That hat brim move and the dark glasses ... worth it. But the rye in the pocket - clean Ace. And when he leaves, says "so long, pal". Beautiful.
@albertgrant10173 ай бұрын
Absolutely.One of my favorite scenes in the movie,Wish he returned to the Acme Bookstore.Also wish he hooked up with the female cabdriver,!
@stevenrobert85673 ай бұрын
Careful, I don't slap so good this time of evening. Great line. (--:
@alansorensen59032 ай бұрын
I liked when he told the librarian shortly before this, "I keep blondes in a bottle, too."
@stevenrobert85672 ай бұрын
@@alansorensen5903 I stash redheads in my closet and blondes under the bed.
@basen5462 күн бұрын
total classic
@sparkomatic2 ай бұрын
This scene is the best argument for small, independent bookstores.
@azohundred13533 ай бұрын
The Big Sleep is a perfect combo of Film Noir and Screwball Comedy, from the master director Howard Hawks. Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall are at their best in this. Shoutout to Dorothy Malone, Martha Vickers, and Sonia Darrin as well(3 more actresses shown in this clip).
@davidhull14813 ай бұрын
Never gets old- except for the “men don’t make passes” routine. Dorothy Malone makes one hell of an impression!
@edelmiraespinosa96893 ай бұрын
Bogie and Bacall great movies
@lemorab13 ай бұрын
I think Bogie and Dorothy are more interesting than Bogie and Bacall. Also, Dorothy doesn't take off her glasses reflexively, just because a man interests her. He's the one who asks, she isn't self-conscious about them. I like this brunette, smart, confident Dorothy better than the blonde alcoholic mess that won her an Oscar for "Written on the Wind."
@davidhull14813 ай бұрын
@@lemorab1 I was referring to the Dorothy Parker quote. Or one of those Algonquin Round Table sages.
@stevenrobert85673 ай бұрын
I haven't watched this great movie since I was teen. It's great, I love the time period and in black and white. And the old cars in the movie. And the music, and the cinematography. A 100 years from now, people will still love this movie.
@cattyelse237213 күн бұрын
well the routine is from that time so what do you expect? you want to go back and rewrite it or leave that part out? of course it gets old. it is old.it is part of the film. so inane a comment.would u boo in the cinema if you heard it?jeez.get with the context
@lorenzobeckmann37363 ай бұрын
the greatness of this movie is manyfold; great original story, script doesn't insult your intelligence, superb acting, one must think to the plot, more............
@hectorrodriguez26863 ай бұрын
It is not an original story. It is based on a novel.
@thesoultwins723 ай бұрын
@@hectorrodriguez2686 .......The genius of Raymond Chandler
@psgrenierАй бұрын
Incredible. Two bookstores. Both still economically viable and within easy walking distance. Seems like a utopia today.
@johnkeenan18293 ай бұрын
I'm currently rereading my Chandler. Gods, what a brilliant writer.
@garryferrington8113 ай бұрын
Interestingly, he had the same literary teacher as P.G. Wodehouse, who was a rather successful writer himself.
@leoscheibelhut94029 күн бұрын
@johnkeenan1829 Whenever I read Chandler he is my favorite author, until I reread Hammett.
@jlwilliams3 ай бұрын
People often don't realize how much dry humor is baked into Raymond Chandler's Marlowe books, and it looks as if this film captures it well. I'll have to seek out the full version.
@eFMe-fk1xh3 ай бұрын
Being an Howard Hawks movie it's always "characters and entertainment over anything else". Much like Chandler, the mood is all that matters. The Big Sleep is the noir's noir.
@McRocket3 ай бұрын
Wow. That woman in the second bookstore really stole the scene. Looks and acting wise. ☮
@nedludd76222 ай бұрын
I thought she looked fine with the glasses, even better.
@206or162 ай бұрын
That’s Dorothy Malone…who later appeared in the TV series “Payton Place”.
@aileenwagner2576Ай бұрын
@nedludd7622 LOL, I was thinking the same exact thing!!! She certainly held her own with Bogie too!
@hebneh2 ай бұрын
Don’t try to figure out the plot of this film based on this entire clip. You never will. It’s incomprehensible - but very enjoyable and worth watching regardless.
@gonesnake23373 ай бұрын
I got a little thrill playing the video game L.A. Noire. I found Geiger's Bookstore and, sure enough, if you look across the street, there's Acme Books.
@mosinmeister253 ай бұрын
Great Game! I didn't notice that. I'll have to look.
@gonesnake23373 ай бұрын
@@mosinmeister25 I did a guided play through of the story (looked up online hints, walkthroughs) just to have the free roaming of 40s Los Angeles.
@sclogse128 күн бұрын
That's awesome.
