Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/237287
- Title
- Smoking guns and smouldering lips: 'The Big Sleep'
- Author(s)
-
McFarlane, Brian
- Abstract
- Raymond Chandler, author of the 1939 novel 'The Big Sleep', famously claimed that his contemporary, Dashiell Hammett (author of The Maltese Falcon) had taken murder out of the vicar's rose garden and given it 'back to the kind of people who commit it for reasons, not just to provide a corpse'. He was having a dig at what he considered the genteel tradition of English detective fi ction, above all the province of female writers from the 1930s (Agatha Christie, Marjorie Allingham, etc).
- Publication type
- Journal article
- Source
-
Screen Education,
no. 39 (2005), pp. 139-143
- Publication year
- 2005
- FOR Code(s)
-
1902 Film, Television and Digital Media
- Keyword(s)
-
Crime films;
Film noir;
Mystery thrillers;
The Big Sleep
- Publisher
- Australian Teachers of Media
- ISSN
- 1449-857X
- Publisher URL
- http://www.metromagazine.com.au/screen_ed/
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2005. Published version reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
- Full text

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