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The Long Goodbye (1973)
In director Robert Altman's deconstructed, post-noir
mystery crime-thriller/drama - the revisionist film was criticized
for taking liberties and degrading the familiar Raymond Chandler character
(in the 1953 published novel), for updating the novel's late 1940s
time-frame to the free-spirited 1970s, and for drastically changing
the ending. Altman deflected outraged audiences by claiming the plot
(which was complex, almost irrelevant and pointless) wasn't as important
as the character interactions and the film's style and mood.
The film's script was from Leigh Brackett, famed
for co-writing the script for the classic detective noir film The
Big Sleep (1946) - another film featuring Philip Marlowe and
based upon another Chandler novel. Five of Chandler's noirish novels
were being adapted and revived in pictures in the late 60's and 70's: Marlowe
(1969), Chandler (1971), The Big Sleep (1978), The Long Goodbye (1973) and Farewell,
My Lovely (1975).
Altman's quirky film with an off-beat cast included a
first-person, constantly-moving camera (especially in the early scene
introducing cat-loving Marlowe), and several versions of the movie's
theme song - a John Williams/Johnny Mercer ballad (first sung under
the credits). The impressive color cinematography was by Vilmos Zsigmond,
who was also noted for his Oscar-winning work in Spielberg's Close
Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). The title song "The
Long Goodbye" (by John Williams and Johnny Mercer) was heard throughout
the film, but with different arrangements, and via various mediums
(via recorded music in a supermarket, a bar piano, a doorbell, a radio
song, a funeral dirge by a jazz band in Mexico, etc.). The film's
two main taglines were fictionalized quotes from Chandler:
- "Nothing says goodbye like a bullet"
- "I have two friends
in the world. One is a cat. The other is a murderer"
The solitary, idiosyncratic and
lonely main character, Philip Marlowe, literally rambled to himself
throughout the film, joking with other characters and with himself
(via a running monologue). The under-rated, definitive detective film
lacked any Academy Award nominations, although it had two superb performances
by Elliott Gould (in a comeback role) as befuddled, disorganized, anachronistic
and out-of-place gumshoe Philip Marlowe, and Sterling Hayden as Hemingway-like,
troubled alcoholic writer Roger Wade.
- the film opened (and closed) with the musical song "Hooray
For Hollywood" - [Note: It was taken from a promo trailer for
WB's Hollywood
Hotel (1937) with Benny Goodman and hIs Orchestra.]
- in the opening pre-title credits scene, chain-smoking
bachelor and quintessential private eye-detective Philip Marlowe
(Elliott Gould) was drowsily waking up in his shabby LA apartment
in the middle of the night, stirred to life by his hungry tabby cat (Morris
the Cat) demanding food; the laid-back, hip, slovenly, laconic and
casually-cool Marlowe was compelled to go out to buy cat food at
the local Thrifty 24 hour supermarket, while his female hippie neighbors
nearby on a balcony in the nude were practicing yoga; one of them
asked Marlowe to pick up two boxes of fudge brownie mix (to make "hash
pies")
- meanwhile, Marlowe's handsome playboy
friend Terry Lennox (ex-NY Yankee pitcher Jim Bouton) drove out of his
security-guarded "Malibu Colony" residence in his light-colored
yellow 1971 Ferrari GTS sports (Daytona Spyder) convertible; the
title credits were accompanied by singing of the title song "The
Long Goodbye": ("There's a long goodbye And it
happens every day When some passer-by Invites
your eye To come his way Even as he smiles a quick hello You've let
him go You've let the moment fly Can you recognise the theme? On
some other street Two people meet As in a dream Running for a plane
through the rain They could be lovers Until they die It's too late
to try When a missed hello Becomes a long... ")
- once Marlowe returned from his errand without his
cat's favorite brand (Courry) for his persnickety pet, he couldn't
