The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]

Posted by Notcot on Sep 6, 2010 in Noir |

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (20 Reviews)

Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall made screen history together more than once, but they were never more popular than in this 1946 adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel, directed by Howard Hawks (To Have and Have Not). Bogart plays private eye Philip Marlowe, who is hired by a wealthy socialite (Bacall) to look into troubles stirred up by her wild, young sister (Martha Vickers). Legendarily complicated (so much so that even Chandler had trouble following the plot), the film is nonetheless hugely entertaining and atmospheric, an electrifying plunge into the exotica of detective fiction. William Faulkner wrote the screenplay. –Tom Keogh

The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]

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5 Comments

Anonymous
at 6:43 am

Review by for The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]
Rating: (5 / 5)
This film is absolutely mesmerizing, a masterpiece full of sharp dialog and a plot so complex not even Raymond Chandler could tell you who commited one of the murders. Bogart is Detective Philip Marlowe and from the moment he arrives to talk to General Sternwood and gets mixed up with his daughters this is a film classic.Bacall is the sultry older sister, but it is sexy and thumb sucking little sister Martha Vickers he meets first. As he tells Sternwood, “Yeah, we met. She tried to sit in my lap and I was standing up”. This is all about gambling debts and murder, all of which leads to Eddie Mars and Carmen (Vickers). But there are more twist and turns here than a rollercoaster, and it moves just about as fast. If you blink, be prepared to start over.Howard Hawks made a masterpiece here. It is the finest straightforward detective novel ever put on celluloid. William Faulkner adapted Raymond Chandler’s greatest literary achievement for Hawks and the whole thing is filmed as a fast moving dream of dialog and images hard to forget. One critic likened it to a huge hangover. That is a perfect description of this film.Bogart’s Marlowe has his hands full trying to keep Carmen out of trouble she may already be in to deep to get out of, and the sparks between he and Bacall may just ignite if he can figure out a way to keep the fast rising body count from getting any higher while keeping himself alive. Bacall has never been more beautiful or inviting than when she is slumped down in the seat of Bogart’s car, just waiting for him to kiss her.You have to see this film to really appreciate it. You’ll never see anything else like it in American cinema. Pick up this one as soon as you can.


 
Nina-Thbo ZANETTI
at 6:46 am

Review by Nina-Thbo ZANETTI for The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]
Rating: (5 / 5)
I grew up hearing great stories about Bogart’s movies, so much loved by my dad… It took me years before I decided to “face” one of those black&whites and see what the fuss was all about. Now I know: his charms, the lines, the storyboard… I absolutely loved my first Bogey movie and I went straight for more. The Big Sleep provides you with intrigue, suspense, romance and even some action, all of them mixed the right way for a captivating cocktail.


 
Anonymous
at 7:23 am

Review by for The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]
Rating: (5 / 5)
This detective thriller is archetypal Bogart and Bacall. Dripping with rich, sensual, dark atmosphere, so that the complexity of the plot (it took me several viewings over many years to get the hang of it) just doesn’t matter – don’t worry about following every detail, just sit back and let this stylish, classic noir soak in to your consciousness in its own good time.


 
Henry Ireton
at 7:59 am

Review by Henry Ireton for The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]
Rating: (5 / 5)
The fact that this has got six five star reviews so far should say something about its quality and there are so many wonderful performances in this film that are really worth highlighting that I hope even in this review I can say something new about it. The point of the film in part is the wonderful relationship between Bacall and Bogart and yet just saying this is a film of that relationship would be completely wrong. There are many other great performances- even by characters whose description is as small as girl in a bookstore.

This film is about as atmospheric as it gets. You can disregard the complicated plot to concentrate solely on the way that each scene, each character almost draws with him or herself an atmosphere. So for instance General Sternwood who hires Marlowe as a private detective has an atmosphere of decadence around him- the heat of his room and the wilting flowers mirror the rottenness of his past. Decadence, moral and actual dominates the film- pornography and violence are referenced though a lot is toned down from the book because of the Production codes in Hollywood at the time.

This is an amazing film to which this review doesn’t do adequate justice but I hope it adds to the pile of general approbation and convinces you to give this a try.


 
R. J. Williams
at 8:44 am

Review by R. J. Williams for The Big Sleep [VHS] [1946]
Rating: (4 / 5)
This is the first time I’ve ever seen ‘Bogie’ in lead role and what a star he is, Lauren Bacall is equally as mesmerising on screen.

The plot is a right old head scratcher as you try to keep track with what the hell is going on, but it’s still highly entertaining stuff from the quirky one liners, “she tried to sit on my lap while I was standing up”, the nymphomaniac character played by the beautiful Martha Vickers, to the directors obsession that every single female character would find Bogart a sex symbol on first sight, something which he himself thought was amusing.


 

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