@josenighthawk3 ай бұрын
Noirs are true INTIMITE Conversations, and it is best to hold them at night - preferably during rainy nights! ... Oh, they are also best - mighty best! - in Black & White, so to allow us to color their shades and tones with the 'Colors' of our feelings!
@TrailerBob3 ай бұрын
The hell with Peyton Place, this is Dorothy Malone's finest hour. She gets Canuck-cred for being in an episode of "The Littlest Hobo" too.
@zetectic79683 ай бұрын
A classic! The cars, the clothes, the dames: they don't make 'em like that any more.
@rrsteamer3 ай бұрын
As an opinion, Dorothy Malone’s performance in this book store scene to me is quite exceptional. Was she capable of that depth of feelings (a great actress) or was she actually making a bit of a play for Bogart? Believe Bogart was in the beginning stages of his relationship with Bacall. Not that Malone wanted to move in, but perhaps just trying the “waters” as it were. Regardless, one of my favorite scenes.
@thesoultwins723 ай бұрын
@rrsteamer........By all accounts, 19-year-old Malone was so nervous appearing opposite Bogart in this scene, her hands couldn't stop shaking and she kept spilling her drink. Hawks eventually solved the problem by putting lead weights in her cup.
@rrsteamer3 ай бұрын
@@thesoultwins72 Well, certainly hadn’t heard that story. Even so, she did a nice job and signs of nervousness were not evident. It would appear that the little bit of help from the director was enough to complete the scene nicely. Thanks for the info!
@thesoultwins723 ай бұрын
@@rrsteamer ........You're welcome. Although not my favourite film adaptation of Chandler's genius writing - it is still an exceptionally good film. And as you say, despite only a very brief cameo, Dorothy Malone performed her part really well.
@abbashussein61613 ай бұрын
WAS LAUREN MAIN STAR OR MALONE
@royfr8136Ай бұрын
She was only 19?
@robkunkel8833Ай бұрын
The black and white photography puts just enough light on the subjects in the rain during the car scene at the middle of this clip.
@petergraham86813 ай бұрын
These two book store scenes especially the second one with Dorothy Malone, the latter teasing the production code at the time, are among my favorite moments in the film & Bogart has a fine time playing both of them it seems.
@aguilayserpiente3 ай бұрын
What is the code? Where can it be found?
@BB19513 ай бұрын
These Warner Bros pictures always have a unique look and sound. Unmistakable.
@sclogse128 күн бұрын
Even their cartoons have a sound. The sense of space around the characters. Amazingly I found out at a party at Isabelle Allende's place. A guest was a composer who had been in the sound stage. It was exactly that. Their unique sound stage acoustics. Listen to Fog Horn Leg Horn and you can hear the room.
@mysterirhys3 ай бұрын
Totally fell in love with Dorothy Malone from this scene
@Bogie03153 ай бұрын
I also, I thought she was the best looking women in the movie, wish she had a bigger role in the film.
@206or162 ай бұрын
@@Bogie0315: Dorothy Malone is very attractive, but I feel Martha Vickers is a notch higher in the looks category.
@daveb78113 ай бұрын
Is that a bottle of rye in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?
@ronnsutton49023 ай бұрын
The characters name is Agnes and she is the coolest character in this great classic
@louise_rose3 ай бұрын
Marlowe's questions about those rare books, with very specific misprints ("third edition with a duplicated line on p.116") sound like an in-joke between book collectors. Books aren't like rare stamps in that way; a special misprint or typo on a page doesn't make them into special collectibles. :) Wonderful film, a real classic.
@Rozsaphile2 ай бұрын
Not to mention that "Ben-Hur" wasn't published until 1880.
@louise_rose2 ай бұрын
@@Rozsaphile Incidentally, there was a scam Ponzi scheme in France some years ago where a man, assisted by two antiquarian book sellers, talked up the value of some supposedly rare manuscripts by the Marquise de Sade (a wayward classic with some parts of the French literate public) and goaded people into paying serious money to own shares in these manuscripts, then urging them to find a new tier of customers so they could get paid by them for owning further small parts of those notebooks or whatever...This is a real "only in France" thing. 😀
@robkunkel8833Ай бұрын
👨🏽🏫🎉Thanks for the first thought. Yes, a rare book is not like a rare stamp. I just got schooled. A book collector’s inside joke. Yes.
@mariellegrass-singing4718Ай бұрын
Yes . Priceless
@robb73983 ай бұрын
Geiger's "shadow," Lundgren, was his live-in boy toy in the book.
@PaulWilliams663 ай бұрын
The ‘studio’ rain always puts my in mind of Bladerunner.