trick his smart cat into eating substitute cat food that he smashed
into an old Courry tin can, and his unsatisfied cat exited through
a window with a handwritten sign: "El Porto del Gato"
- Terry Lennox drove up to his friend Marlowe's
place and entered, with visible bruises on his face and hands; Marlowe
inquired: "You
and Sylvia going at it again?"; Lennox asked for a favor - "There's
gonna be a lot of people looking for me as a result of my lovely
wife" -
and claimed that he needed an immediate ride to Tijuana; after parking
his car in Marlowe's garage, Terry convinced Marlowe to drive him in
his 1948 Lincoln Continental Convertible Cabriolet, and drop him and
his suitcase off on the Mexican border at Tijuana
- once Marlowe returned to his apartment by
morning, he was confronted as he entered by two inquisitive plainclothes
officers, Detective Dayton (John Davies) and Sgt. Green (Jerry Jones),
who demanded answers about where he had gone with Lennox in the
middle of the night; when he refused to answer, Marlowe was set up
with 'assaulting an officer' charge, apprehended, taken to
the station, booked (photos and prints were taken), and questioned
in an interrogation room by Lt. Farmer (Steve Coit) while viewed
through a one-way mirror; Marlowe (with fingerprint ink smeared on
his face, while he mimed Al Jolson in "blackface" and chatted about
Notre Dame football) was uncooperative and not taking the situation
seriously: ("I
don't like the way you guys ask questions, and I don't know what
you wanna know");
he was finally told that he was implicated as an 'accessory after
the fact of murder' and for 'aiding and abetting a felon in unlawful
flight' - Lennox had apparently severely beaten and killed his rich
wife Sylvia before crossing the border; Marlowe couldn't believe
it: "I
don't believe it...That Terry Lennox could kill her"
- Farmer accused Lennox (whose real name was Lenny Potts)
of additional criminal deeds with a corrupt gambling associate: "The
man's a gambler, a hood, he's thick as thieves with Marty Augustine...He
was always splitting up with his wife"; Marlowe was jailed for
three days and then released; as he left his cell, his cellmate Dave
aka Socrates (David Carradine) pontificated: "'Possession' is
what you get in here now. Possession of noses, possession of gonads,
possession of life....Listen, some day, some day, all the pigs are
gonna be in here, and all the people are gonna be
out there"; as Marlowe left the station, Lt. Farmer curtly
explained the reason for his release: "Terry Lennox is dead,
Marlowe. The case is closed"
- as Marlowe was driven home by Morgan (Warren Berlinger),
he read the Los Angeles Dispatch report on the murder, bylined Otatoclan,
Mexico: "Lennox Suicide Proves Wife's Murder" - "Los Angeles law enforcement
officers, together with Mexican police, have concluded today that
the suicide of prominent Hollywood playboy, Terry Lennox, reveals
that Lennox was responsible for the brutal slaying of his wife Sylvia
at their plush Malibu Colony home, playground of the movie world....";
according to Morgan, Lennox "blew his brains out in a little
godforsaken town in Mexico" and "left a full confession"; there was
a second article on Marlowe, headlined: "Private Investigator Refuses
to Talk - Philip Marlowe Held as Accessory in Lennox Murder-Suicide Case"
- the skeptical Marlowe began to conduct his
own investigation - unsure and unbelieving that Terry murdered
his wife Sylvia or had committed suicide: ("Case closed, all zippered
up like a big bag of s--t. Terry Lennox wasn't at the end of his
rope. The way he talked, Sylvia wasn't dead then either. I don't
believe he killed her. I don't believe he killed himself")
- Marlowe was contacted by mysterious, callous,
and beautiful but manipulative blonde Mrs. Eileen Wade (Nina Van
Pallandt in her US film debut), who coincidentally lived
in the same beach-side Malibu Colony neighborhood where the Lennox
couple lived; a running joke was the various movie-star impersonations
by the Colony's Guard (Ken Sansom) (e.g., Barbara Stanwyck, Jimmy
Stewart, Walter Brennan, etc.)
- Marlowe was allowed into Mrs.
