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Sherwood 2022-03-27 09:01:04
The ending and the three looking for the eagle are very fun, but the male and female protagonists are not cute, and the rhythm is very...
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Karson 2022-03-27 09:01:04
I personally don't like movies that use dialogue to explain the plot, but John Huston's single-scene, multi-role mise-en-scene skills are still worthy of modern filmmakers' admiration. The Maltese Falcon is a pioneering work of "film noir", and its inspiration for later suspense films and detective films can be regarded as a milestone in film...
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Gretchen 2022-03-27 09:01:04
Hardcore detectives outwit three greedy villains. Bogart's performance and lines are very good, but the language of the film has developed for so long, and it was not very shrewd to recite large lines of lines from the villain back then. Many details have become the classic symbols of later film...
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Stuart 2022-03-27 09:01:04
Tough bridge, tough horse, tough guy, cold-blooded, cold-faced and...
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Jettie 2022-03-27 09:01:04
It's completely a one-man show by Bogart, the charm breaks the screen, and Peter Lowe's character is particularly cute, and he contributed to several funny scenes. As for the overall plot, it's actually not very eye-catching. As the most critical prop of the whole film, the process of finding the Eagle of Malta is completely like a white wolf with empty gloves. The detective doesn't know anything. ...but as a black film, it shows the greed and sinister nature of human nature most...
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Archibald 2022-03-26 09:01:04
It is obviously different from the screenwriting taste of contemporary films. A very subtle and delicate exploration of human psychology requires continuous and high concentration on the lines and performances. Although the jokes are constant and the laughter is high-level (it was difficult to be low-level in that era), the viewing process is definitely not easy. Unexpectedly, in such a crime detective film, the action scenes are completely for the purpose of being funny. In fact, the whole...
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Margot 2022-03-26 09:01:04
Less than two months after the film was released, the Pacific War broke out and the United States was involved in World War II. After this, it was considered by the film history as a period of silence for the newly emerging film noir, because the American film industry also served the mobilization of war power, and the dark and negative film noir was degenerate and out of place. The Falcon of Malta is generally considered the first film noir, but followed the characteristics of film noir...
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Reanna 2022-03-26 09:01:04
Because this one is so good... so the others on Bogart inevitably make me think: Errrrrrr, Not...
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Christiana 2022-03-26 09:01:04
Success factors: book, low-key photography, villain boss, femme fatale, Bogart. Chinatown must have taken a lot of nourishment from...
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Randy 2022-03-26 09:01:04
This movie must have been very shocking 70 years ago, and it was also a noir movie of that era, but it has been 70 years old. In terms of movies, human tastes are really getting heavier and heavier. Bogart looks like Marlowe in everything he...
The Maltese Falcon Comments
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Angus 2021-12-30 17:20:42
Tough detective, a male myth is shattered-from "The Maltese Eagle" to "The Kiss of Death"
Tough detective, a male myth is shattered
-from "The Maltese Eagle" to "The Kiss of Death"
one. Black Origin
1941, John Houston filmed his directorial debut, "Malta Eagle". From this movie, a movie era full of crime, violence, suspense and shadows began. Beginning with "The Eagle of... -
Darrell 2021-12-30 17:20:42
"The Maltese Eagle": The greatest detective film ignites the "black" trend
Most researchers now agree that "The Stranger on the Third Floor" (1940), which is only 64 minutes long, is the first real noir film. Because of the length of the film, a considerable number of people think that John Houston’s debut novel "The Maltese" "Eagle" (1941) was the first film noir, and...
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[to Spade]
Joel Cairo: No, no. Our private conversations have not been such that I am anxious to continue them. Forgive me for speaking so bluntly, but it is the truth.
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Sam Spade: You gotta convince me that you know what this is all about, that you aren't just fiddling around hoping it'll all come out right in the end!