Dashiell Hammett documentary

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Samuel Dashiell Hammett (May 27, 1894 - January 10, 1961) was an American author of hard-boiled detective novels and short stories. He was also a screenwriter and political activist. Among the enduring characters he created are Sam Spade (The Maltese Falcon), Nick and Nora Charles (The Thin Man), the Continental Op (Red Harvest and The Dain Curse) and the comic strip character Secret Agent X-9. Hammett "is now widely regarded as one of the finest mystery writers of all time".
    Dashiell Hammett documentary
    1999

Комментарии • 209

  • @asharpmajor6740
    @asharpmajor6740 2 года назад +82

    Great to have so many people who knew Hammett personally speaking in the documentary. Another ten years and it would probably have been too late for many of them

    • @jabbermocky4520
      @jabbermocky4520 11 месяцев назад +5

      Agree. This is the only firsthand documentary commentary I've seen about Hammett. It's very well done. Another 10 years, man, and it never would have happened.

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 10 месяцев назад +12

    I'm lucky to have a single volume collection of all 5 of Hammett's novels. I bought it in '93 at B&N's discount section for $7.99.

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird5634 Год назад +16

    In 1992 I climbed out the window of my downtown Phoenix apartment and left behind a career, an apartment and a lifetime of connections to live in the Jemez mountains of New Mexico as an artist. I had never read about Flitcraft or what he did by way of Hammett's parable, but it now seems to apply rather sharply.
    I recommend anyone to do the same: climb out the window of your life, and start again. The ''second act'' of your play can have as little or as much to do with the first as YOU DECIDE.

    • @cruisepaige
      @cruisepaige Год назад +5

      100%! I was a corporate lawyer and I ditched it all to live the dolce vita as a translator in Italy!

    • @JonathanBrown1
      @JonathanBrown1 Год назад +5

      Why did you climb out the window, instead of the door?

    • @blackbird5634
      @blackbird5634 Год назад +7

      @@JonathanBrown1 Well first of all, I needed to get out of a bad situation. And 2nd, it is an apt metaphor for leaving behind a toxic and self damaging way of living in an unexpected, and imaginative way. So I climbed out the window, and later, when the coast was clear, I came back, packed my car, and took off.
      *My bills were paid, my job was done, there was nothing holding me to that particular town or state.

    • @alidabaxter5849
      @alidabaxter5849 Год назад +6

      I climbed out of a terrible marriage - you may lose your possessions but you keep your mind.

  • @appnzllr
    @appnzllr 11 месяцев назад +26

    I respect Hammett for his writing and for knowing when to stop writing. Too many authors continue without the same level of story ideas.

    • @MrEdWeirdoShow
      @MrEdWeirdoShow 10 месяцев назад +2

      Hemingway also did a few short and sweet detective type things.
      But then brevity was already part of his style, anyway.

    • @Rustsamurai1
      @Rustsamurai1 10 месяцев назад +4

      Didn't he keep trying? Is writing either manic or absent? If you cannot write, you do not write?And in not writing from no longer being able, one either drinks oneself to the grave, or becomes a brick layer's labourer; perhaps fooling oneself or others that the experience will be material for a story? Is carrying a bottle of vodka or a loaded hod not self-imposed punishment for not 'making the cut'/being 'washed-up'?
      A fascinating documentary.

  • @adamodeo9320
    @adamodeo9320 2 года назад +24

    Kathleen turner's voice is a joy to the ears.

  • @JamesBrown-ij1px
    @JamesBrown-ij1px 2 года назад +32

    Outstanding. In maturity, so many 'dots' are being connected for me in learning more about Dashiell Hammett: his relationship with Lillian Hellman (which I first learned about in the movie 'Julia'), continuing the legacy of 'Detective' stories from my favorites Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle from the English tradition to that of the American, his involvement in the 'Red Scare' and the McCarthy Era, and establishing a cornerstone of the classic Hollywood 'Film Noir' genre. And, of course, seductively narrated by the incomparable voice and style of Kathleen Turner, who would continue the Film Noir tradition to a new generation (myself included) in the modern classic 'Body Heat'. Thank you.

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  2 года назад +8

      Much welcome. Well said!