Wade's home, but greeted by her barking Doberman pinscher; she revealed
that her self-destructive, frustrated alcoholic novelist husband
Roger Wade (Sterling Hayden) had gone missing for a week and she
was covering up for his absence:
"My husband has a drinking problem. Every so often he reaches
a stage when he feels he needs professional help"; he normally
would "dry out" in a facility, but she hadn't been able
to locate him; Marlowe was suspicious about a bruise on the side
of her face that she attributed to falling out of bed; she described
her husband as a "big" man - a huge "monster" hulk
at six foot five and 220 pounds ("Once you've seen
his face, you'll never forget it")
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Mrs. Eileen Wade (Nina Van Pallandt)
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- soon after, Marlowe visited the Burbank
Care Center - a private, luxury self-help detox
clinic run by Dr. Verringer (Henry Gibson), where he was misled and told
that Wade wasn't a patient there; Marlowe went on his own search for
Wade in an outdoor garden area of the facility while pursued by Dr. Verringer
who was protesting his presence on the private grounds
- Marlowe returned to Mrs. Wade to report back,
but she was fearful of returning to the
facility with him: "He doesn't want me to find him. He doesn't want
me to know why he's hiding out at Verringer's"; she repeated her
objective: "I want you to make sure he's all right, and try to bring
him home if you can. If you have any trouble, I'll back you up. But
I don't think you're afraid of trouble"; she also divulged an
important clue - she happened to mention that she was, like Marlowe,
a social "friend" to her neighbor Terry Lennox
- that evening, Marlowe returned to the detox-center
and overheard Verringer speaking to Wade in his private room, who
complained about signing a check to cover his $5,000 bill for
treatment; Wade angrily retorted: "You got me all drugged up, Doc...This
place stinks, Doc. It's this place that's sick, not the people in
it...I'd like to go home, and I'm going home....I'm a man cannot
stand confinement. So if you don't start pressin' buttons and get
me out of here, I'll tell you, I'll tear you limb from limb and waltz
right out through the god-damn wall!"; Verringer innocently responded:
"I'm here to help you"; Marlowe intervened, identified himself as
a private detective who had been hired to bring him home ("if that's
where you wanna go"), and offered to rescue Roger and take him back to his wife Eileen
- Roger happily joined Marlowe (calling him the "Marlboro"
man) to return home to his wife and barking dogs; when they arrived,
Eileen was upset over Roger causing a commotion due to his erratic
behavior: ("If you don't stop this drinking, I'm gonna leave
you. I mean it"); after Roger collapsed on a sofa in his writer's
study, Eileen confided in Marlowe that the self-destructive Wade
suffered from writer's block: "He's really a sick man. More
so than you might think. He feels he's all finished as a writer.
He sits down and stares at the paper and nothing happens. I don't
know what to do. He really needs help"; she was grateful for
his assistance
- before leaving, Mrs. Wade briefly asked Marlowe about
his friendship with Terry Lennox, and agreed with him that she thought
Terry was innocent of the murder charges, even though it was reported
that he had confessed: "I can't understand how he could do something
like that. How could he kill his wife? I mean, they were nice people"
- later that night outside his apartment, Marlowe (while
carrying his laundry in a bag) was violently assaulted by powerful
mobster and Jewish loan shark Marty Augustine (director Mark Rydell)
with a group of menacing hoods on the street; the mobsters forcibly
led Marlowe via his elevator back up into his apartment - they passed
by his female neighbors unclothed on the balcony, who Marlowe dubbed
"The Rockettes" while Marty exclaimed: "I can't believe
what I'm looking at"; the demanding and psychotic Augustine
ordered his hoods to ransack Marlowe's apartment - as he detailed
his high-living expensive lifestyle: ("I gotta have a lot of
money so I can juice the guys I gotta juice, so I can get a lot of
money so I can juice the guys I gotta juice")
- Marty blurted out: "You can't take my money. I want
my money!" - suspecting that Marlowe - with his picture in the newspaper
- had or knew where their mob money was located ($355,000 dollars owed by Terry Lennox to the mob):
"You made a deal with Terry Lennox...Your friend was a criminal....The
major crime is he stole my money. Your friend stole my money... I don't
give a god-damn how he died. All I care about is $355,000 of my
money that he was supposed to deliver to Mexico City... I think you
know where it is and I want it"
- during Marlowe's shakedown, Jo Ann ("scared" after
being left in the car) entered the apartment; and then, after calling
Jo Ann
"the single most important person in my life," Augustine
unexpectedly and deliberately - in the film's most shocking sequence
- injured and maimed his own mistress Jo Ann by striking her in the
face with an empty Coke bottle; he then warned Marlowe to heed him: "That's
someone I love, and you I don't even like. You have an assignment,
Cheapie. Find my money!"
