Tuesday, January 31, 2012

It Was A Wandering Daughter Job - Dashiell Hammett's Influence on The Big Lebowski

I'm still out of town and as a result I managed to catch The Big Lebowski on the big screen last night. First time I've seen it projected since it came out and it still holds up...Anyway I thought I'd repost this blog from a couple of years back on The Coen brothers and their links to Dashiell Hammett:
...
Joel and Ethan Coen have said that the biggest literary influence on their cult stoner movie The Big Lebowski (1998) was Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep. And from the title and structure of their film you can certainly see what they are talking about. Both works are classic visions of Los Angeles and both films follow similar trajectories: a foil gets involved with a disabled rich man, the rich man's daughter, and a runaway from his family who gets mixed up in pornography. Joel Coen has also said that he was influenced by Robert Altman's 1970's remake of Chandler's The Long Goodbye which gave us a slightly baked version of Marlowe played by Elliot Gould. So the Chandler influences are real and obvious but I want to argue that there's a deeper structure to The Big Lebowski which comes not from Raymond Chandler but from Dashiell Hammett.
...
Let's backtrack a little first. The Coen Brothers first foray into Hammett country came with Millers Crossing. This is a fairly explicit remake of Hammett's Red Harvest which the Coens apparently became of aware through Kurosawa's version Yojimbo (which later was remade by Sergio Leone as A Fistful of Dollars and again by Walter Hill as Last Man Standing). Miller's Crossing (and Red Harvest and the others) is a classic story of an outsider playing off two rival gangs for his own benefit, however the Coens not only appropriated Dashiell Hammett's plot-line but also his entire argot: "What's the rumpus?" "She's just a twist," "The high hat," "We're not muscle we don't bump guys" etc. The Coens don't seem to have read Hammett as much digested him, absorbing his street talk, his cadences, his slang, his American tough guy voice. (As an aside here I actually think their use of "What's the rumpus?" as "hello" in Millers Crossing is a misreading of Hammett's use of the phrase in Red Harvest.) The Coens of course are suburban college boys with little experience of the actual "streets" but Hammett was a Pinkerton Detective for nearly two decades investigating murders, robberies, insurance frauds with a little union busting thrown in for good measure. The Coens seem to have used Hammett as one of their touchstones for Americana and the more you read him the deeper you see his influence on their work: Blood Simple, Fargo, Miller's Crossing, No Country For Old Men sometimes read like undiscovered Hammett screenplays; but so also do the comedies Raising Arizona and The Big Lebowski. Hammett and humour don't seem to go together but he could be very funny in both his private life and in his books - The Thin Man is as witty as any PG Wodehouse and here's an experiment: try re-reading The Maltese Falcon as a black comedy and you'll get exactly what I'm talking about. Chandler has those great lines about a blonde so beautiful she would make a bishop kick in a window but Hammett has those lines too and a dark, satirical edge as well. 
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Yes the Coens used The Big Sleep as their skeleton for The Big Lebowski but the irony comes from Hammett: Donny's death, The Nihilists, The Porn King, The Malibu Sheriff - these seem like straight out of Dashiell's playbook not Ray's. The eccentricity and odd digressions are more like Hammett and of course the snap of the dialogue is more authentically Hammettian too. I think subconsciously the Coens knew this and they either gave us a Freudian hint or a deliberate clue late in the film when Jeff Bridges as The Dude encounters a private detective working for Bunny's parents, the Knutsons. "Why are you doing following me?" The Dude asks. The Private Dick played by Joe Polito (who also played one of the rival gang bosses in Miller's Crossing) shrugs and explains: "It was a wandering daughter job." And of course if you know your Hammett you'll recognise that as the opening line of the great Continental Op short story "Fly Paper". The Big Lebowski was a wandering daughter job all right and ultimately the daughter stays lost, an innocent guy dies and the bad guy keeps the money, but what else would you expect in Hammett's bleak, entropic and blackly comic universe?

72 comments:

Brian said...

On a side note I think it's interesting that the brothers still haven't acknowledged Cutter's Way as an influence on the Big L. (that I'm aware of any way).

Some fans of CB have pointed the many similarities here and there but that's about it.

Gerard Brennan said...

