"Even on Central Avenue, not the quietest
dressed street in the world, he looked about as inconspicuous as a tarantula on
a slice of angel food.” ―Raymond Chandler, Farewell, My Lovely (1940)
This quote is a pretty good example of why the work
of mystery novelist Raymond Chandler
(1888-1959) endures, even as the world that inspired him is gone. The simile about the tarantula feels fresh, even surprising. It practically makes you laugh aloud as soon
as you read it.
I was reminded of the novel in which this quote
appears last night. In channel-surfing, I came across, on Turner Classic Movies
(TCM), Murder, My Sweet, the
1944 adaptation of Farewell, My Lovely. I
came in about 15 minutes after the film started and stayed to the end. Because
I missed the initial scenes, I have no idea if screenwriter John Paxton and
director Edward Dmytryk used this line. More’s the pity if they didn’t.
I’m not sure exactly how true the film, a pioneering example of film noir, remained to
the book. But it’s certainly the case that Hollywood couldn’t get enough of
Chandler in the 1940s. According to TCM’s Robert Osborne, no less than four
actors played hard-boiled private eye Philip Marlowe within a four-year period:
Robert Montgomery (Lady in the Lake),
George Montgomery (The Brasher Doubloon,
an adaptation of The High Window),
Humphrey Bogart (The Big Sleep), and
Powell.
It’s not hard to see why Hollywood was attracted to
his work, even when the plots got so complicated they almost became
preposterous. It’s that voice: thoroughly
streetwise, completely wised-up about the human propensity toward sin,
especially when exhibited by the powerful—and, perhaps for that reason, on the
side of the underdog. It sounds less like someone from Los Angeles, Marlowe’s
ostensible turf, than from the mean streets of New York in the Thirties and
Forties—maybe an Irish-American detective, now freelancing.
The surname of Chandler’s now-immortal private eye
would seem to contradict that idea, given the author’s Anglophilia and
consequent acknowledgement here of another writer who brought drama and poetry to
terrible violence, Christopher Marlowe. But Chandler’s mother was Irish, and in
“Try the Girl,” a short story from which he cannibalized much of Farewell, My Lovely, Chandler’s hero
sports a different name: Ted Carmady.
(The image accompanying this post, from Murder, My
Sweet, features Powell on the right as Marlowe and, on the left, Mike Mazurki as the “inconspicuous”
gangster, the appropriately named “Moose” Malone.)
3 comments:
This is a misquotation from the book. In the book the word "cake" does not appear, only angel food.
Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I've fixed it.
Thanks for reading. Interestingly, I was looking up what it meant as in the UK it's only referred to as Angel cake. Never Angel Food cake. And I had never heard of it.
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