Marty's Beautiful Mistress/Girlfriend Jo Ann Eggenweiler (Jo Ann Brody)
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The Unexpected and Shocking Maiming of Jo Ann
by Marty With a Coke Bottle
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- as the gang fled on the slow elevator, Marlowe hurriedly
raced down the stairs and beat them to the ground floor; a dim-witted
hood named Harry (David Arkin) who had been left behind -
stationed to remain there and pursue Marlowe - became distracted
by the nude-dancing on the balcony above him, allowing Marlowe to
stealthily drive away in his own car; he followed Augustine's car
into the Malibu Colony complex, and watched from afar outside the
Wade property as Augustine with one of his hoods appeared to threaten
Eileen Wade
- the next morning, Marlowe returned to speak to the
Wades; as Marlowe stood outside watching the ocean waves, Eileen
again reiterated her warning to her husband Roger from the night
before: "I simply said if you go on drinking, I'm gonna leave you";
he suggested that he might be the one to leave her, but then
apologized and hugged her: "I'm sorry I said that, but you're the
only thing I've got left. Don't you know that?...If I could just
get you to understand that, you know, when a writer can't write,
it's like being impotent"; when she replied that she understood,
he startled her by loudly shouting: "Balls, baby! Balls! Why don't
you remember the good we had together, the beautiful times?"
- as Eileen walked off, Roger invited Marlowe to join
him in a "little old-fashioned, man-to-man drinking party"; during
their conversation, Marlowe learned to his surprise that Marty Augustine
owed Roger $50,000 dollars; when asked about Terry Lennox, Roger
admitted: "I know Terry Lennox, but he's the kind of a guy that if
I knew him, I wouldn't let on I knew him....Christ Almighty, I didn't
know him... Son of a bitch killed himself, huh?"; when asked about
Terry's wife Sylvia, Roger reacted: "A beautiful broad. I don't
know, Marlboro. If I was your age, I think I'd sure as hell bust
my ass to get into something a little more dignified form of endeavor,
well I'll tell ya that...I'm not talkin' about myself"
- the case became extremely complex and interconnected
know that Marlowe realized that mobster Augustine knew the Wades,
and that Terry's unlikely 'death' was somehow related
- after returning home, Marlowe opened up a letter with
a $5,000 bill (with James Madison) inside and a note
of apology from Terry: "Good Bye Phil I'm sorry Terry" -
Terry was undoubtedly alive
- still with doubts about Terry's suicide, Marlowe traveled
to Mexico by bus and strolled into town, where he met with the coroner/doctor
(Pancho Cordoba) and was provided with morgue pictures and fingerprints;
Terry had presumably died from a self-inflicted gunshot with his
own registered gun, and died one hour after arriving at his hotel;
all of his personal effects were sent back but there was a discrepancy
in the record that he only had one bag
- back in Los Angeles at a beach party in Wade's
home where Roger was becoming increasingly drunk, Marlowe listened
as Roger in public denigrated the character of the sinister
and shady quack-psychiatrist Dr. Verringer: ("It's Minnie Mouse.
It's the albino turd himself. Peter Pan. No. The white knight....He
is the epitome of what's wrong with this world. He really is, actually,
because he pretends to cure people..."); Marlowe listened as the
demanding doctor forced Roger to sign a $4,400 check to pay the remainder of his detox-facility bill,
and slapped Roger's face when he refused; Roger was confused, smashed
his whiskey bottle, and physically spun around, and then yelled at
the guests: "Get out, all of you, god-dammit! Get outta here!" and
Eileen graciously announced: "It seems the party's come to an abrupt
end"; as the guests filed out, Roger signed the check and Verringer
departed with the check in his pocket, and told Eileen that Roger
could no longer be one of his patients
Dr. Verringer at Wades' Beach Party
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Verringer Departing With Roger's Signed Check
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Roger Drunk and In a Stupor After Signing Check
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- shortly later in the evening, Eileen seductively
entertained Marlowe with an impressively fancy dinner of Chicken
Kiev and alcohol on her outdoor patio; he abruptly asked her why
she had spoken to Marty Augustine on an earlier evening; she explained: "Roger
owes him, loaned him some money. Maybe $10,000 or something like
that" - the
exact reverse of what Roger had claimed; Marlowe then stated how
he had heard that Terry Lennox was working for Marty Augustine; and
then Marlowe also asked two crucial questions
- Was Roger having an affair with Sylvia Lennox?
