Monday, April 20, 2015

Murder, My Sweet [Blu-ray] Discount !!

Title : Murder, My Sweet [Blu-ray]
Category: Movies
Brand: Warner Archive Collection
Item Page Download URL : Download Movie
Rating : 4.5
Buyer Review : 37

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Dick Powell stars as Raymond Chandler's hard-bitten, world-weary private detective, Philip Marlowe, in this classic film noir adaptation of Chandler's novel "Farewell, My Lovely". Marlowe takes a job looking for Moose Malloy's (Mike Mazurki) girlfriend Velma. Malloy's a petty criminal just released after a seven-year prison sentence, and Velma has not been seen for six years. But a simple missing-person case becomes much more twisted than Marlowe ever anticipated as initially promising clues lead to a complex web of deceit, bribery, perjury and theft, in which no one's motivation is clear ... least of all Marlowe's.


Review :
Farewell, My Lovely on Film
I read Raymond Chandler's 1940 novel, "Farewell, My Lovely" recently Farewell, My Lovely and wanted to see the film. Chandler's novel has been filmed three times. The first film was "The Falcon Takes Over" in 1942. The most recent adaptation was in 1975 in a film starring Robert Mitchum. The 1944 film I saw, "Murder My Sweet" is the second and most famous of the three adaptations. Edward Dmytryck directed the film which features Dick Powell in the role of private detective Philip Marlowe. Although it is a detective film, "Murder My Sweet" has become a noir classic. It received several Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America, including best picture, best screenplay, best author, and best actor.

Chandler's novel has a complex, disjointed plot which cobbles together at least at least two separate story lines. The strength of the book lies in its portrayals of people and places, language, and...
Tracing a Missing Person
Farewell My Lovely, 1944 film

This is the film version of Raymond Chandler's "Farewell, My Lovely". It opens with Philip Marlowe being questioned by police detectives. It started when Marlowe was hired by Mike Malloy to look for an old girlfriend. Malloy had been away for years. Marlowe finds a dead end. Then a stranger hires Marlowe to ransom stolen jewelry. Marlowe is sapped, his client Marriott cannot speak. The police question him but Marlowe knows little. Then a reporter visits him to ask questions but Marlowe figures out the answers. Next Marlowe is hired by Mrs. Helen Grayle, the woman whose necklace was stolen. Malloy takes Marlowe to meet a guy; Jules Amthor is very interested in that necklace. They try to get information from Marlowe. [There are some novel special effects here.]

Marlowe continues in his quest for the truth. Ann Grayle hates her stepmother. Mr. Grayle was the owner of Marriott's apartment, so the police questioned him. Helen...
Murder, mayhem and more!
Dick Powell as the cynical, world weary detective Philip Marlowe is so perfect for the role that one can't imagine another actor in the part. But aside from Marlowe, the bad guys are more interesting and more fun than the good guys, and the bad guys are quite a stable full of delicious villains. Clair Trevor is the two-timing blond femme fatale, Mike Mazurki is the psychotic hulk Moose Malloy, who hires Marlowe to find his missing girl friend. Esther Howard joins the group as a drunken slattern, Otto Kruger is the sophisticated, smooth-talking blackmailer, always seen with a flower in his button hole, and Ralfe Harolde plays the incendiary psychiatrist suspicious eyes darting back and forth. Philip Marlowe is plunged into a cistern of deception and murder and is obliged to claw himself out.

I did not select HD to download but the $1.99 version was clear and sharp. As in virtual all black and white films, shadows play a large part, almost taking on a life of their own. The...

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