The Maltese Falcon

In The Maltese Falcon screenwriter-turned-director John Huston created a shadowed, unreal territory where no thing is as it seems. The rules of the game keep changing for everyone, save Sam Spade (Humphrey Bogart), who is unfailingly guided by his obfuscated sense of justice and a morality that has come full circle. This third adaptation of Dashiell Hammett's novel was thoroughly charmed (and charming). The ensemble acting between Bogart, Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet (in his first screen appearance after forty years as a Shakespearean actor), and Elisha Cook, Jr. is sublime. And Mary Astor as Brigid O'Shaughnessy is "good, awfully good." Huston adds to the overall sense of drama by keeping the viewer neatly poised between omniscience and Spade's viewpoint. The Maltese Falcon itself is poised in a world between romance and realism, a place where dreams come from.-Sally SybergPreserved from original negative.

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