@williamschlenger15183 ай бұрын
Great movie. Was the librarian suggesting an after noon delight 😂
@Actor4123 ай бұрын
Sky rockets in flight.
@garryferrington8113 ай бұрын
Yup. Very subtle, because of censorship.
@texasbluebonnet43033 ай бұрын
Wow, look at those cars!
@leoscheibelhut9402 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite scenes in cinema! Bogart is great but she's perfection!
@lindafarnes4863 ай бұрын
It's a really good book by Raymond Chandler. Probably his best.
@thoughtsurferzone50123 ай бұрын
Pretty, bookish girl. Hope he got more than a book marker. 😘😘😘😘
@josenighthawk3 ай бұрын
NOTE: Back then there were legal issues of using a name that could already be copyrighted elsewhere - and thus, being exposed to potential lawsuits. ... Keep in mind that back then there were no powerful computers (just clunky analog mechanical ones) to both store and search for hypothetically considered names - let alone, no internet, Google, etc., of course. ... Not sure about the name of the bookstore across the street. .. It could be one of many that Hollywood pre-copyrighted to use in films. ... BTW, Digital Computing, as universally used all over, was invented by 30's & 40's & 50's actress, Hedy Lamarr, who was not only stunningly beautiful but a true MENSA genius. ... She came up with the framework of digital computing while inventing and devising 'STEALTH TRANSMISSION' of electronic signals that made torpedoes stealthy in their signatures against detection. .. (She, of course, got a patent for this.)
@EJP286CRSKW20 күн бұрын
Err, no. Digital computing was invented by Charles Babbage in the 19th century. Hedy did invent something akin to cell phone protocols.
@jackie77253 ай бұрын
I used to watch these movies as a kid
@garryferrington8113 ай бұрын
Now you watch them as an old man.
@Bogie03153 ай бұрын
l loved Dorothy Malone's part in the film, I liked her better as a brunette as she went blond in many of her later films.
@theroaringshadows2 ай бұрын
Watching a lot of Black n white movies lately reminds me how simple & normal people once were. Everyone has been lead to believe technology helps us so much meanwhile everyone's attention span is now 1.5 seconds.
@brianwallace65663 ай бұрын
that final line? so hilarious. (I mean, the whole thing is great but)
@Ducatirati10 күн бұрын
This , Casablanca, great last line , The Maltese Falcon , the best last line ever , The Roaring Twenties, key Largo , And Cagney why The Roaring Twenties is so good , love it , even if he did have to stand on a box in Casablanca to be taller the Bregman , she was taller by an inch or two . Cheers . R
@ItsMefromSnuffys2 ай бұрын
Cutting the intro music and credits really detracts from the experience
@johnnya8673 ай бұрын
Hmm I wonder what they're suggesting went on in that bookstore that we werent privy to during this little episode. They should have shown him doing up his tie. Never would have got past the sensors! I've have seen this film 20 times, conservative estimate. Just ask my wife!😊
@TerryUniGeezerPetersonАй бұрын
We'll always have Geiger - we didn't have, we lost him until he turned up in the bed. We got him back last night.
@brendakempf1863 ай бұрын
My absolute favorite Bogie movie.
@greglongphee20342 ай бұрын
Dorothy was some babe in her youth.
@buzzawuzza37433 ай бұрын
Yikes! He left fingerprints on everything in Geiger's house!
@vincentmoserblues2 ай бұрын
Dorothy Malone ! Even more more seductive with glasses. For me she was the real star of "The Big Sleep".
@voltairebanquirigo11193 ай бұрын
Hope we can have the whole film. Saw the robert mitchum version but nothing bet the bogie original
@snarflatful3 ай бұрын
Great film.
@RaysDad3 ай бұрын
Movies like this are no longer allowed.
@sclogse128 күн бұрын
Well you have to get frisked first.
@mcd2263014 күн бұрын
Maybe there isn’t anyone who knows how to make a movie like this these days.
@RaysDad14 күн бұрын
@@mcd22630 Humphrey Bogart wouldn't make it in today's Hollywood. Marlowe would be played by a diversity hire.
@rinkadink663 ай бұрын
Hollywood at its best..
@sclogse128 күн бұрын
Imagine the world working like this.
@waynedurning87173 ай бұрын
These women are gorgeous lol.
@andrewanderson61216 күн бұрын
I've watched big sleep more times than I can count and it never grows old. The remake with mitchum is just about unwatchable.
@jeshkam3 ай бұрын
Who plays the Geiger bookstore assistant?
@azohundred13533 ай бұрын
Sonia Darrin.
@jeshkam3 ай бұрын
@@azohundred1353 Thanks!
