Skip to main content

Empire Magazine Greatest Movies List - #273: The Maltese Falcon

People who don’t like black and white movies don’t know what they are missing. Sure, most of the times it means the movies are very old, the dialogue and attitudes are dated, and there is a lot less action compared to today’s hyper-frenetic blockbusters, but many of those films are timeless classics. Case in point: The Maltese Falcon (1941) the first major film noir stars screen icon Humphrey Bogart as private investigator Sam Spade who is trying to stay ahead of a bunch of shady characters who want to get their hands on a mythical jewel-encrusted bird. Hallmarks of the genre include low-key lighting, a complicated plot, and of course a femme fatale.

I first saw The Maltese Falcon on a boring Sunday morning while in college in Quebec City. It was playing on the CBC, probably because they thought many old people would be watching at that time of the day, but since I like movies new or old I had no problem with diving back to the 1940s. Also I was curious to see it since this is such a classic you have heard of it one way or another in pop culture. As it is a Warner Bros. film it was eventually parodied in an episode of Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries called The Maltese Canary. Same general plot, only Sam Spade never had to deal with Sylvester the cat chasing the bird. 

The story begins with a scene that is a staple of the noir genre. A beautiful woman (Mary Astor) walks into the office of San Francisco private investigators Sam Spade (Bogart) and Miles Archer (Jerome Cowan) asking for help. She says her name is Ruth Wonderly and is looking for her sister, who is hanging out with a man called Floyd Thursby. She has arranged to meet Thursby, but pays Archer to follow her to the meeting and find her sister. So far, this is just another simple missing persons case.

Only that night Spade gets a call telling him is partner has been fatally shot. In another classic scene the police take Spade down to the station where the investigators give him a grilling because they think he is involved neck-deep in the whole thing. Not only was Spade’s partner shot, but Thursby was also found dead that same evening. The police think Thursby shot Archer and Spade shot Thursby in retaliation. Archer’s wife is no big help, as she thinks Spade could murder Archer to be with her.

The plot thickens even further when Space finds Wonderly who says her real name is Brigid O’Shaughnessy and Thursby was actually her partner and he most likely killed Archer. Later at his office Spade meets Joel Cairo (Peter Lorre), a slippery fellow who wants to pay Spade to find a black bird, only to pull a gun on him. What is the black bird, and where is it? That is the question on everyone’s mind. During a meeting with the shady Kasper Gutman (Sydney Greenstreet), a.k.a the “Fat Man,” Spade learns all about the Falcon’s history and the many people who have died trying to find it. Gutman, Cairo, Thursby, and O’Shaughnessy are in a long line of poor saps who have been looking for the Maltese Falcon for hundreds of years.

The movie may be black and white, but the world Spade inhabits is certainly a grey one. All of the characters he meets during his investigation lie to him and are willing to commit murder in order to find the priceless artefact. In the midst of it all Spade stays cool under pressure and even has time to romance the femme fatale.

If you are confused by the time the credits are rolling it doesn’t really matter. With film noir, the plot is notoriously hard to follow, but the atmosphere is easy to enjoy. Here was era where men wore sharp suits and hats every day to work, damsels in distress had deadly secrets, cigarette smoke blended with the low lights, and cool cats like Bogart said lines like “I hope they don’t hang you, precious, by that sweet neck.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Empire Magazine (2008) Greatest Movies List - #97: Reservoir Dogs

One of the most surprising things about Quentin Tarantino’s debut film Reservoir Dogs (1992) is the fact that it has never been adapted for the stage. They will make a show out of Beauty and the Beast , Monty Python and the Holy Grail , and even Spider-Man , but somehow a movie in which most of the action takes place in a warehouse has never made it to Broadway? In any case, this was the movie that announced the arrival of the insatiable film fan that could regurgitate everything he had learned watching movies at the video store into stories filled with sudden bursts of violence, sharp-dressed characters, awesome soundtracks, and crackling dialogue.   Since this violent piece of American cinema came out at a time when I was still learning basic math in elementary school there was no way I would watch this on the big screen. However as the years went by it became a cult classic, and even a classic of the independent movies genre, and was re-released on special edition DVD for its

Empire Magazine (2008) Greatest Movies List - #49: Evil Dead 2

What do you get when you mix buckets of fake blood, creative camera operators, the humour of the Three Stooges, and a man with the most recognizable chin in Hollywood? You get Evil Dead II (1987), the horror classic that somehow manages to remake the original in the first 15 minutes and yet feel entirely original. Even though it is mostly set in a cabin in the woods, that staple location in the horror genre, it feels like a roller coaster ride. This is especially true once the film's hero, the scrappy Ash Williams, embraces the madness by arming himself with a sawed-off shotgun and attaching a chainsaw where his hand used to be. "Groovy" indeed. This gore-soaked franchise has had a long run, starting off with one low-budget movie directed by a young Sam Raimi and then growing into two sequels, a remake, comic books and a TV show with three seasons. My starting point was the third entry, Army of Darkness, which moves the action to the Middle Ages with the same

Empire Magazine (2008) Greatest Movies List - #102: The Hustler

Robert Rossen’s The Hustler (1961) is proof that any sport can be used for good cinematic drama even if that sport is pool. Although this is not a game that involves a massive sport arena and bloody boxing gloves, things can get dramatically interesting if the monetary stakes are high, and visually arresting if the filmmakers shoot from the right angle. It also helps a lot if the man putting his money on the table is played by a young Paul Newman in a career-breaking role. Prior to watching the film I had a vague idea of the meaning of the word “hustling” and a rather passive interest in the game of pool. It’s a fun game to play if you are having a couple of nachos and chicken wings on a Friday evening with friends, but I didn’t see it as a spectator sport. Watching The Hustler in the classics section of Netflix two years ago was a bit of an education since it shows the sport as a way of life for some people, and a huge source of revenue for big time gamblers. Newman star as