Tuesday, September 3, 2019
The Big Sleep Movie and Novel :: Movie Film comparison compare contrast
      The Big Sleep Movie and Novel                      On first inspection of Raymond Chandler's novel, The Big Sleep, the reader  discovers that the story unravels quickly through the narrative voice of Philip  Marlowe, the detective hired by the Sternwood family of Los Angeles to solve a  mystery for them. The mystery concerns the General Sternwood's young daughter,  and a one Mr. A. G. Geiger. Upon digging for the answer to this puzzle placed  before Marlowe for a mere fee of $25 dollars a day plus expenses, Marlowe soon  finds layers upon layers of mystifying events tangled in the already mysterious  web of lies and deception concerning the Sternwood family, especially the two  young daughters.            When reading the novel, it is hard to imagine the story  without a narrator at all. It certainly seems essential for the story's make-up  to have this witty, sarcastic voice present to describe the sequence of events.  Yet, there is a version of Chandler's novel that does not have an audible  storyteller, and that version is the 1946 movie directed by Howard Hawks.            Hawks' version of The Big Sleep is known to be one of the  best examples of the film genre-film noir. "Film noir (literally 'black film,'  from French critics who noticed how dark and black the looks and themes were of  these films) is a style of American films which evolved in the 1940s." (The  Internet Movie Database LTD). Film noir typically contains melancholy, and not  so moral themes. Another characteristic of film noir is just because the main  character has the title hero, that does not mean that he will always be alive at  the end of the book, or that the hero is always "good." Marlowe in The Big Sleep  is a prime example of this concept. In the novel it is questionable how lawfully  moral he actually is, concerning the situation of turning Carmen into the police  for killing Sean Regan. This aspect of Marlowe's character added yet another  difficult task of formatting The Big Sleep to the big screen-the question of how  the audience (media) might react to such a personality    trait was now placed  before the writing staff (IE production codes).  					  The Big Sleep Movie and Novel  ::  Movie Film comparison compare contrast        The Big Sleep Movie and Novel                      On first inspection of Raymond Chandler's novel, The Big Sleep, the reader  discovers that the story unravels quickly through the narrative voice of Philip  Marlowe, the detective hired by the Sternwood family of Los Angeles to solve a  mystery for them. The mystery concerns the General Sternwood's young daughter,  and a one Mr. A. G. Geiger. Upon digging for the answer to this puzzle placed  before Marlowe for a mere fee of $25 dollars a day plus expenses, Marlowe soon  finds layers upon layers of mystifying events tangled in the already mysterious  web of lies and deception concerning the Sternwood family, especially the two  young daughters.            When reading the novel, it is hard to imagine the story  without a narrator at all. It certainly seems essential for the story's make-up  to have this witty, sarcastic voice present to describe the sequence of events.  Yet, there is a version of Chandler's novel that does not have an audible  storyteller, and that version is the 1946 movie directed by Howard Hawks.            Hawks' version of The Big Sleep is known to be one of the  best examples of the film genre-film noir. "Film noir (literally 'black film,'  from French critics who noticed how dark and black the looks and themes were of  these films) is a style of American films which evolved in the 1940s." (The  Internet Movie Database LTD). Film noir typically contains melancholy, and not  so moral themes. Another characteristic of film noir is just because the main  character has the title hero, that does not mean that he will always be alive at  the end of the book, or that the hero is always "good." Marlowe in The Big Sleep  is a prime example of this concept. In the novel it is questionable how lawfully  moral he actually is, concerning the situation of turning Carmen into the police  for killing Sean Regan. This aspect of Marlowe's character added yet another  difficult task of formatting The Big Sleep to the big screen-the question of how  the audience (media) might react to such a personality    trait was now placed  before the writing staff (IE production codes).  					    
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