Excellent post, mate. Loved it. And since I've finally read The Big Sleep and have watched The Big Lebowski a piddling five times (as opposed to the real fans who've lost count of their viewings), I'm thinking I should crack open my copy of The Maltese Falcon and read it (for the first time) as a black comedy.

Cheers, man.

gb

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

I liked Cutters Way. CW and Jagged Edge are two of my favourite Jeff Bridges films. I dont think he always gets the credit he deserves as an actor.

adrian mckinty said...

Ger

If you're going to jump in I'd rec either Maltese Falcon or Red Harvest (or both).

I quite like The Thin Man too and the film version isnt half bad either.

Peter Rozovsky said...

You're a loyal subject of her Majesty, the Queen. Any idea why the British 50-pence coin has seven sides? A numismatic memory of the Heptarchy, perhaps? (This is not an idle question; I found such a coin in my wallet this week.)

P.S. I have never seen The Big Lebowski.
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
“Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home”
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Ian F said...

Peter

Here in Aus its the same coin with her maj on it too. The 50 c. coin is bigger than both the dollar and two dollar coins - never understood why.

Adrian

How about a list of your 10 favourite stoner movies? (Its obvious you like lists.)

Dana King said...

I'm a big Coen Brothers fan, though I'll admit some of their movies work better than others. What impresses me most about THE BIG LEBOWSKI is how many layers can be found in what is, on its surface, an oddball comedy.

I have a project to teach my 18 year-old daughter about cultural reference from before her time, in large part by showing what are, to her, old movies. JAWS, BUTCH CASSIDY, THE LION IN WINTER, THE BRIDGE OVER THE RIVER KWAI, stuff like that. We got to THE BIG LEBOWSKI about a year ago.

The Dude will continue to abide for as long as people keep peeling back the layers of this movie, which appears to be for quite a while yet.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Ian, a bit of research has revealed that the coins have different sizes and shapes to blind and sight-impaired people can use them more easily. (It also revealed that the coin is an equilaterally curved heptagon -- curved rather than straight sides), but why seven sides? Who knows? And which side represents Mercia and which Northumbria, East Anglia, and so on, well, we could debate that for hours.
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
“Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home”
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Peter Rozovsky said...

An intriguing statement from a Web site called Math Open Reference: “Heptagons are not seen much in everyday life except in the UK, where there are coins in the shape of a heptagon.” Could I be on to something?
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
“Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home”
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

I do think its odd that the largest coin in the UK and Australia (and in the Irish Republic before they brought in the Euro) was a 50p.

I'm not sure The Big Lebowski is your cup of tea.

adrian mckinty said...

Ian

I dont think I can do a top 10 stoner list. Hope about a top 5 slacker list?

1. The Big Lebowski
2. Breaking Away
3. Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle
4. Clerks
5. Withnail and I

I think my favourite pro drug movie is probably The Barbarian Invasions.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

All great films.

I just rewatched Bridge on the River Kwai last week. Great performance from all the principals but especially William Holden.

Liked that bit in the Lion in Winter when Richard Coeur de Lion is facing death in the dungeon and my favourite scene in Jaws is the scar contest and the USS Indianapolis speech on the Orca.

seanag said...

I like the title.

My question is, when a movie or book refers back to another book or film, is that just cleverness or does it actually make the new work stronger? Or put another way, does peeling back the layers actually add new insight about the work at hand? I mean it's fun to get all the in references--or I suppose it is, though I never do--but beyond that, what does it do?

Hope that doesn't sound like a jibe against either the Big Lebowski or this post, because I don't mean it that way. Although I suppose instead of saying they were heavily influenced by Hammett or Chandler, you could also say that they lifted a lot of material.

Or could you?

Peter Rozovsky said...

Dude!

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

You cant say stole with the Coens. Both TBL and Millers Crossing are stunningly original piece of film-making. I think the Danny Boy scene in Millers Crossing is comparable to the Christening scene in The Godfather or the spaghetti making/gun selling/helicopter scene in Goodfellas - brilliant film makers at the top of their game. (Good editing too).


Does it add to the film to spot the Chandler or Hammett references? Probably not, but its fun for me.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Do yourself a favour drive a few block to N Philly, see one of those guys standing on the corner, transact with him, come back and rent the DVD.

I dont guarantee laughs or even well being but I do promise that the next you hear the phrase Shomer Shabbos you will think of John Goodman.