    • @wellesradio
      @wellesradio Год назад +1

      I really don’t see the connection between Christie and Hammett. It’s like saying Oscar Wilde was influenced by Mark Twain.

  • @henryj.8528
    @henryj.8528 11 месяцев назад +14

    The first atomic bomb (Fat Man) was named for a Hammett character (Caspar Gutman). The second was originally named the Thin Man after another Hammett character but the size was reduced and it became Little Boy.
    The gun-type bomb, Little Boy used a conventional naval gun barrel. It was heavy because it had to stand up to repeated firings. Eventually they figured out they could cut the weight b/c it would only be fired once. That also shrunk it in size.

  • @jacquetracy3194
    @jacquetracy3194 2 года назад +15

    I love Dashiell Hammett! I try to find anything he has written ! So handsome 😍! I'm from Baltimore MD were he lived. I'm very proud of that . I didn't know that he went through the McCarthy torture !!! Dashiell Hammett fought in two world wars the man loved this country and McCarthy put him and other victims through hell! Dashiell we love you. Thank you for serving and your wonderful works 💗

    • @Donjasoni
      @Donjasoni 11 месяцев назад +1

      He’s originally from St. Mary’s County. I live in bmore too. I didn’t realize he lived in bmore later. Im from St. Mary’s originally. There are still relatives of his there.

    • @bovnycccoperalover3579
      @bovnycccoperalover3579 9 месяцев назад +1

      While it's McCarthy who gets a rap deservedly, it's HUAC, run by J. Parnell Jones, who went after Hollywood people they thought were "reds". Jones, himself, was later arrested for embezzlement and served in the same prison as one of the Hollywood Ten. I call that irony. It irks me that this evil man as not as infamous as McCarthy. In many years, he did more damage. Hellman wrote a blistering letter to HUAC when summoned in 1952. Ah was blacklisted and lived and wrote in exile in Europe. She wrote a nonfiction book about it, " Scoundrel Time".

  • @brianpurdy6072
    @brianpurdy6072 10 месяцев назад +9

    This documentary is a fine piece of work. It offers a balanced and nuanced view of the man, his work and the times in which he lived. It particularly benefits by the testimony of many who knew him as he was, not as the semi-mythic figure he became and even now, mostly remains. It would rate it as 'top drawer'.

  • @normanCabral1
    @normanCabral1 10 месяцев назад +5

    A superb and enthralling study of the man, his life, work and demons, put forth via excellent narration.

  • @eawe
    @eawe 11 месяцев назад +18

    I have just discovered this amazing channel.
    As an avid reader of the "vintage" authors, I truly appreciate these documentaries. Thank you.

  • @Daunou777
    @Daunou777 2 года назад +107

    Very well done. Kathleen Turner was the perfect narrator.

    • @robertodelosangeles3247
      @robertodelosangeles3247 Год назад +13

      Ha! After pushing play and only listening without watching for opening credits or anything, for the first 8 minutes I coulda sworn it was Lauren Bacall! But then I read your comment and immediately realized you’re right. Kathleen Turner does have a very distinct, unmistakable voice!

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 Год назад +5

      I didn’t even recognize her at first

    • @seanwieland9763
      @seanwieland9763 Год назад +13

      She’s not bad, she’s just drawn that way.

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 Год назад +2

      @@robertodelosangeles3247 - Is she still acting?

    • @robertodelosangeles3247
      @robertodelosangeles3247 Год назад +3

      @@matthewschwartz6607 She had a pretty amusing cameo as Michael Douglas’ wife in that Netflix series he did recently with Alan Arkin. But other than that I ain’t seen her

  • @numbersix8919
    @numbersix8919 5 месяцев назад +1

    Nice documentary! I like all these interviewees, especially Joan Mellen and her take on Hammett's political commitment.

  • @markbeames7852
    @markbeames7852 9 месяцев назад +2

    27:38 Victor Moore famous for "Swing Time" with Fred Astaire.

  • @JCPJCPJCP
    @JCPJCPJCP 11 месяцев назад +9

    I read a couple of his novels decades ago, when I was reading plenty of fiction.
    This interesting documentary provides plenty of info about an unusual, distinctive life.
    Thanks again, Paul.

