody Anderson
    • Rhonda Farr
    • 1986
    Robin Givens
    Robin Givens
    • Token Ware
    • 1986
    Kate Reid
    Kate Reid
    • Anna Jeeter
    • 1986
    Linda Griffiths
    • Lola Barsley
    • 1986
    Gayle Hunnicutt
    Gayle Hunnicutt
    • Sally Glenn
    • 1983
    Lise Hilboldt
    Lise Hilboldt
    • Dolores Chiozza
    • 1983
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    7.7514
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    Featured reviews

    8rockyb61

    Marlowe

    I remember watching the first season of this when it came out and absolutely adored it. Powers Boothe's portrayal was just right. It was around the same time that Jeremy Brett's Sherlock Holmes first aired, so we were spoilt for quality detective drama. If I recall correctly, it was part financed by London Weekend Television (part of the ITV network at the time) and shown on ITV in prime time. I recall them announcing that, even though the show was popular, they would not be making any more after the initial five due to it being so expensive. Nearly every item in the show was a genuine period piece, with very little being reproduced. This, and the fact that it was shot in the UK, made it extremely costly. The second series was never shown properly in the UK. Odd episodes would turn up in the early hours of the morning and, although the production values were not as good, the shows were still enjoyable. Hopefully someone will produce a restored version of the shows on DVD (previous comments claim that the quality is not too good). I also think it's time for Marlowe to appear again. James Caan's version in "Poodle Springs" didn't quite work as I thought he was a little too old for the role. Ideally, Marlowe should be in his late thirties/early forties: young enough to take (or throw) a punch, but old enough to have "been around the block" a few times. Ten years ago, Harrison Ford would have been ideal, but now I'm not sure. Any ideas .... ?
    SylvesterFox007

    The Original Tough Guy Private Eye Returns

    Raymond Chandler practically invented the detective noir genre with his Philip Marlowe novels and stories. The trench coat. The fedora. The monotone first-person narration and the cynical outlook on life. They all started with Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe.

    So it's only appropriate that several actors have brought Phillip Marlowe to life over the years, most notably James Garner and Humphrey Bogart.

    It's hard not to keep Humphrey Bogart's portrayal in mind when watching a Philip Marlowe mystery, and most actors understandably pale by comparison. That said, Powers Boothe still does a worthy job. You must put all of the sleazy roles he's ever played out of your head. He perfectly portrays Philip Marlowe as a cynical private investigator with a tough exterior but a heart of gold.

    Samuel Matlovsky's musical score is the icing on the cake. The background music, and especially the haunting theme tune, definitely enhance the 1930's gumshoe atmosphere.

    I've only seen a few episode from the '86 series. These episodes of "Phillip Marlowe: Private Eye" are filled with clever twist and turns, exciting gun fights, and plenty of tough-talking wise guys. If nothing else, they will inspire you to seek out the writings of Raymond Chandler.
    9fung0

    Here's to Powers Boothe - The Only True Marlowe

    I've meant to post a review of this ground-breaking series for some time. The untimely passing of Powers Boothe this week has goaded me into action...

    To sum up: this series is not just the best adaptation of Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe, it's the *only* adaptation that really manages to to remain true to the letter and the spirit of the books. Amazing, but true.

    Humphrey Bogart was charming as Marlowe, of course... but his Big Sleep (especially the best-known edit) is 99% Howard Hawks, and should have a 'may contain traces of Chandler' warning on the label. What's more, Bogey couldn't have been much less like the character described by Chandler. In fact, Chandler's own ideal Marlowe is said to have been Cary Grant, which gives you some idea of just how far off-track Bogart, the geriatric Mitchum, and others have been. (Let us not even speak of Dick Powell.) Robert Montgomery could have been good, but he loused it up with that stupid first-person camera business, which has never worked and never will. Astoundingly, the best Marlowe prior to Boothe was Elliott Gould, in Altman's modernized, revisionist yet nonetheless evocative Long Goodbye. (EDIT: forgot to mention James Garner, who was very good, though a bit more Rockford than Marlowe.)

    But Powers Boothe was an even more appropriate choice. He had just the right age, just the right gravitas - the world-weary toughness of a Bogart or Mitchum, but also the class, the energy and the good looks described by Chandler. He also had the advantage of being less familiar. When you looked at Boothe you didn't see a movie star - you saw Marlowe, a hard-working gumshoe, and nobody else.