Anonymous said...

My favorite tid bit about TBL is that Jeff Bridges wore all his
own clothes. No, really, he did.

Matt said...

On a somewhat related note, I've read many places that John Goodman's character, Walt, is based on writer/director John Milius (Conan,
Big Wednesday, etc., etc.).

Favourite Jeff Bridghes role: The hard to find on DVD Fearless.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

To link about the thread a little how about this for a piece of trivia: according to Empire magazine John Milius was the script doctor on Jaws who wrote the whole "thing about a shark" speech about the USS Indianapolis.

Yeah I liked Fearless esp the bit where he's in the plane sitting next to the guy who played Q in Star Trek and he switches seats to be next to the terrified little girl and of course Q buys the farm...

seanag said...

No, it's fun to read you spotting the influences too. I don't doubt the talent of the Coen Brothers, though I don't always like their movies. Or maybe I do always like their movies, but am not always equally impressed. And as for lifting material, well, Shakespeare did, so there's a precedent.

I guess what I'm saying, though, is that as we now live in an age where you can see pretty much anything, and budding film geniuses have seen everyone that they consider important by the time they graduate from college, if not high school, there isn't a danger of thinking that making arch references is the same thing as having substance. A case in point was seeing The Brothers Bloom last weekend. It didn't get great reviews around here, but a friend told me it was good so I went, and had yet another mildly disappointing indie film experience. Interestingly, I didn't realize till just now that it was made by Rian Johnson, the guy who made Brick, which I did like. My friend liked it for its literary allusions, of which there were many. I won't give away the plot, in case anyone wants to go to it. But here is how Roger Ebert sums up his review:

Johnson has a fertile imagination, a way with sly comedy and a yearning for the fantastical. But he needs to tend to his nuts and bolts and meat and potatoes. The film is just too smug and pleased with itself; as a general rule, an exercise in style needs to persuade us it cares about more than style. Lesson in point: "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou." This movie is lively at times, it's lovely to look at, and the actors are persuasive in very difficult material. But around and around it goes, and where it stops, nobody by that point much cares.

(Although for some reason, I was very charmed by The Life Aquatic--definitely a minority opinion).

Liam Hoyle said...

Last Man Standing is one of my favorite films. I had no idea it was a remake of Fistful of Dollars, though I knew it had Japanese origins. Mr. Willis at his best, screen writing at it's best. Though I own the movie, I find myself watching it every time it comes on TV.

marco said...

I'll derail this serious thread with these Toy tie-in movies . I know you'll like the Smurfs one.

OT The US nearly won the Confederation Cup.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I disagree quite a bit with Roger Ebert (his Millers Crossing review for example is all wrong (in fact he generally tended to damn the early Coen brothers films and overpaised the later ones as if to compensate) but I agree with him about Life Aquatic. I actually walked out of it, but I read later that Owen Wilson's character died. I dont know how someone could make Bottle Rocket and Rushmore and then go on to do Royal Tenenbaums, Life Aquatic and that Indian one.

I see those later films and think thats a kid who has lived a spoiled bloody life.

Which you could also say about the Coen brothers I suppose but one of them (I forget which) has a philosophy degree not a BA in film

adrian mckinty said...

Liam

I'll be honest, I havent seen it. I do like Walter Hill though as screenwriter and director.

adrian mckinty said...

Marco

Nice linkage. Did you watch the Smurfs as a kid? I remember seeing the episode where they explained where Smurfette came from, which I think retarded my puberty by about a year.

marco said...

Those Smurfs ... already they were a blatant apology for Communism, and then the only female member is artificially created only to wreak havoc in their perfect all-male society? makes you wonder how they managed to avoid censorship.

Brian O'Rourke said...

Adrian,

TBL is a great movie for the many reasons already cited by everyone here. I'd never never thought of the Hammett influence before reading this, but I couldn't agree more.

I'd still say the influence was split fifty-fifty here. The plot itself - which on first viewing can be incomprehensible - is I think an homage to the convoluted awesomeness that is The Big Sleep. If memory serves, the Coens said they wanted to make a movie where no one really knew what was going on and sometimes not even the protagonist himself.

But TBL is, in and of itself, a wonderfully structured film as well. It starts off with two losers asking Lebowski where the money is, and it ends with two other losers asking another Lebowski...where the money is. Pure genius. Not to mention the film's absolutely hilarious from start to finish.