  • @albertgrant1017
    @albertgrant1017 2 года назад +30

    Great video I loved The Continental Op and Sam Spade. His work as a detective made his novels and stories realistic !

  • @joe18750
    @joe18750 10 месяцев назад +2

    I was born after the Golden Age of Radio. However, I access, The Adventures of Sam Spade, Detective, nearly every day on my Echo Dot. Effie and Sam are great characters and Howard Duff as Sam, is my favorite. What great stories. Thanks for the inside baseball on a truly wonderful writer.

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 Год назад +9

    Unable to write for 30 years would have been excruciating

  • @shangrila73eldorado
    @shangrila73eldorado Год назад +9

    Proclaiming New Orleans as an anti-Semitic city is based on what?

    • @sgabig
      @sgabig 11 месяцев назад +1

      I guess since New Orleans is predominantly Catholic & its football 🏈 team is named the saints ... I guess it depends on how you define antisemitism

    • @GeorgeSmileyOBE
      @GeorgeSmileyOBE 11 месяцев назад +2

      This is nuts. The New Orleans Jews are all over the place, Tulane has two Jewish fraternities, and Sophie Newcomb college is for jewish southern belles like Sweetbriar is for prosperous Presbyterian daughters.

    • @Epidian
      @Epidian 10 месяцев назад

      Maybe they don't like other semites like Arabs.

    • @sulevisydanmaa9981
      @sulevisydanmaa9981 10 месяцев назад

      @@GeorgeSmileyOBE INTERESTING. "OBE" is 4 out of body experience or Order Of The British Empire ? Sure u not talkin bout dem Khazars ....()(?). How come this dated 80 s doc can proclaim such an elementary lapsus ? Lillian Hellman loox like big sys of Lili Palmer .. .. .

  • @QPRTokyo
    @QPRTokyo Год назад +6

    San Francisco changed a lot.. the biggest understatement of all time.

  • @berhanegebriel3155
    @berhanegebriel3155 2 года назад +6

    Another one of the very BEST (A+) documentaries.

  • @Denver_Risley
    @Denver_Risley 2 года назад +9

    "What's that man doing in my drawers..." I did the same thing he did!

  • @AB-kg6rk
    @AB-kg6rk 2 года назад +11

    Thanks for posting. Good stuff 😃

  • @janetsaeger8439
    @janetsaeger8439 Год назад +6

    Thank you. Very engrossing. Have read almost all Hammett's detective stories and of course have watched The Thin Man movie many times. Late '50s a tv series was created with Peter Lawford and Phyllis Kirk. While not as suave and polished as William Powell and Myrna Loy with snappy dialogue, still fun entertainment.

    • @emmitstewart1921
      @emmitstewart1921 11 месяцев назад

      I remember. I loved that series at the time.

  • @steveculbert4039
    @steveculbert4039 2 года назад +9

    This is a fine video documentary about a man who has always interested me. Thank you.

  • @superglue6298
    @superglue6298 2 года назад +8

    Im here because everyone calls me this guy as my names Dashiell lol

  • @tonydialsr7190
    @tonydialsr7190 11 месяцев назад +3

    What a great program. Just outstanding to have interviews that knew the man. Thanks so much.

  • @MrEdWeirdoShow
    @MrEdWeirdoShow 10 месяцев назад +3

    Many if not most editors required a set page count from writers, as if they were ordering from a fast food joint.
    It was up to the writer to stretch the meal as close to the goal as possible, without overpowering readers with too much onion. Luckily I began at the end of the 20th century, and not the start.

  • @MementoMorituri
    @MementoMorituri 2 года назад +17

    Tragic yet somehow admirable and quietly heroic.

  • @donaldkelly3983
    @donaldkelly3983 3 года назад +16

    That was great! Hammett is another favorite American writer of mine. Thanks for this video.

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  3 года назад +6

      You're welcome. Same here! I love The Thin Man and have seen all six movies. (I like the first one best)

  • @dwaynebrue6028
    @dwaynebrue6028 2 года назад +7

    Dashiell Hammett was The Greatest!!

  • @emmitstewart1921
    @emmitstewart1921 11 месяцев назад +5

    He could be regarded as the inventor of film noir. His Continental op, and Sam spade are the prototypes for the hard men in a merciless world that came to characterize the genre.

