The Big Sleep

Book by Raymond Chandler

First released in 1946 and now being revived for selected screenings around the country and an extended run at the National Film TheatreThe Big Sleep is a film of infinite interest. In its famously knowing trailer, Humphrey Bogart walks into the Hollywood Public Library and asks for “a good mystery like The Maltese Falcon“. A librarian gives him a copy of what is misleadingly described as “Raymond Chandler’s latest”, adding: “What a picture that’ll make!” Well, it did, and the result can be approached from a number of distinct and complementary directions.

First, it’s a Warner Brothers production, made at the height of Hollywood’s big studio era and announced by Warner’s logo, which looks like a federal badge of social responsibility. Jack L Warner, who’d headed the studio since the early 1920s, determined what films were made, how and by whom, their cost and which contract performers appeared in them; their smart, stocky, wisecracking heroes looked a lot like Warner himself.