The Maltese Falcon

by DVD

Video Recording

Status

Available

Call number

DVD 369

Rating

(46 ratings; 4.4)

Description

After the death of his partner, San Francisco private eye Sam Spade is dragged into a quest for a priceless statuette.

Original publication date

1941-10-03

Media reviews

The strange, dreamlike tension of the film escalates with each new confrontation, each new tailing, each new beating, with Gutman and Cairo shot from a queasy low angle, and the nightmare culminates in a gripping series of closeups on each strained face. Spade acidly dismisses the falcon as “the
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stuff that dreams are made of”, an anti-Prospero of cynicism and survival.
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4 more
The New Yorker
Humphrey Bogart’s most exciting role was Sam Spade, that ambiguous mixture of avarice and honor, sexuality and fear, who gave new dimension to the detective genre. This film, the first directed by John Huston, is an almost perfect visual equivalent of the Dashiell Hammett thriller. Huston used
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Hammett’s plot design and economic dialogue in a hard, precise directorial style that brings out the full viciousness of characters so ruthless and greedy that they become comic. It is (and this is rare in American films) a work of entertainment that is yet so skillfully constructed that after many years and many viewings it has the same brittle explosiveness—and even some of the same surprise—that it had in its first run.
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The Warners have been strangely bashful about their new mystery film, "The Maltese Falcon," and about the young man, John Huston, whose first directorial job it is. Maybe they thought it best to bring both along under wraps, seeing as how the picture is a remake of an old Dashiell Hammett yarn done
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ten years ago, and Mr. Huston is a fledgling whose previous efforts have been devoted to writing scripts.... the trick which Mr. Huston has pulled is a combination of American ruggedness with the suavity of the English crime school—a blend of mind and muscle—plus a slight touch of pathos.... It's the slickest exercise in cerebration that has hit the screen in many months, and it is also one of the most compelling nervous-laughter provokers yet.
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The Maltese Falcon is going to be one of the most profitable and talked about pictures of the year. On a number of accounts it is distinguished celluloid entertainment, but it is of great interest to the trade because it reveals, in startling terms, the unheralded talent of topflight scenarist,
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John Huston, who, in the dual capacity of writer and director of this picture, is now entitled to take his place among the most important creative artists in the industry.... The Maltese Falcon is blessedly lacking in psychological implications and the well-drawn, airtight story is always clear to the onlooker. Cannily developed, with an eye toward creating excitement, action and suspense, the dialogue is strikingly natural and penetrating writing skill is evident in the building of the characters.
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This is one of the best examples of actionful and suspenseful melodramatic story telling in cinematic form. Unfolding a most intriguing and entertaining murder mystery, picture displays outstanding excellence in writing, direction, acting and editing–combining in overall as a prize package of
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entertainment for widest audience appeal. Due for hefty grosses in all runs, it’s textured with ingredients presaging numerous holdovers in the keys–and strong word-of-mouth will make the b.o. wickets spin.
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Awards

Academy Award (Nominee — Best Adapted Screenplay — 1941)
AFI's 10 Top 10 (Mystery — 6)
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