Geek Syndicate Issue 8 | Page 21

Geek Syndicate Their victim accepts his fate. An insurance investigator has his doubts and a love is betrayed. This film features flashbacks, dubious dealings, curiosity, coincidence, double crossing, murder and a beautiful and untrustworthy dame. • The Big Sleep, 1946 starring: Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, Dir: Howard Hawks 114 mins. • Night and the City, 1950 starring: Richard Widmark and Gene Tierney, Dir: Jules Dassin 101 mins. An American crook dreams of the big leagues in London. He needs to break the Mob’s monopoly. He betrays everyone to make his dream come true. This film features nihilism, a fatalistic loser, shady morals and dark shadows, and absolutely no dame, trustworthy or otherwise. • Kiss Me Deadly, 1955 starring: Ralph Meeker and Albert Dekker, Dir: Robert Aldrich 106 mins. A private eye – Mike Hammer – helps a female hitchhiker, but she ends up murdered. Oddly affected by her, he tracks down her killers and realises that everyone is after a mysterious box. This features misogyny and just plain meanness, murder, coincidences, shadows, wise-guys, (very briefly) a helpless dame, an untrustworthy dame and an absolutely killer climax. A wealthy old man has a wild and sleazy daughter. Blackmailers threaten to ruin him by exposing her. The man hires Marlowe, who falls in love while trying to uncover the truth. This features a violent private eye being lead by his heart, a pointless plot, mobsters and gambling and a beautiful and possibly trustworthy dame. and gangsters, sleaze and a framed dame. • The Long Goodbye, 1973 starring: Elliott Gould and Nina van Pallandt, Dir: Robert Altman 112 mins. Marlowe’s best friend is framed for murder. A highclass lady hires him to find her missing husband. The husband commits suicide, or does he? And what has this to do with his best friend? This film features sleaze, a dishevelled private eye who appears to be manipulated by a shadowy underworld, murder and a totally untrustworthy dame. • Touch of Evil, 1958 Staring: Charlton Heston, Orson Welles and Janet Leigh, Dir: Orson Welles 95 mins. A district attorney comes to a US/Mexico border town to investigate murder and corruption. Featuring one of the best and longest opening shots in cinema history, heat so oppressive you can taste it, murder • Chinatown, 1974 starring: Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway, Dir: Roman Polanski 130 mins. 21