  • @Amphy002
    @Amphy002 11 месяцев назад +3

    What a great documentary. As intelligent as its subject.

  • @irenemax3574
    @irenemax3574 Год назад +5

    "He (Hammett) created the terms of their relationship before they even met." I pause the video to try to figure out what that means. Hammett was playing a role in his relationship with Hellman: he played the strong silent withdrawn and withdrawing (of love, affection, flattery) type of guy. His behaviour elicits respones from Hellman that include whining, whinging, begging, berating, and clinging. ??? That interpretation doesn't allow Hellman any agency: she's nothing more than the embodiment of a fictional character from Hammett's novels.
    I see Hellman as more dominant than Hammett in that relationship, for the most part, in spite of her clingy, beggy aspects. Hammett wrote female characters that he could bleep to, and was attracted to a living woman who had many of those sexy (?) traits. The two of them together were toxically bonded with rituals of alcohol and argument.

  • @jonathanmitchell9886
    @jonathanmitchell9886 10 месяцев назад +5

    Raymond Chandler made some genuinely bizarre, crabby, and ultimately inarticulate criticisms of Hammett. It was a lousy way to thank the man to whom Chandler owed his career.

  • @jabbermocky4520
    @jabbermocky4520 11 месяцев назад +4

    Striking how he found his "Girl with the Silver Eyes" in Hellman, who very much lived up to the role. She was as narcissistic as any of his hardboiled anti-heroines. But he was harder. Sounds like a stand-off to the end between these 2 literary giants.

  • @kengruz669
    @kengruz669 11 месяцев назад +4

    If you are unable to provide captions for this, can you activate auto-subtitling?

  • @bernardhayes4459
    @bernardhayes4459 Год назад +6

    Ok Im hooked, now I need a full biography of him.

    • @texas1949
      @texas1949 Год назад +2

      I can’t remember the name of it for the life of me but a full length film starring Sam Shepard is excellent, imo.

  • @ronniwright8315
    @ronniwright8315 Год назад +4

    Great bio thank you

  • @kentjensen4504
    @kentjensen4504 9 месяцев назад +1

    This documentary is perfectly done.

  • @kafkaesque7737
    @kafkaesque7737 3 года назад +13

    Love your documentaries. Are there any documentaries about E. E. Cummings or surrealist poets/writers?

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  3 года назад +7

      Thanks! I haven't found a good one on Cummings yet, but I'll look into him and those other ones. If not, I'll make a voice over mini-doc on Cummings for when I eventually run out.

    • @kafkaesque7737
      @kafkaesque7737 3 года назад +1

      @@AuthorDocumentaries thank you!!

  • @steveculbert4039
    @steveculbert4039 2 года назад +5

    Actually, there is a large Jewish population in New Orleans.

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon 11 месяцев назад +3

    I bet the San Francisco of Dashiell Hammett was wonderous.

  • @DrewSohl
    @DrewSohl 2 года назад +12

    An amazing man,unfortunate that he drank,and had t.b.I wish he wrote more,but it wasn't in him.A camp counselor read Maltese Falcon,to my cabin,and it was incredible. Thanks,Dashell.

    • @markpage9886
      @markpage9886 Год назад +1

      A lot of writers drank...it was almost a hazard of the career. It was crazy.

    • @kengruz669
      @kengruz669 11 месяцев назад +2

      What a forward-thinking and erudite camp counselor. The world needs more of this thinking outside the box.

  • @thomasbell7033
    @thomasbell7033 Год назад +5

    I've read Hammett's and Chandler's (admittedly small) output so many times I could never count. The first novel mentioned, Red Harvest, is the single bloodiest novel in our language I'm pretty sure. And it's fine literature by just about any measure.

  • @marysalerno467
    @marysalerno467 10 месяцев назад +1

    I seem to have missed the part about Hammett and Hellman being active members of the Communist Party.

    • @bovnycccoperalover3579
      @bovnycccoperalover3579 9 месяцев назад

      Hellman was well known as a staunch Stalinist! However, her literary output will be what defines her.

  • @sondreeriksen9146
    @sondreeriksen9146 Год назад +2

    Hammet is such an interesting figure in literary history, one I'm sure would never covet my ox.