- And where was Roger the night that Sylvia was killed?
- behind them through the picture window, the drunken
Roger was apparently suicidally walking into the ocean to drown himself;
Eileen saw what was happening and raced with Marlowe into the waves,
but the two were unable to save Roger, although his dog retrieved his cane
- after being questioned by authorities about Roger's
drunkenness at the party before his death, Marlowe (sounding like
a drunkard) began to piece the clues together; he realized that Roger
Wade had been involved in an affair with Terry Lennox's wife Sylvia,
and then surmised:
"Your crazy, Looney Tune husband could have killed Sylvia Lennox";
Eileen explained further: "I couldn't tell anybody Roger had
an affair with Sylvia. And Terry found out. And Sylvia wanted to
break it off. And Roger was jealous, and Roger went to see her and
then she was dead. And then I read in the paper that Terry confessed,
and I don't know what to think"
- on the beachside, Marlowe explained to Lt. Farmer that he had new information from Mrs. Wade
about the Terry Lennox case: "Mrs. Roger Wade is prepared to
give evidence that her husband was sleeping with Sylvia Lennox the
night that she was killed";
Farmer explained how it was impossible for Roger to have murdered
Sylvia because he checked into the de-tox clinic a few hours before
her murder: "We know that Roger Wade saw Sylvia Lennox that
afternoon. We know what time he left her. We know he went directly
from the Lennox house to Verringer's clinic...He was there all the
time and in sedation at the time that Sylvia Lennox was killed. So
will you do me a favor? Go back to your gumshoes and your transom
peeping and let us alone"
- Marlowe angrily contradicted Farmer's account: "I
saw that man walking into the Pacific Ocean - gave your doctor whatever-his-name-is
$5,000 for an alibi so that you could keep your job"
- afterwards, Marlowe visited Marty Augustine, who was
still miffed about his missing and stolen $355,000; he complained:
"What we have here is a problem in communication. I knew it from
the beginning. I mean, I don't hear from you any more. I don't get
a phone call, I mean, not so much as a postcard. What's the matter?
Where's the money?"; Marlowe kept insisting he didn't know where
the money was; [Note: One of Marty's enforcers in the room was Arnold
Schwarzenegger!]
- during the meeting in Marty's office, when he forced
everyone to strip ("I want you to get naked so you can tell me the
truth about my money"), Marlowe joked about Marty's honest claim
he didn't have pubic hair until he was 15 years old: "You must have
looked like one of the Three Little Pigs"; Marlowe's wallet fell
to the floor revealing the $5,000 bill ("a picture of James Madison")
sent to him earlier by Terry; Augustine naturally assumed it was
part of his money (three Madison bills were in Terry Lennox'
suitcase that he took to Mexico)
- fortuitously, the "entertainment for five grand" was
interrupted by news that a money bag had just arrived with the missing
$350,000 dollars; as Marlowe left, Marty returned Marlowe's $5,000
bill, and Marlowe quipped: "My fairy godmother dropped your
$350 grand back in your lap"; as he was leaving, Marlowe noticed
Eileen driving away nearby in her 1972 Mercedes-Benz 350 SL yellow
sports convertible (with California "LOV YOU" plates),
but she ignored him as he chased and called after her; Marlowe was
struck by a car and knocked out, and taken by ambulance to a hospital;
Marlowe awoke in a hospital bed and told himself: "I just gotta get
outta here...nothing broke, nothing broke"; the completely-bandaged
'mummified' patient next to him handed him a miniature harmonica
- and Marlowe accepted it and promised to practice
Mrs. Wade Driving Away After Delivering Marty's Missing $350,000
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During a Chase After Mrs. Wade, Marlowe Was Struck by a Vehicle
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Marlowe's Trippy Female Neighbors
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- Marlowe was suspicious that Eileen had returned the
money and was planning on selling the Wade house; when he revisited
the Wade residence in the Malibu Colony, his hunch was accurate;
Eileen had vanished (possibly to Europe), her house was up for sale
by the Surfside Realty company in Santa Monica, and the furnishings
were being packed up by movers
- upon Marlowe's return to his apartment, he discovered
his trippy female neighbors on their balcony - so spaced that they
couldn't answer him about the whereabouts of his cat: ("We're
dancing in the sand and our bodies are in ecstasy. We're seeing colors,
all the most beautiful colors you can imagine. And we're holding
hands because we're one, and our breasts become full and our arms
become free and our bodies become free. And we are now beautiful.
