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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
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{{quote|''"I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun."''|'''Philip Marlowe''', ''Farewell My Lovely'' by [[Raymond Chandler]]}}
{{quote|''"I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun."''|'''Philip Marlowe''', ''Farewell My Lovely'' by [[Raymond Chandler]]}}


A tough, [[Deadpan Snarker|cynical]] guy with a gun and a lot of [[Street Smart|Street Smarts]], who solves mysteries with [[Determinator|dogged persistence]] rather than astounding insight, the [[Hardboiled Detective]] was America's [[Darker and Edgier]] response to the classic ideal of the [[Great Detective]].
A tough, [[Deadpan Snarker|cynical]] guy with a gun and a lot of [[Street Smart]]s, who solves mysteries with [[Determinator|dogged persistence]] rather than astounding insight, the '''Hardboiled Detective''' was America's [[Darker and Edgier]] response to the classic ideal of the [[Great Detective]].


The hardboiled detective is generally a [[Knight in Sour Armor]] or even an [[Anti Hero]] who lives in a world of [[Black and Grey Morality]]. He's a [[Private Detective]] or [[Amateur Sleuth]] -- usually the former. His services are required because [[Police Are Useless]], so he'll never be a cop, though he may be a [[Retired Badass|retired]] one. Expect him to keep a [[I Need a Freaking Drink|bottle of scotch]] in his desk, which is probably located in an office in the [[The City Narrows|low rent district]]. Recent depictions typically include the trademark [[Badass Longcoat|trenchcoat]] and [[Nice Hat|fedora]] made popular by [[Humphrey Bogart]].
The hardboiled detective is generally a [[Knight in Sour Armor]] or even an [[Anti-Hero]] who lives in a world of [[Black and Grey Morality]]. He's a [[Private Detective]] or [[Amateur Sleuth]]—usually the former. His services are required because [[Police Are Useless]], so he'll never be a cop, though he may be a [[Retired Badass|retired]] one. Expect him to keep a [[I Need a Freaking Drink|bottle of scotch]] in his desk, which is probably located in an office in the [[The City Narrows|low rent district]]. Recent depictions typically include the trademark [[Badass Longcoat|trenchcoat]] and [[Nice Hat|fedora]] made popular by [[Humphrey Bogart]].


Originating in the early part of the twentieth century, hardboiled detective stories quickly became a major subgenre of [[Mystery Fiction]]. Later, they became strongly associated with [[Film Noir]]. [[Raymond Chandler]] is considered the master of the genre, but it was [[Humphrey Bogart]]'s depiction of detective Sam Spade in the 1941 film, ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'' (based on a novel by [[Dashiell Hammett]]), that became the [[Trope Codifier]].
Originating in the early part of the twentieth century, hardboiled detective stories quickly became a major subgenre of [[Mystery Fiction]]. Later, they became strongly associated with [[Film Noir]]. [[Raymond Chandler]] is considered the master of the genre, but it was [[Humphrey Bogart]]'s depiction of detective Sam Spade in the 1941 film, ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'' (based on a novel by [[Dashiell Hammett]]), that became the [[Trope Codifier]].


By the [[The Sixties|1960s]], the hardboiled detective had nearly become a [[Dead Horse Trope]], but continuing interest in [[Film Noir]] kept it from the brink of extinction. Today it is most often seen in parodies and [[Fantastic Noir|genre crossovers]] (the [[Hardboiled Detective]] [[Recycled in Space|In SPACE!!]]), but can still be played straight in Noir revival or homage. The style and language of the hard-boiled detective tends to remain solidly anchored in the [[The Thirties|1930s]] and [[The Forties|1940s]], though, no matter where he appears. Expect him to call his gun a "gat", to refer to women as "dames" and their legs as "gams".
By the [[The Sixties|1960s]], the hardboiled detective had nearly become a [[Dead Horse Trope]], but continuing interest in [[Film Noir]] kept it from the brink of extinction. Today it is most often seen in parodies and [[Fantastic Noir|genre crossovers]] (the '''Hardboiled Detective''' [[Recycled in Space|In SPACE!!]]), but can still be played straight in Noir revival or homage. The style and language of the hard-boiled detective tends to remain solidly anchored in the [[The Thirties|1930s]] and [[The Forties|1940s]], though, no matter where he appears. Expect him to call his gun a "gat", to refer to women as "dames" and their legs as "gams".


