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The Maltese Falcon (1931 film)

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Maltese Falcon (1931)
File:Dangerous female 1931.JPG
Directed byRoy Del Ruth
Written byDashiell Hammett (novel The Maltese Falcon)
Maude Fulton
Brown Holmes
StarringBebe Daniels
Ricardo Cortez
CinematographyWilliam Rees
Edited byGeorge Marks
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
June 13, 1931
Running time
80 min.
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

The Maltese Falcon is a 1931 Warner Bros. film based on the novel of the same name by Dashiell Hammett. It was directed by Roy Del Ruth and stars Ricardo Cortez as private detective Sam Spade and Bebe Daniels in the role of Ruth Wonderly. Also featured were Thelma Todd, Dudley Digges, Otto Matieson, and Una Merkel. Maude Fulton and Brown Holmes wrote the screenplay.

Synopsis

Private eye Sam Spade (Ricardo Cortez) and his partner Miles Archer are approached by Ruth Wonderly (Bebe Daniels) to follow a man, Floyd Thursby, who allegedly ran off with her younger sister. The two accept the assignment because the money is good, but Spade also implies that the woman looks like trouble, though she projects wholesome innocence.

That night, Detective Tom Polhaus informs Spade that Archer has been shot and killed while tailing Thursby. Even later that night, two officers visit Spade at his apartment and inquire about Spade's whereabouts in the last few hours. Spade asks what the visit is really about. The officers say that Thursby was also killed and that Spade is a suspect, since Thursby likely killed Archer. They have no evidence against Spade at the moment, but tell him that they will be conducting an investigation into the matter.

The next day, Spade gets a visit from Archer's wife (Thelma Todd), with whom he has been having an affair. The widow asks Spade if he killed off Miles so that they could be together. Spade dismisses her and tells her to leave, and coldly orders his secretary Effie to remove all of Archer's belongings from the office.

Later, Spade is visited by another man, Joel Cairo, who offers Spade $5000 if the private eye can retrieve a figurine of a black bird that has recently arrived. While Spade has no idea what the man is talking about, he plays along. Cairo leaves a card and tells Spade to contact him should anything develop. Following this, Spade is again contacted by Ruth Wonderly. She offers her sympathies for the death of his partner. Spade senses a connection between Ruth Wonderly and Cairo, and casually mentions that Cairo has contacted him. Ruth Wonderly gets extremely nervous when she hears this.

Cairo and Ruth Wonderly meet one night, at Spade's apartment. They get into an argument just as the police arrive to question Spade. Spade greets them at the door, but refuses to let them in. The officers say they know Spade was having an affair with Archer's wife; just as they are about to leave, they hear Cairo and Ruth Wonderly screaming in the back. They force their way into Spade's apartment, and Spade invents a story that involves describing how Cairo and Ruth Wonderly were just play-acting. The officers seem to accept, if not believe, Spade's story, but Cairo goes along with them because he is carrying "a large amount of money" and wants to be protected.

Spade eceives a call from Casper Gutman, who wishes to meet with him. Gutman, a huge person weighing over 300 lbs, says he will pay handsomely for the black bird. Spade implies that he can get the item (though at this point this is a bluff). At this point Cario arrives and tells him that Spade is lying. Gutman has Spade drugged and retrieves the money he had given Spade for the bird.


When Spade awakens, he returns to his office and tells the story of the Maltese Falcon to Effie. Soon afterwards, an injured man, identified as Captain Jacobi of "La Paloma," shows up at the office; he drops a package on the floor and then dies of gunshot wounds. Spade opens the package, and finds the falcon...


Pre-Code Aspects

File:Maltesefalcon1931.jpg
Ruth Wonderly (Bebe Daniels) on Sam Spade's bed.

While the plot is much the same as the better-known 1941 adaptation (much of the dialogue for both of the films is taken directly from the novel, so in many scenes, it is identical), the tenor is lighter, and there is rather extensive use of sexually suggestive situations in this pre-Code film, notably a scene featuring Bebe Daniels nude in a bathtub and another in which she is seen naked in the kitchen, partially covering herself with her clothes after being stripped-searched by Ricardo Cortez. From the opening scene, in which a young woman is seen straightening her stockings as she leaves Spade's office, there are numerous suggestions of Spade's sexual involvement with other female characters. Furthermore, the film does not shy away from the theme of homosexuality: a young and handsome Wilmer (played by Dwight Frye) is openly called Gutman's "boyfriend," implying a gay relationship. Spade also plays with a cop he doesn't like by constantly referring to him as "sweetheart" and "darling."

Censorship and Remakes

In 1936, Warner Brothers attempted to re-release the film, but was denied approval by the Production Code Office due to the film's "lewd" content. For decades unedited copies of the film could not legally be seen in the United States.

Once restrictions were lifted from showing this film (sometime after 1966), the film was retitled to Dangerous Female for U.S. television in order to avoid confusion with the 1941 version, which had previously been the only version available by that name. (Another light-comedy version of The Maltese Falcon, called Satan Met a Lady was released by Warners in 1936.)

Cast

As listed in the credits of the film: