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Murder, My Sweet Streaming

Vendredi, août 13th, 2010
Murder, My Sweet Streaming. Murder, My Sweet Streaming.

Movie Title: Murder, My Sweet
Average customer review:

Murder, My Sweet is available for streaming or downloading.

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This one of my favorite movies. Years ago I rented a VHS of it and made a dupe at home. The quality was lousy but I liked it and played it often, but I learned my lession about making unauthorized copies. My daughter’s puppy urinated all over the tape. This movie is so good it even survived that.

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This is classic noir, with Phillip Marlowe. The plot is about stolen jade, hidden identities, blackmail, love, treachery and murder. The story is complicated, the casting is great, the photography and voice-over narration carry things along. It has style. The ending is satisfying. And the dialogue is some of the best ever written.

Powell broke through into serious roles with this film. Even in all the singing roles he had up to this movie he exuded cocky confidence, and that aspect of his personality is perfect here. As an aside, if you enjoy his singing movies, and I do, watch how he can smile naturally while singing; that’s hard.

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Claire Trevor, it seems to me, almost always played bruised roses (Stagecoach, Key Largo) or rotting orchids. You cared about her because she was one of life’s losers, or you wanted to go to bed with her even knowing you might not wake up in the morning. The scene when we (and Marlowe) first meet her is just as good as the scene when MacMurray first meets Stanwyck in Double Indemnity.

Mike Mazurki as Moose Malloy is great, probably the best role he ever had. He was no actor, but he is effective and sympathetic as a slight pyscho who genuinely is in love; he’s starring in his own version of Romeo and Velma.

One of the key ingredients in making this movie work is the dialogue. Quantities of it must have been lifted verbatim from Farewell, My Lovely. When Moose talks about Velma being “cute as lace panties” the imagery is vivid. Raymond Chandler, in my view, is the best author of private eye mysteries yet. If you haven’t read him, dive in. Ross Macdonald and Hammett come close, but it’s no three-way tie.

See the movie. Read the book.

The DVD transfer is first rate. There’s a commentary by a fellow named Alain Silver which is adequate, and not essential to enjoying the film.

Dick Powell makes a fine Philip Marlowe in this splendid film noir. The film is based on Raymond Chandler’s “Farewell, My Lovely,” which marks the second appearance of Marlowe in print. The book was actually adapted once before for an entry in the Falcon series (”The Falcon Takes Over”), which featured George Sanders. That film, however, simply adapted the plot of “Farewell, My Lovely” for the Falcon series; hence, the character is named Gay Lawrence, not Philip Marlowe. So in effect, “Murder, My Sweet” is the first screen appearance of Philip Marlowe. In addition, “The Falcon Takes Over” is a decent but lightweight thriller - not the noir classic of “Murder, My Sweet.”

The plot is typically convoluted for a film noir written by Chandler. Marlowe, a somewhat down-on-his-luck private detective, is approached by Moose Malloy, a giant of a man who has just been released from the pokey and is searching for his ex-girlfriend. He reluctantly accepts the case. However, before he can make headway, Marlowe gets a second client, the effete Lindsay Marriott who wants Marlowe to accompany him on a late night pay-off. These two cases quickly become enmeshed and lead to numerous complications and murders.

“Murder, My Sweet” is first-rate film noir in every way. Director Edward Dmytryk (The Caine Mutiny, Crossfire) was one of the best noir film makers of all time, and he uses the conventions of the genre (shadows and unusual lighting, hard-boiled dialogue) with fine subtlety. The cast is also extraordinary - lead by Powell as Marlowe. Arguably, Humphrey Bogart was a more forceful Marlowe two years later in “The Big Sleep.” However, Powell is convincing as the straight-shooting but somewhat desperate detective. Furthermore, he’s joined by femme fatale Claire Trevor, who is always terrific in this type of hard-bitten role. Screenwriter John Paxton adapted Chandler’s novel - managing to save some of the best bits, such as Marlowe’s encounter with Mrs. Florian (”She was a charming middle-aged lady with a face like a bucket of mud”). All of the elements really come together for one of the finest noirs ever made, and this DVD transfer is solid.

DVD extras: The original theatrical trailer and an informational, but somewhat boring commentary by Alain Silver, who is a film producer and has written several books on film noir.

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