  • @yourmother2739
    @yourmother2739 2 года назад +10

    The maltese falcon the classic film noir. Irreplaceable mystery writer with characters framed in the language of corruption. He is unforgettable and he should have been an anarchist in his soul.

    • @yourmother2739
      @yourmother2739 2 года назад +1

      Otherwise perfection in his writing milieu.

  • @kevinrussell1144
    @kevinrussell1144 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks; I thoroughly enjoyed your documentary. As a huge fan who has read just about everything he produced, but without agreeing with him politically, I still consider him a great, although very flawed American patriot. But as a writer of detective fiction, he has no superior, and he was a true original who lived according to his code.

  • @QPRTokyo
    @QPRTokyo Год назад +2

    It is interesting how the original Maltese Falcon movie was less censored than the 1941 remake. We know why.😂

    • @yodservant
      @yodservant 11 месяцев назад

      Could be pre code production?? The censorship started in earnest in 1934

  • @j.taylor3670
    @j.taylor3670 2 месяца назад

    He's one of the best 20th century writers in my view and he left school at 13! He was pigeon holed but he was more than his image.

  • @I_am_a_cat_
    @I_am_a_cat_ 2 года назад +3

    Why can't anyone pronounce Dashiell correctly??? They always ignore the i as if it's not even there... the i isn't silent...

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie 3 года назад +13

    Very well made, thank you. So, can we expect one on the Master of the Mean Streets?

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  3 года назад +5

      You're welcome. Hmm, are you referring to Raymond Chandler by any chance?

  • @patriciafeehan7732
    @patriciafeehan7732 11 месяцев назад +2

    His girlfriend was Lillian Hellman a great writer herself.

  • @markpage9886
    @markpage9886 Год назад +3

    Read Red Harvest...you'll see what the fuss is about. He's the real deal.

    • @alidabaxter5849
      @alidabaxter5849 Год назад +2

      Please read The Glass Key and The Dain Curse

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 Месяц назад +1

    Hammett pronounced his first name Dash-eel, accent on the last syllable. Not Dashull. Lillian Hellman discussed his name and its pronunciation in an interview with Dick Cavett on his show one time.

  • @1Tonari
    @1Tonari 21 день назад

    Excellent, well done

  • @user-lr4sg2ms7i
    @user-lr4sg2ms7i 7 месяцев назад

    Great documentary. I learned a lot. Thank you for this.

  • @votemonty1815
    @votemonty1815 3 года назад +4

    Splendid Noir 🔎

  • @sclogse1
    @sclogse1 11 месяцев назад +1

    Many many fine things in this. Inspiring.

  • @orchidlilly7518
    @orchidlilly7518 2 года назад +3

    Thank-you*

  • @michaelgalea5148
    @michaelgalea5148 10 месяцев назад +2

    Dashiell Hammit was the best mystery writer period end of story.

    • @sulevisydanmaa9981
      @sulevisydanmaa9981 10 месяцев назад

      @michaelgalea5148 ALL ranking is childish ! Dig up the Wenders work from 82. Wrote a long essay on it wayyybackkkk (dont like the bulldyke voice in this, like Mrs Amthor in the Dick Richards/Mitch flick in 75 ..).

  • @alexdavies7394
    @alexdavies7394 Год назад +2

    Dashiell Hammett's writing carries more along the lines of realism, compared with other authors of hardboiled detective fiction.

  • @dierdresetser21
    @dierdresetser21 2 года назад +2

    well done

  • @dr.barrycohn5461
    @dr.barrycohn5461 10 месяцев назад

    Maltese Falcon is an amazing movie. Love the word gunsil.

  • @kuba70834
    @kuba70834 2 года назад +7

    Is it Kathleen Turner's voice?

    • @bluecollarlit
      @bluecollarlit 2 года назад +1

      She DOES sound like Kathleen Turner!
      I think it's her...!
      Iconic in Body Heat.

    • @JamesBrown-ij1px
      @JamesBrown-ij1px 2 года назад +2

      It most certainly IS the incomparable Kathleen Turner!

    • @cindyhammond7320
      @cindyhammond7320 2 года назад

      Yes

    • @unowen-nh9ov
      @unowen-nh9ov 2 года назад +2

      Ironically, she also narrates a documentary about Myrna Loy (who portrayed Hammett's character Nora Charles onscreen for over a decade) & presented the actress her Kennedy Center Honors many years later.

  • @dianal.clausen8118
    @dianal.clausen8118 11 месяцев назад

    Never knew all that about Lilian Helman. Thanks

  • @jenniferbrown5688
    @jenniferbrown5688 9 месяцев назад

    Sounds like a wonderful writer unique and special.

  • @yodservant
    @yodservant 2 года назад +3

    The narrator sounds a lot like Barbara Stanwyck...

    • @cindyhammond7320
      @cindyhammond7320 2 года назад +2

      Kathleen Turner

    • @snowysnowyriver
      @snowysnowyriver Год назад +1

      If I didn't know it as Kathleen Turner, I would have also thought it was Barbara Stanwyck.

  • @robertg.arbuckle6838
    @robertg.arbuckle6838 11 месяцев назад +4

    I read about 400 words a minute. The Falcon I ate in three hours. The reason Hammet sounds so good today is we talk like that now. Everyone started talking like that when they they saw it. For 90Years we have talked what he wrote. I saw the tiny apartment in Seattle's Chinatown where he wrote. It's quite a neighborhood! My father wanted to be him and my mother married him, my Dad. They even went to Mexico. I grew up with Beats in my house. Of course I'm weird as hell.

    • @marbleman52
      @marbleman52 11 месяцев назад +3

      Hey, when you said "beats", were you referring to the time of the Beatniks; the Beat Generation of the 50's ? Yea man...I can dig it...be cool and hip...!! I was a bit too young for the Beat Generation ( born 1952 ), but as the Beatniks morphed into the Hippie Generation of the 60's, I experienced a little bit of it in the late 60's.

  • @noneofurbusiness5223
    @noneofurbusiness5223 2 года назад +2

    It's bugging me: who's actor reading 📚 excerpts of novels?
    Straythairn? (Who was born in SF) Small world.

  • @mrsjupiter9310
    @mrsjupiter9310 2 года назад +1

    The things you don't know.....sad.

  • @nomadpi1
    @nomadpi1 11 месяцев назад +1

    I've been a voracious reader of all the detective story writers. I think he, like Hemingway, simply ran out of product. Alcohol was an excuse for both Hammett and Hemingway, and not a destroyer of their talent. Hellman had a style of her own and used it well. She produced writing for a living until she decided to quit. The interviewee who slammed Hellman isn't capable of astuteness, as she's protecting a bias of her own writing. In short, it's her opinion, nothing else. Hammett, like Hemingway, had his tome in the sun, and faded, as did all the writers who couldn't produce enough for Holly Wood's demands.

  • @JonathanBrown1
    @JonathanBrown1 Год назад +1

    Who is the woman wearing the pearl necklace who comments in several places? She is brilliant.

  • @MB-vu3ow
    @MB-vu3ow 11 месяцев назад +2

    Kathleen Turner sounds like Patricia Neal.

  • @beverlyledbetter4906
    @beverlyledbetter4906 Год назад +3

    He was a very nice looking man. He looked aristocratic!🙄

  • @Fadem12forReal
    @Fadem12forReal Год назад +1

    Pretty cool

  • @bayareaartist999
    @bayareaartist999 10 месяцев назад

    Barbara Stanwyck no it's Kathleen Turner.

  • @MrSoulauctioneer
    @MrSoulauctioneer 10 месяцев назад +1

    leaves his family to live with a mistress in NY state. Hammett is the first person Ive ever heard of that had TB that didn't move to the Southwest. Hellman must have been seriously self-centered or Hammett was a fool.

    • @sulevisydanmaa9981
      @sulevisydanmaa9981 10 месяцев назад

      @MrSoulauctioneer NEVUHHHH judge a ... hook by its ....What kinda deep soul u r sellin ? FREDDIE SCOTT on Shout ? Buy the Selvin mob bio on Bert Berns. Albert Wash on Eastbound ? O er

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 2 месяца назад +1

    There is no "American male mystique".

