Does Le Carre really count as "classic detective"? I have always thought of George Smiley and co. as spies rather than detectives. I'd go for Sherlock Holmes (Conan Doyle) and Philip Marlowe (Raymond Chandler). The Sherlock Holmes stories become something of a parody - we know Conan Doyle got so fed up with him that he tried to kill him off, but the outcry was so great he had to bring him back again. And I just love Chandler's hard-boiled style spiced with humour. My favourite line is in the film of 'The Big Sleep':
Bacall to Bogart: "You go too far, Marlowe."
Bogart to Bacall: "Those are hard words to throw at a man, especially when he's walking out of your bedroom."
I read a very entertaining article on this film, which maintains that it is a spoof and not to be taken seriously. In particular, the plot is deliberately so convoluted and complicated that it becomes incomprehensible. William Faulkner worked on the script and apparently at one point someone asked Howard Hawks, who was directing, who had committed one of the many murders. Hawks wasnt sure, so he asked Faulkner. Faulkner was'nt sure either, so they asked Chandler. "The butler did it" said Chandler. "Are you crazy?" said Hawks, "the butler was in the beach house."
But if you like the stories but not the humour, try Dashiell Hammett: same tough-guy plots, but without the wisecracks.
Bacall to Bogart: "You go too far, Marlowe."
Bogart to Bacall: "Those are hard words to throw at a man, especially when he's walking out of your bedroom."
I read a very entertaining article on this film, which maintains that it is a spoof and not to be taken seriously. In particular, the plot is deliberately so convoluted and complicated that it becomes incomprehensible. William Faulkner worked on the script and apparently at one point someone asked Howard Hawks, who was directing, who had committed one of the many murders. Hawks wasnt sure, so he asked Faulkner. Faulkner was'nt sure either, so they asked Chandler. "The butler did it" said Chandler. "Are you crazy?" said Hawks, "the butler was in the beach house."
But if you like the stories but not the humour, try Dashiell Hammett: same tough-guy plots, but without the wisecracks.
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