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Murder, My Sweet (1944)

Murder, My Sweet (1944)
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One-time movie crooner Dick Powell literally turned his career around in the 1944 film noir Murder My Sweet. Powell stars as Phillip Marlowe, the hard-boiled private detective antihero created by novelist Raymond Chandler. Hired by hulking, psychotic Moose Malloy (Mike Mazurki) to locate Moose's old girl friend, Marlowe is pitched headlong into a morass of intrigue and deception. The participants include duplicitous glamour-girl Claire Trevor, sodden slattern Esther Howard, suave blackmailer Otto Kruger and dyspeptic doctor Ralf Harolde. At one point, Marlowe is railroaded into a lunatic asylum, where under the influence of drugs he experiences a surrealistic nightmare the like of which would not be seen on screen again until Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958). So fascinating are the "bad" characters in Murder My Sweet that the two 100% "good" characters, heroine Anne Shirley and detective Don Douglas, seem wishy-washy wimps by comparison. After years of insipid golly-gee roles, Dick Powell startled his fans with his cynical, world-weary portrayal of Philip Marlowe. The part put him back on top of the box-office tallies and enabled him to extend his acting career into the 1950s, which led to an even more lucrative "third life" as a powerful TV-studio executive. Murder My Sweet was based on Chandler's Farewell My Lovely, previously filmed in 1942 as The Falcon Takes Over; a remake, Farewell, My Lovely, was produced in 1975, with Robert Mitchum as Marlowe. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Dick PowellClaire Trevor, (more)
Director(s):
Edward Dmytryk
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Murder, My Sweet

One-time movie crooner Dick Powell literally turned his career around in the 1944 film noir Murder My Sweet. Powell stars as Phillip Marlowe, the hard-boiled private detective antihero created by novelist Raymond Chandler. Hired by hulking, psychotic Moose Malloy (Mike Mazurki) to locate Moose's old girl friend, Marlowe is pitched headlong into a morass of intrigue and deception. The participants include duplicitous glamour-girl Claire Trevor, sodden slattern Esther Howard, suave blackmailer Otto Kruger and dyspeptic doctor Ralf Harolde. At one point, Marlowe is railroaded into a lunatic asylum, where under the influence of drugs he experiences a surrealistic nightmare the like of which would not be seen on screen again until Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958). So fascinating are the "bad" characters in Murder My Sweet that the two 100% "good" characters, heroine Anne Shirley and detective Don Douglas, seem wishy-washy wimps by comparison. After years of insipid golly-gee roles, Dick Powell startled his fans with his cynical, world-weary portrayal of Philip Marlowe. The part put him back on top of the box-office tallies and enabled him to extend his acting career into the 1950s, which led to an even more lucrative "third life" as a powerful TV-studio executive. Murder My Sweet was based on Chandler's Farewell My Lovely, previously filmed in 1942 as The Falcon Takes Over; a remake, Farewell, My Lovely, was produced in 1975, with Robert Mitchum as Marlowe. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
95 mins

Complete Cast of Murder, My Sweet


Director(s):
Edward Dmytryk
Writer(s):
John Paxton
Producer(s):
Adrian Scott
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Violence, Not For Children)
Categories:
Mystery & Suspense
Murder, My Sweet Awards:
  • 1945 - Edgar Allan Poe Awards - Best Screenplay
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    Member Reviews
     
    Hiawatha B.

    I'm an old-time radio buff, and mainly know Powell as radio private eye Richard Diamond. This movie shows where he learned the moves. I'd heard about this film for years, but wasn't expecting it to be so good. Powell's version of Philip Marlowe is at least as good as Bogart's performance in The Big Sleep. Indeed, I found it rather more convincing. All the other performances are fine, and the scriptwriting is first-class. In all, a much better movie than I'd expected.

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    Susan C.

    Really great story, full of twists and hilarious "one liners". They just don't make movies like this anymore. And check out the lavish living spaces! A classic!

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    Geoffrey G.

    If you want Chandler with the all the grit intact this one's for you. It sticks closer to his dark, perverse spirit than just about anything else and really is the best all-round Chandler adaptation on film, and Dick Powell is - if not the best Marlowe - certainly just below Bogey. I'm preachin' to the choir but if yer a film noir buff YOU HAVE TO SEE THIS MOVIE!!!!!

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