Brian O'Rourke said...

And don't even get me started on how effing great The Bridge on the River Kwai is. It's weird to think they originally wanted Cary Grant for Holden's part.

I also read somewhere (probably IMDb) that they shipped the footage, when they'd finished, from overseas on five separate planes so as to minimize the risk of losing the entire thing. Even though all the planes arrived safe and sound, one-fifth of the film went missing. They looked everywhere and eventually found it had been left in a bag on the runway, where it had sat for several days in the blazing heat. Amazingly, none of the film was damaged.

seanag said...

It's hard to believe that self-indulgence is ever a huge temptation for filmmakers, seeing how expensive it remains to make even a small movie, and how many people and objects have to be co-ordinated in space and time. And yet it is.

I wasn't thinking about college degrees, I was thinking about the way people can have access right in their homes to whatever interests them in film, and from an early age. And, uh, discuss them endlessly on blogs, etc.

That's a great River Kwai story, Brian.

Dana King said...

As much a I love TBL, what I'd really like to see is someone make a good movieout of THE BIG SLEEP. The Bogart version is okay to a point, but the Hays office wouldn't let them do justice to the core story, and the ending ruins the point the whole book built toward.

The Robert Mitchum version from the 70s is an embarrassment. And I'm a Mitchum fan.

I hear Clive Owen is going to star in TROUBLE IS MY BUSINESS. Maybe that will give someone some ideas. There's never really been a movie that did justice (openly) to a Chandler novel.

adrian mckinty said...

Marco

I also felt that their society could only have survived with a strong external threat. Remove the threat and the underlying tensions destroys the Smurf utopia.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

Kwai is great. Did you ever see The Great Escape? The Dr. (pretty much the only really sympathetic character) is the senior British officer - also quite sympathetic there too.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I think I was so disappointed with Wes Anderson's last 3 films because I loved the first 2 so much. Maybe if I'd seen them decontextualised as standalones I would have got into the spirit a bit better, but Bottle Rocket and Rushmore are among my top films of the 90's and it was such a big come down for Tenenbaums, Zissou and the Indian one.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

I dont know how you feel about Clive Owen, but I really like him. I thought Derailed was a pretty good film and Children of Men underrated. I even liked that perfume movie which most other people seemed to hate, although I thought Julia Roberts was far far too skinny.

seanag said...

I agree with you about the decline of Wes Anderson--it was the Royal Tannenbaums that I felt the biggest disappointment in. And yes, I understand that the Life Aquatic is flawed in the same ways. But I guess the ocean adventure part just made it more interesting to me.

As to the Smurfs and the threat from outside, I think you, Marco and Heraclitus might be on the same page for once. I don't usually link to my own blog here but it's worth it for the all is strife comments. Of course, I have to disagree.

The whole reason to write a blog post is really to see if I can snare someone into saying something more substantive in the follow-up.

Dana King said...

Adrian,
The Beloved Spousal Equivalent and I "discovered" Owen in INSIDE MAN, then recently saw I'LL SLEEP WHEN i'M DEAD. Now we're both in the tank for him, though her attraction may have an added level mine lacks.

I think he'd be the perfect Marlowe.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I disliked RT. And there were a lot of reasons to like it: Bill Murray and Gene Hackman among them, but I was also excited by the prospect of seeing a film shot in the 130's in Harlem a neighbourhood I knew quite well but even with all that I still though it sucked.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

I loved I'll Sleep When I'm Dead. It was gritty, rainy, genuinely exciting and filled with great performances. I dont think I quite bought the central romance (there's a pretty considerable age gap which I dont buy in Woody Allen films either) but on the whole pretty good.

Brian O'Rourke said...

Adrian,

You bet I've seen TGE, and though I have no idea what his name is, I think that guy is a great actor.

Seana,

It's incredible to think such a small oversight could ruin an entire movie, isn't it? I wonder whatever happened to the guy that left the film on the runway?

Brian O'Rourke said...

Adrian,

Re: the Smurfs' external threat, I tend to agree with you. An interesting counterpoint to the example of the threat the Morlocks posed to the Eloi in The Time Machine.

marco said...

So you don't approve of Papa Smurf's declaration of war against Gargamel in the preview of "Lord of the Smurfs" ?

seanag said...