@darnellmitchell93573 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 I love it this is my first time seeing this but I love to dialect when he slapped in the face and said lady on there and be quiet oh my God later and be quiet
@pasqualevincent92603 ай бұрын
Wish this was in English
@lbj49933 ай бұрын
Please take some writing lessons...please, please, please...
@LarryMcLarnon2 ай бұрын
Classy stuff.
@ianboard5443 ай бұрын
I was surprised that Sonia Darrin wasn't in the credits.
@hebneh2 ай бұрын
There was some kind of falling-out with her and the studio and while they couldn’t remove her from the movie, they didn’t credit her or employ her again. Meanwhile she’s one of the best parts of this film.
@AlanCanasToons3 ай бұрын
ACME?!?!?
@josenighthawk3 ай бұрын
NOTE: Back then there were legal issues of using a name that could already be copyrighted elsewhere - and thus, being exposed to potential lawsuits. ... Keep in mind that back then there were no powerful computers (just clunky analog mechanical ones) to both store and search for hypothetically considered names - let alone, no internet, Google, etc., of course. ... Not sure about the name of the bookstore across the street. .. It could be one of many that Hollywood pre-copyrighted to use in films. ... BTW, Digital Computing, as universally used all over, was invented by 30's & 40's & 50's actress, Hedy Lamarr, who was not only stunningly beautiful but a true MENSA genius. ... She came up with the framework of digital computing while inventing and devising 'STEALTH TRANSMISSION' of electronic signals that made torpedoes stealthy in their signatures against detection. .. (She, of course, got a patent for this.)
@jlwilliams3 ай бұрын
"Acme" was a popular real-world name for businesses and products in 20th-century America -- it means "highest point, peak, summit" etc. Chuck Jones had tongue firmly in cheek when he adopted it as the name for the business that foisted invariably disastrous products on Wyle E. Coyote...
@robb73983 ай бұрын
Acme was a common name for businesses back then. Like Apex.
@hebneh2 ай бұрын
No products for Wile E. Coyote were sold at this bookstore, however.
@jimringomartin3 ай бұрын
Bogey, the G.O.A.T. The reason I became a P.I.
@larrytaylor30483 ай бұрын
I have some rye in my pocket as well!
@lorianderson-musgrave36093 ай бұрын
So long,Pal
@danlhendl3 ай бұрын
She reminds me of mak. Just vaguely if you squint real hard
@billwhelpley68253 ай бұрын
Awful lot of good looking dames in those book stores!
@TerryUniGeezerPetersonАй бұрын
Martha Vickers was hot!
@billthestinker3 ай бұрын
Bogart was party size
@scottdellrobinson3 ай бұрын
They didnt shower after drinks and things. lol
@RobertHunt-vd8vy2 ай бұрын
Robert Michum did a good in job......his should of longer. Robert
@AaronGranda-g5r2 ай бұрын
Sex drugs and murder. Yeah thats the forties all right. Malone is adorable. This is so good i can almost forgive the cheapass sets.
@lonzo612 ай бұрын
This kind of thing has never happened to me with the dames. Say, what gives? Maybe I need to start carrying a flask of rye, and develop a manner of speaking like Bogie. Shay shweetheart.
@gaylandbarney22313 ай бұрын
like hearing the main theme of one movement of a concerto , this sucks.......give us the movie ,
@royfr8136Ай бұрын
'A dead body is heavier than a broken heart' - Man, I wanted to like Raymond Chandler but between the implausible plots and convenient behaviour = cheese
@Ftc.63 ай бұрын
Reported for Homophobia
@CliffBronson12123 ай бұрын
I will always be on the side of Moses ...I do not choose this ...choice made for me ...less Vincent, more Holy Trinity 😍
@DieFlabbergast2 ай бұрын
Good acting, of course, but this is a travesty for anyone who has read the book. Apart from completely changing the dialogue and the appearance of every character (including Marlowe himself), they also went off on a storyline that's not only not in the book, it's not in character for Philip Marlowe. I should have expected no less when I saw they had cast Bogart in the title role. In the books, Philip Marlowe was six foot three and broad-shouldered. Bogart was nowhere near that. It's like Tom Cruise as Jack Reacher.
@arturovaldes5463 ай бұрын
Only in the movies 19 year girls fall for middle age men.
@MsJackrussell23 ай бұрын
They do in real life...if the man has plenty of money.
@svjim13 ай бұрын
Miss Bacall Mrs. Bogart same age.
@jesterday22223 ай бұрын
@@svjim1 He was 25 years her senior 🙄 Old perv
@johnsmith1003 ай бұрын
Who’s this actor?
@VentrueCapital3 ай бұрын
Name’s Humphrey Bogart.
@johnsmith1003 ай бұрын
@@VentrueCapital Thanks. He’s famous, I know him, but my brain couldn’t fetch his name :)