Rating: NR
Genre:
Mystery
Release Date: 07/25/2006
SubTitles: English/French
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 230 Minutes
Flags: Violence, Questionable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Warner Home Video
The definitive
Humphrey Bogart/
Lauren Bacall vehicle,
The Big Sleep casts
Bogart as
Raymond Chandler's cynical private eye
Philip Marlowe. Summoned to the home of the fabulously wealthy General Sternwood (
Charles Waldron), Marlowe is hired to deal with a blackmailer shaking down the General's sensuous, thumb-sucking daughter Carmen (
Martha Vickers). This earns Marlowe the displeasure of Carmen's sloe-eyed, seemingly straight-laced older sister Vivian (
Bacall), who is fiercely protective of her somewhat addled sibling. As he pursues the case at hand, Marlowe gets mixed up in the murder of Arthur Geiger (
Theodore von Eltz), a dealer in pornography. He also runs afoul of gambling-house proprietor Eddie Mars (
John Ridgely), who seems to have some sort of hold over the enigmatic Vivian. Any further attempts to outline the plot would be futile: the storyline becomes so complicated and convoluted that even screenwriters
William Faulkner,
Leigh Brackett, and
Jules Furthmann were forced to consult
Raymond Chandler for advice (he was as confused by the plot as the screenwriters). When originally prepared for release in 1945,
The Big Sleep featured a long exposition scene featuring police detective Bernie Ohls (
Regis Toomey) explaining the more obscure plot details. This expository scene was ultimately sacrificed, along with several others, in favor of building up
Bacall's part; for instance, a climactic sequence was reshot to emphasize sexual electricity between
Bogart and
Bacall, obliging
Warners to replace a supporting player who'd gone on to another project. The end result was one of the most famously baffling film noirs but also one of the most successful in sheer star power.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide