Film Review: The Maltese Falcon
Director John Huston’s The Maltese Falcon features the actor Humphrey Bogart in one of his iconic starring roles as the hardboiled detective Sam Spade. The film is an adaptation of Dashiell Hammett’s book of the same name, but is famous less for its plot than its atmospheric rendition of the mystery. The Maltese Falcon melds a traditional crime plot of murder, missing persons, and mistaken identity with that of the legendary bird of the title, a figure so valuable, people will do anything to find it.
The film begins with a mysterious and ultimately untrustworthy woman claiming that she is looking for her missing sister. She employs Spade and his partner Miles Archer to find her sister, who she says is seeing a man named Floyd Thursby. Both Archer and Thursby are later found dead. Eventually, the woman Brigid O’Shaughnessy, is implicated in both murders—she wanted Thursby dead and framed Archer. Before Spade can discover the beautiful woman’s treachery, however, he learns of the machinations of a number of criminal gangs (who he ultimately thwarts) to get the precious falcon.
The film is in black-and-white, and features rapid, staccato, witty dialogue. Although created during...
Reference
Huston, John. (1941). The Maltese falcon. USA: Warner Brothers.
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