Re: RARA-AVIS: noir vs hardboiled

james.doherty@gsa.gov
07 Dec 98 12:10:00 -0500 --UNS_gsauns2_3009294094
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Content-Disposition: inline


Mark, re your comment below:

"Jim, while I pretty much agree with your definitions of noir and
hardboiled, I have to nit-pick about one thing. The great Murder My
Sweet was not the first time Farewell My Lovely was filmed. It was
shot earlier as The Falcon Takes Over. American Movie Classics
occasionally runs it (along with others in the Falcon series)."

True enough, but I never said *Murder, My Sweet* was the first film
version of *Farewell, My Lovely*. I said it was the first Philip
Marlowe film. *The Falcon Takes Over* (in which I understand Ward
Bond does a decent job in the Moose Malloy role) featured George
Sanders as Michael Arlen's the Falcon, not Chandler's Marlowe.

Similarly, the fourth Marlowe film, *The Brasher Doubloon*, which
featured George Montgomery as Marlowe, was not the first film version
of *The High Window*. The first film version was a Mike Shayne movie,
the title of which escapes me at the moment, in which Brett Halliday's
character was played by Lloyd Nolan. - Jim Doherty

--UNS_gsauns2_3009294094--
#
# To unsubscribe, say "unsubscribe rara-avis" to majordomo@icomm.ca.
# The web pages for the list are at http://www.vex.net/~buff/rara-avis/.