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The Big Sleep (1946)
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Overview
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Release Date:
31 August 1946 (USA) moreTagline:
The type of man she hated . . . was the type she wanted ! morePlot:
Private detective Philip Marlowe is hired by a rich family. Before the complex case is over, he's seen murder, blackmail, and what might be love. full summary | full synopsisAwards:
1 win moreNewsDesk:
(3 articles)
The Dude Abides (From New York Post. 6 September 2008, 11:20 PM, PDT)
Jackson's Lawyers "Stop" Book Promotion (From WENN. 2 November 2004)
User Comments:
"Over Here, Canino" moreCast
(Complete credited cast)| Humphrey Bogart | ... | Philip Marlowe | |
| Lauren Bacall | ... | Vivian Sternwood Rutledge | |
| John Ridgely | ... | Eddie Mars | |
| Martha Vickers | ... | Carmen Sternwood | |
| Dorothy Malone | ... | Acme Bookstore proprietress | |
| Peggy Knudsen | ... | Mona Mars | |
| Regis Toomey | ... | Chief Insp. Bernie Ohls (District Attorney's Office) | |
| Charles Waldron | ... | Gen. Sternwood | |
| Charles D. Brown | ... | Norris (Sternwood's butler) | |
| Bob Steele | ... | Lash Canino | |
| Elisha Cook Jr. | ... | Harry Jones | |
| Louis Jean Heydt | ... | Joe Brody | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Pat Clark | ... | Mona Mars (scenes deleted) | |
| James Flavin | ... | Capt. Cronjager (scenes deleted) | |
| Thomas E. Jackson | ... | Dist. Atty. White (scenes deleted) | |
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Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
114 min | 116 min (pre-release version)Country:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Mono (RCA Sound System)Certification:
Portugal:M/12 | New Zealand:PG | Argentina:16 | Australia:M | Australia:PG (alternate rating) | Canada:14A (video rating) | Chile:18 | Finland:(Banned) (1947-1949) | Finland:K-16 | Germany:16 | Norway:16 | Sweden:15 (1961) | UK:PG | USA:Approved (PCA #10625) | Iceland:12Filming Locations:
Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USAMOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Raymond Chandler claimed that Martha Vickers gave such an intense performance as Carmen Sternwood that she completely overshadowed Lauren Bacall, and that much of Vickers' performance ended up on the cutting room floor as a result. moreGoofs:
Continuity: The size of Vivian's glass and the amount of liquid in it doubles from when she walks to the bedroom window and sets the glass on the window sill. moreQuotes:
General Sternwood: Do you like orchids?Philip Marlowe: Not particularly.
General Sternwood: Ugh. Nasty things. Their flesh is too much like the flesh of men, and their perfume has the rotten sweetness of corruption.
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Movie Connections:
Featured in Hold Your Breath and Cross Your Fingers: The Story of 'Dark Passage' (2003) (V) moreSoundtrack:
And Her Tears Flowed Like Wine moreFAQ
What does the title mean?A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
Is this movie based on a novel?
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The second of the Bogey and Bacall pairings has Humphrey Bogart playing his second pulp fiction detective for the screen. Previously he had done Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon and now he's Philip Marlowe in The Big Sleep. He's at the top of his game in both.
Bogey's been hired by Philip Waldron to get rid of a blackmailer that's got something on one of his daughters, the amoral and disturbed Martha Vickers. The older daughter Lauren Bacall intrigues Bogey a bit more when she tries to pry into exactly what Bogart is doing for her father. Seems as though a family chauffeur has gone missing a while back and the family is concerned on a number of levels.
The plot glides into the question of the missing chauffeur and Bogart meets all kinds of interesting characters before all the mysteries are solved.
The Big Sleep proved that the teaming on screen of Bogey and Bacall was no flash in the pan success that they had in Two Have and Have Not. They are surrounded with a great cast of players. Dorothy Malone got her first notice on film as a bookstore proprietor. Elisha Cook essays one of his typical roles as a luckless fall guy. John Ridgely is properly menacing as gambler Eddie Mars.
But my favorite in this film has always been Bob Steele as the vicious killer Canino who Ridgely has on retainer. Why Bob Steele wasted his time with two bit grade C westerns when he was doing work like this is beyond me. My favorite scene in The Big Sleep has always been when Bogey blasts Steele after Bacall has diverted his attention. When you hear Bogart utter those words, "over here, Canino" he was never more chilling or menacing on the screen before or after.
Set comfortably within it's time in the Forties, The Big Sleep still packs quite a wallop for today's audience. May you never have Humphrey Bogart looking to nail you for some misdeed.