We are now beautiful and we are now one")
- on a hunch, Marlowe traveled to Mexico and after 'bribing'
officials to tell the truth (with a "charity" donation with the $5 grand Madison
bill), they admitted that the suicide was a "fake" and the coffin
and burial were staged; Marlowe was told Terry's location -
he walked in and found him alive in a villa on the town's outskirts
- Terry admitted to Marlowe all about his convoluted
love affairs - and that his own affair with Eileen Wade had angered
his wife Sylvia, who threatened to go to the police during a fierce
argument and report Terry's nefarious associations with gangster
Marty Augustine; Terry then confessed to brutally beating Sylvia
to the point of death to silence her: ("I killed her, but you can't
call it murder. Wade told her about Eileen and me, she started screaming.
She was gonna tell the cops. She knew I was carrying money for Augustine.
She was gonna turn me in. I hit her. I didn't try to kill her. I
hit her. I didn't mean it...She didn't give me any choice...I had
a dead wife. $350,000 that doesn't belong to me. I had to get out.
It's as simple as that"); before fleeing to Mexico, he gave Marty's
money ($355,000) to Eileen
- Terry gloated that he had outfoxed everyone because
he was "in a jam" - even his "friend" Marlowe
- he was legally dead, and he had returned Augustine's money: ("Goddamn
simple. Cops have me legally dead, Augustine's got his money. He's
not lookin' for me anymore. I got a girl that loves me. She's got
more money than Sylvia and Augustine put together. What the hell?
Nobody cares"); exasperated
for being used and betrayed and uploading a code of honor - Marlowe
disagreed: ("Nobody
cares but me"), and was upset over being thought of as a naive
and "born loser" - and
for losing his beloved cat
Marlowe's Fatal Shot at Terry For Betraying Him
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Eileen and Marlowe Passing Each Other
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- in the film's second most startling act of violence,
Marlowe shot Terry Lennox dead; as Marlowe walked down the road back
to town, Eileen passed him in a jeep on her way to seeing her lover
Terry and she glanced over and noticed him; he played the film's
theme song on the tiny harmonica as the film concluded
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Private Detective Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould)
Marlowe's Friend Terry Lennox (Jim Bouton)
Terry
to Marlowe: "I really need a ride...Tijuana"
Marlowe Arrested and Interrogated Behind a One-Way Mirror
In Interrogation Room, Marlowe With Fingerprint Ink On His Face - Miming
Al Jolson
Marlowe Jailed For Three Days, Then Released
Marlowe's Cellmate Dave aka Socrates (David Carradine)
"Lennox Suicide Proves Wife's Murder"
"Private Investigator Refuses to Talk"
(l to r): Dr. Verringer (Henry Gibson) and Roger Wade (Sterling Hayden) in Detox
Facility
Roger Wade About to Leave the Facility
Mobster and Loan Shark Marty Augustine (Mark Rydell) with Girlfriend Jo Ann Eggenweiler
(Jo Ann Brody)
A Major Distraction - Marlowe's Neighbors on the Balcony
In Marlowe's Apartment, Marty Accused Marlowe of Having His $355K Money
Roger to Eileen: "When a writer can't write, it's like being impotent"
Marlowe and Roger Drinking Together By the Ocean
Roger to Marlowe: "I know Terry Lennox..."
Terry's Note of Apology to Marlowe, With a $5,000 Bill
Coroner's Official Mexican Records and Photos of Terry Lennox's Death
Behind Them in the Distance, Roger's Suicidal Walk Into the Ocean
Eileen Noticing Roger Drowning Himself in the Crashing Waves of the Ocean
Marlowe and Eileen Unable to Save Roger in the Surf
Eileen Conjecturing with Marlowe About Roger Possibly Killing Terry's Wife Sylvia
Lt. Farmer Claiming Roger Wade Couldn't Have Murdered His Lover Sylvia Lennox
Clothes-Stripping Sequence
Terry in Mexico Confessing to a Betrayed Marlowe That He Had Murdered His Wife
Sylvia, Lied About It, and Faked His Own Murder
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