Noir films have a certain sensation about them,
where too much investment in the effort creates predictability, and a repellent and detachment from the film observer. Indeed, good noir depictions do not try
to work within the theme at all. The only connected dots between the treatment
and the genre is simply a story involving the police.
Elliot Gould plays an exceptional character in Mr. Marlowe. As the
protagonist makes or breaks the center stage in this genre, Mr. Gould's balance
is extraordinary. We do not see a fatigued exertion into the machismo. Yet we
also do not see a man who finds the story he is in to be overtly melodramatic,
as if he is aware of the director's efforts to film.
Thus the absence of apathy seen on his face is commendable. As the engine
in the story - by necessity - we see an emotional commitment in the shifting
gears. Often times we will have a sense that "gumshoes" roll their
eyes at the malaise that their clients put themselves into. Here, however, we
have a sincerity with Mr. Gould's effort - almost a conviction that his cause
his noble in itself. This is in sharp contrast with poorer efforts in the genre
which would paint the detective using the same color palette as the scenery.
And the scenery is not terribly asymmetric to the main character. This is
not a hopeless world, in other words, where it would be easier to flood it and
start anew. The characters and their lives which breathe life into every frame
do not have a sense of decadence or decay about them. The main current in the
film is indeed caused by immorality, but we do not see a city of sinners where
this is a frequent happenstance. In fact, as one character drowns himself in
the Pacific, we have a community of onlookers, distressed, look out into the
darkness of the sea, the same night he passes on. This catastrophe is
communally felt. It is abnormal. Teams of police come in, scuba gear in tow.
The setting is one in which we ourselves would inhabit.
Thus a golden mean between sleuthing and the underbelly of every story
such as this, and the normalcy of society, is cleverly accomplished. The pacing
is such that we rarely have time to contemplate the inner nature of Marlowe;
neither are we scratching our heads in the who-dun-it. The film flows like a
gentle creek, which eventually arrives at a sudden, but small, jaded rock, at
its ending.
What to make of it? There are men who enjoy their job. And there are men
who enjoy justice in the world. And they are not mutually exclusive.
Grade: B
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