Brian,

Someone with statistical abilities would probably tell me I'm wrong, but if you divide a film up into five packages and send them on five airplanes, isn't it actually more likely that something will go horribly wrong than if you just cross your fingers and bet the house on one trip?

Dana and Adrian,

I first caught on to Clive Owens in a British TV mystery series called Second Sight, and have liked him in pretty much everything I've seen him in since. He was very good in The Croupier, for instance. He seems to have an eye for intelligent scripts.

Matt said...

Speaking of '30s crime, Public Enemies opens tomorrow...Mann, Depp, Bale...Just a slight possibility it might be better than Transformers 2.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

I liked Jack Hawkins as the brutal special ops guy too.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I liked Croupier but that heist was weird. What was the point of it exactly? And I'm not sure that that book would be such a big hit without Owen having some kind of link to the British reviewers.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

I already watched it on a site that - for legal reasons - I will not name here. I thought it was pretty good. Depp's best performance in a long time (no gimmicks)and I'm sure it will be even better on the big screen.

adrian mckinty said...

Marco

I think Gargamel is a cretaion of Papa Smurf to keep Smurf society under his thumb though Smurf culture is much more Brave New World than 1984.

seanag said...

What book?

My only issue with Clive Owen is that he always seems to play it kind of cold. I don't really mind it, but I think it could be limiting after awhile.

As to Croupier, I'm afraid I'd have to see it again to remember the whole heist sequence well enough to discuss it.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Remember the whole point of the film was that he turned his experiences into a best selling crime novel. But the crime novel lacks action and I dont think you could get a hit with having some kind of inside track that gets your favourable reviews and coming from South Africa he has no inside track.

seanag said...

First of all, thanks for the clarification, but...you know too much.

adrian mckinty said...

My typing is worse than usual: I meant WIHOUT having some kind of inside track that gets YOU favourable reviews.

Of course if you look like Clive Owen then all the publishers have to do is have him lunch with the mostly female books editors of the national papers and then its also a done deal.

seanag said...

I took your meaning. Actually, he's not handsome by the usual template, but he is attractive. I wouldn't worry, aspiring male authors, women are insanely flexible in their decisions about who's hot and who's not.

Rob said...

Geez, I'm late to the party on this post. Don't know how I missed it.

Great insights about TBL & the origins of the story - I'd heard the Coen bros credit The Big Sleep, but it always seemed to have that little surrealist edge (OK, big surrealist edge) that you'd never find in Chandler, but ran rampant through Hammett's work.

Interesting observation about The Maltese Falcon as a black comedy. Thinking about that, I see strains of it as a black comedy running more through the movie than I remember in the book, but that's probably because visual hooks always seem punchier - I remember that the movie dialog is pretty true to the book.

Chandler vs. Hammett = the Mary Ann vs Ginger question for 30s pulp fiction. I've always thought Hammett the better writer but that Chandler got all the press.

adrian mckinty said...

Rob

I agree I think Hammett edges C because of his diversity. I think H could have written all of C's novels if he had been so inclined but Chandler could never have written The Thin Man.

Also Hammett like Hemingway created a new American idiom, RC was a very good writer but he was working in familiar terrain not ploughing anything that new.

Sheiler said...

I loved Rushmore. Saw it twice in a movie cinema, which is saying a lot about me since I'm a cheap so-and-so.

But I also loved Royal Tenenbaums.

Adrian, what exactly did you not like about RT?

I stopped viewing Life Aquatic during the middle part - returned the dvd to my local store and never thought again about it until your post.

Have not seen Bottle Rocket, but will do so immediately.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Hammett must be in the air. I've been reading him and posting about him, and there's big Hammett anniversary coming up in 2011: fiftieth anniversary of his death, which I think may mean expiration of copyright on his work.

A spate of new, cheap editions next year, perhaps?
==========================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

adrian.mckinty said...

Sheiler I just found it all too precious.

Rushmore and Bottle Rocket = genius.

Everything since = blah.

seana said...

Bottle Rocket...it's been too long.

I think I'm the only one in the world who really liked The Life Aquatic. Much more than the Royal Tenenbaums. I didn't hate that, but all through the movie, I was thinking, I don't really understand...

Declan said...

