Permalink Reply by Ella Kremper on June 28, 2010 at 6:38am Then again, 17 wasn't the big taboo back then that it is today; that's really relatively recent, within the last few decades or so.. So who's to say.
Permalink Reply by Docneg on December 19, 2010 at 10:49pm Watch "A Dangerous Woman", the first film version with Ricardo Cortez as Sam. It's not a bad movie and very interesting to compare. Made before the Hays office started sanitizing things, this version clearly shows Sam having an affair with Archer's wife, and lots of frank sexuality. Also the relationship between Gutman and Wilmer is a bit less disguised. What a difference a few years made in what was allowed on the screen!
Permalink Reply by Tome Wilson on December 20, 2010 at 1:03pm You thought Humphrey Bogart was likable in The Maltese Falcon?
I always felt exactly the opposite. Bogart's pimp hand was used on more than one occasion, and the cold way he picks up the case after his partner is killed is pretty sociopathic if you ask me.
Compared to Marlowe in The Big Sleep, Sam Spade had the emotional range of a tenured prison guard.
Permalink Reply by Ella Kremper on February 16, 2011 at 6:03am Well, my opinion of what I think is 'likeable' - for example, in the Gormenghast trilogy, Steerpike is an utter bastard and the villain of the piece, but I personally think he's awesomely characterised within the plot confines.
On a scale of book to film, I thought book Spade was a total creep, and compared to that, Bogart's Spade seemed nicer. Still a git, but less of one. Take 'likeable' to mean in relative here. Heh, I don't mean that I'd love to socialise with them. I might end up dead!
Tome Wilson said:
You thought Humphrey Bogart was likable in The Maltese Falcon?
I always felt exactly the opposite. Bogart's pimp hand was used on more than one occasion, and the cold way he picks up the case after his partner is killed is pretty sociopathic if you ask me.
Compared to Marlowe in The Big Sleep, Sam Spade had the emotional range of a tenured prison guard.
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