  • @michaelingleson1656
    @michaelingleson1656 Год назад +2

    I knew I headbanging in my kid days I know it means a good start when I was at work. Think o don't have knowledge like that it not agai st the law to get on top someone when he z I could.

  • @jerrycruitt5375
    @jerrycruitt5375 10 месяцев назад +1

    Is it ever possible to get through a book, article, or video without being dragged through the wailing semite scream of personal agony? Oh, I've got the Anglo/Celtic blues, and must halt the familiar scene.

    • @trickywoo5165
      @trickywoo5165 10 месяцев назад

      Oi vay! take it easy with the anti termitic remacks 😝 that was exactly what i was thinking but you worded it perfect

  • @markbeames7852
    @markbeames7852 9 месяцев назад

    Is that Straithairn narrating?

  • @ladym6738
    @ladym6738 10 месяцев назад

    Howard Duff - Sam Spade.

  • @gloworm6387
    @gloworm6387 2 года назад +5

    Sorry he spent even a little time as a Pinkerton thug, but, heck, we all have to start something somewhere.

    • @AuthorDocumentaries
      @AuthorDocumentaries  2 года назад +1

      Ain't that the truth

    • @unowen-nh9ov
      @unowen-nh9ov 2 года назад +3

      Pretty sure there were thugs on both sides of the law in those days or Hammett wouldn't have had anything to write about.

  • @hegyesvivien3372
    @hegyesvivien3372 Год назад

    S.O.Swho was the actress in the scene when the men didn't know her name?

    • @Babinkley
      @Babinkley 11 месяцев назад

      I think it is Maureen O'Sullivan, Mia Farrow's mother.

  • @MasterEth
    @MasterEth 3 месяца назад +1

    I didn’t know man carrying thing made documentaries

  • @swengeer
    @swengeer 9 месяцев назад

    Diane Johnson looks and sounds like Meryl Streep

  • @melissasnow416
    @melissasnow416 11 месяцев назад

    Was his wife by any chance ? a young war widow? I had heard that she was. Interesting that he continued to support her all his life.

  • @barbaraanneneale3674
    @barbaraanneneale3674 10 месяцев назад

    I agree very Well done. I always Preferred Raymond Chandler as a writer, But Hammett is undeniably great!

  • @alexwilson888
    @alexwilson888 11 месяцев назад +1

    Typical American! “Hammer may have written the original private detective” what! He was about 30 to 40 years too late

    • @HaywardSouth
      @HaywardSouth 10 месяцев назад +1

      Typical Brit! Closer to 90 years when Poe invented the detective story genre.😂

  • @yodservant
    @yodservant 11 месяцев назад

    Corruption was abundant.... nothing's changed

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Месяц назад

    The movie comes no where close to the spirit of The Thin Man novel.

  • @pressureworks
    @pressureworks 11 месяцев назад

    Did someone add the annoying music before uploading on yt ???

  • @GlobalistGazette
    @GlobalistGazette 11 месяцев назад

    Just loving the Jewish cult tropes in this. The talk of "True socialism" indeed.

  • @uhlijohn
    @uhlijohn 10 месяцев назад

    Lillian Hellman was the typical Jewish communist. She wrote a book back in the 1970s or early 1980s that I read entitled "Scoundrel Time" about the anti-communist politicians and media. Intellectual Marxists are ALL the same: totally blind to the evils of communism. They need only read famed Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovitch's memoir of the Stalinist era "Testimony" that had to be smuggled out of the USSR. In that book Shostakovitch castigates western "liberals" like George Bernard Shaw for lionizing Stalin as a "man of the people"! Their willingness to be duped by the Red Czar knew no bounds.

  • @Channelscruf
    @Channelscruf 11 месяцев назад +1

    47:03 Evil Communists looking evil.

  • @DonnaGisellaTranchel
    @DonnaGisellaTranchel 11 месяцев назад

    💙💙💙💙💙

  • @BrettLeMans
    @BrettLeMans Год назад +5

    So there you go, wanna'be's - don't drink.

  • @jeffreymorrissey6064
    @jeffreymorrissey6064 5 месяцев назад

    I think it’s time to talk about the New Blacklist that is responsible for the nadir Hollywood has been in most of my adult life.