    The Boothe series also marked a rare attempt to include the *most* significant character from Chandler's stories: the city of Los Angeles. (The best previous attempt was, again, Altman's Long Goodbye.) Hawks' Big Sleep is set-bound, and could be taking place in New York as easily as LA. Mitchum's Marlowe was set in England - a travesty! The Powers Boothe series at least attempted to capture some of the gaudy, steamy, crazy city that Chandler created in his writing. Ironically, the series was not filmed in Hollywooed, but in Toronto, which gives you some idea of what can be done with a bit of creative camera work and a few judiciously-chosen locations.

    Another very cool thing about this series is that instead of adapting The Big Sleep - YET AGAIN - it adapts some of Chandler's excellent short stories. We get that flavorful dialog, those evocative descriptions, and the dark noir-ish plots - all of them fresh and barely familiar to even the most devoted Marlowe fans.

    Obviously, it's hard to beat Bogey and Hawks for sheer entertainment value. Or Altman for quirky, innovative filmmaking. But when it comes to all-out fidelity to the cherished Chandler stories, Powers Boothe in Philip Marlowe Private Eye has no rival.
    7blacknorth

    John Dalmas, PI, in fact

    This rather curious series is a hybrid in more ways than one.

    A US-UK co-production, with the UK input coming from LWT, as far as I remember, it looks like a period Dempsey & Makepiece. It seems to have been shot on video stock which has degraded over the years or been damaged in storage. But, thankfully, that doesn't affect the viewing experience very much.

    Chandler's stories feature a number of different Private Detectives, of whom Marlowe is the most famous. But many of the original stories, from which these episodes are adapted, actually featured John Dalmas as the shamus, rather than Marlowe. As a reader of Chandler I was always mystified as to why Marlowe eclipsed Dalmas - the latter character seemed witter, surer, with more tragedy about him and less of the throwaway line. What we have in this series is many of the Dalmas stories given over to Marlowe. And, to be frank, it doesn't feel right - Marlowe doesn't have the intellectual equipment of Dalmas, and I think the scriptwriters recognised this and took some severe liberties with the plotting when making their adaptations. One compromise leads to another...

    Having said all that, the series is very enjoyable as it stands. Powers Boothe is good as Marlowe, more of the laconic thick-ear than the closet fist. The supporting actors are all fine and there are some very effective action set-pieces scattered throughout.

    Recommended. I feel sorry for Dalmas, though I know he'd shrug it off.
    10ANDREWEHUNT

    The 1983 Episodes Were By Far the Best

    Long before Sex in the City or Six Feet Under, HBO proved itself to be at the cutting edge of television when it released several episodes of Philip Marlowe, Private Eye, with Powers Boothe as the best Marlowe in film history (even better, in my view, than Humphrey Bogart, Dick Powell and Robert Mitchum). He's so authentic, so dead-on perfect, that I can't read Chandler's Marlowe stories without thinking about him. The episodes that aired in 1983 were, in my view, far superior to the series in 1986. The writing was better, the story lines were tighter, and they had a gritty, noirish atmosphere that made you think of Los Angeles in the early 1940s. Unfortunately, the 1986 episodes did not have the same Chandleresque seedy Los Angeles feel. For years, I watched and re-watched the original episodes on videotape, but--alas--I've long since lost those taped episodes and I haven't been able to find copies of them ever since. Let's hope HBO re-releases them on DVD. This was television at its absolute finest.

    post-script: After writing this review, I discovered that the episodes are indeed available on DVD. What a great day I'm having!

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Before he died, Raymond Chandler informed his agent Helga Greene never to allow the character of Philip Marlowe to appear in a TV show. Helga Greene later allowed this show to be made after discussions with producer David Wickes.
    • Quotes

      Philip Marlowe: Hollywood's the kind of town where they stick a knife in your back and then have you arrested for carrying a concealed weapon.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Goodnight Sweetheart: In the Mood (1993)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 16, 1983 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Philip Marlowe, Private Eye
    • Filming locations
      • USA
    • Production companies
      • David Wickes TV
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
      • London Weekend Television (LWT)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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