Adrian, as of course you know, Miller's Crossing owes as much, if not more, to The Glass Key as it does to Red Harvest. Albert Finney and Gabriel Byrne are Ned Beaumont and Paul Madvig to the letter, and the love triangle is simply a racier take on the original. In fact, the movie is a brilliant conflation of the two books, and works best the closer it sticks to them. It's also such a glorious visual rendering of Hammett's world: the overcoats, the apartments, the drinks, the lamps, the light ... and tonally, the Coens capture his sour, romantic, dying fall cynicism so well.

Peter Rozovsky said...

…Miller’s Crossing …. This is a fairly explicit remake of Hammett's Red Harvest which the Coens apparently became of aware through Kurosawa's version Yojimbo (which later was remade by Sergio Leone as A Fistful of Dollars and again by Walter Hill as Last Man Standing)…

This post keeps apoearing every year or so. It's your greatest hit.

I haven’t seen Last Man Standing, but every other work, book or movie, on that list is better than Miller’s Crossing. I dunno, I guess every time I see a Coen Brothers movie, it happens to be a bad one: the vastly overrated “O, Brother, Where Art Thou?”, the horrible remake if “The Lady Killers.” I liked “Fargo,” and I guess I have to give them a bit of credit for “Blood Simple.” Although that movie treated a tiny bit of the appeal of hard-boiled writing (itsd atmosphere) and treated as if that’s all there was to the genre, they got on board the neo-hard-boiled train before a lot of other folks did.

I didn't see "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead" when this post first appeared, but I staged a little Mike Hodges filmfest before Hodges appeared at Crimefest in 2010. Clive Owen struck me as a bit cold and too well-groomed to be entirely convincing as the hit man.
================================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

seana said...

An Australia reminiscent of 1950s Northern California and now big screen Lebowski.

Sounds like you might be caught in some kind of time warp there, mate.

Adrian said...

Peter

I do watch The Big Lebowski every year. Its one of those things if you like you like.

I did like Millers Xing although I dont think the plot works. If I was going to convince an anti Coen brothers faction I'd say watch: Blood Simple, Raising Arizona, Barton Fink and Fargo.

Adrian said...

Seana

It is very nice down here. There's a definite Monterrey Bay vibe circa 1980.

seana said...

I would recognize it, then.

Can't believe I still haven't seen Miller's Crossing.

Darren Price said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Darren Price said...

You really know your stuff. I liked this film but didn't really know what to make of it. I have a hard time seeing the meanings behind most of the Cohen brothers' films but I have to say its interesting to hear some analysis from someone with background knowledge. Maybe i'll re-watch it and take a look at the other books you speak of.

HoldenCaufield said...

Sorry, off-topic, but I just finished reading The Cold Cold Ground. It’s excellent! I wasn’t aware of how The Troubles put such a blanket of terror on everyday life. I love the characters and the story and the writing.

(However, Hidden River is still my favorite – you always remember your first one, don’t you?)

Next steps for me are to go write a review on Amazon, pick up the book on Audible so I can hear Gerard Doyle’s lovely rendering, then write a review on Audible as well.

Thanks for another beautiful book, Adrian. I’m looking forward to I Hear the Sirens in the Street.

-- cheryl aka holden

adrian mckinty said...

Darren

I dont know as much as a real film buff but I have seen TBL a lot over the years and you do notice a lot of things after a while.

adrian mckinty said...

Cheryl

Glad you like it.

I too am looking forward to I Hear The Sirens In The Street and finding out what the hell it is going to be about.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I don’t why I’ve never seen Raising Arizona. I remember to this day an interview in which one of the Coen brothers talked about having a mess of crawling babies as extras and, when one suddenly walked for the first time, “We fired him immediately.”

The wacky crook nicknames that Hammett had so much fun with in "The Big Knockover: is probably the closes he came to out-and-out wackiness, and I love the names. But I still have yet to be convinced that the Coesn Bros. have come up with anything as goos as the Motzah Kid, Itchy Makers, and Alphabet Shorty McCoy. =======================================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

seana said...

Holden/Cheryl--I don't think you can be off topic here if you want to start raving about The Cold, Cold Ground.

Peter, I really liked Raising Arizona when I saw it many years ago. I hope it holds up. I don't know that anything I've seen by them since has really grabbed me to the same degree.

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