See also: [[Private Detective]], [[Amateur Sleuth]], [[Film Noir]] and [[Fantastic Noir]]. Contrast with [[Great Detective]], [[Kid Detective]], and [[Little Old Lady Investigates]]. If the character simply provides first-person narration the way detectives in [[Film Noir]] often do, that's [[Private Eye Monologue]].
See also: [[Private Detective]], [[Amateur Sleuth]], [[Film Noir]] and [[Fantastic Noir]]. Contrast with [[Great Detective]], [[Kid Detective]], and [[Little Old Lady Investigates]]. If the character simply provides first-person narration the way detectives in [[Film Noir]] often do, that's [[Private Eye Monologue]].
{{examples|Examples}}


{{examples}}
== Anime And Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==

* Gai Kurasawa, a minor character in ''[[Darker Than Black]]'' is an affectionate parody of the hardboiled detective.
* Gai Kurasawa, a minor character in ''[[Darker than Black]]'' is an affectionate parody of the hardboiled detective.

== Comedy ==

* On the [[Firesign Theater]]'s album, ''How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You're Not Anywhere at All?'', the character Nick Danger, Third Eye is a surrealist take on the trope.


== Comic Books ==
== Comic Books ==
* Hannibal King from [[Marvel Comics]] is a [[Our Vampires Are Different|vampiric]] hardboiled detective.

* Rorschach from ''[[Watchmen (comics)|Watchmen]]'' has some elements that seem like a shout-out to the trope, including the trenchcoat and fedora and the [[Private Eye Monologue]] (which is actually excerpts from his journal).
* Hannibal King from [[Marvel Comics]] is a [[Our Vampires Are Different|vampiric]] hardboiled detective.
* Rorschach from ''[[Watchmen (Comic Book)|Watchmen]]'' has some elements that seem like a shout-out to the trope, including the trenchcoat and fedora and the [[Private Eye Monologue]] (which is actually excerpts from his journal).
* Dr. Occult from [[The DCU]] is a hardboiled [[Occult Detective]].
* Dr. Occult from [[The DCU]] is a hardboiled [[Occult Detective]].
* From the [[Batman]] universe, Harvey Bullock is usually one of these.
* From the [[Batman]] universe, Harvey Bullock is usually one of these.
* The nameless protagonist of ''Potter's Field'' by [[Mark Waid]] is another.
* The nameless protagonist of ''Potter's Field'' by [[Mark Waid]] is another.
* [[Hellboy (Comic Book)|Hellboy]] is an otherworldly version of the noir classic model, a heavy-drinking, chain-smoking, cynical demon with [[Badass Longcoat]] who sticks his nose where it doesn't belong, takes a beating, etc. etc. He's often referred to as "The World's Greatest Paranormal Investigator".
* [[Hellboy (comics)|Hellboy]] is an otherworldly version of the noir classic model, a heavy-drinking, chain-smoking, cynical demon with [[Badass Longcoat]] who sticks his nose where it doesn't belong, takes a beating, etc. etc. He's often referred to as "The World's Greatest Paranormal Investigator".
* The DC comic character ''[[Ms. Tree]]'', created by Max Allan Collins, is a relatively rare female hardboiled detective.
* The DC comic character ''[[Ms. Tree]]'', created by Max Allan Collins, is a relatively rare female hardboiled detective.
* Steve Ditko loved Hardboiled Detectives, and his two (very similar) characters Mr. A and [[The Question]] are objectivist takes on the Trope.
* Steve Ditko loved Hardboiled Detectives, and his two (very similar) characters Mr. A and [[The Question]] are objectivist takes on the Trope.
* The title character of the Spanish comic ''[[Blacksad]]'' is a hardboiled detective in the 1950s -- and a cat.
* The title character of the Spanish comic ''[[Blacksad]]'' is a hardboiled detective in the 1950s—and a cat.
* Nightbeat from ''[[The Transformers (Comic Book)|The Transformers]]'', ''[[Transformers Classics]]'', and IDW's "-ations" is a [[Humongous Mecha]] homage to the genre, up to and including sporting a [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Image:MarvelUK-230.jpg fedora and trenchcoat] and [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Bird_of_Prey! "Bird of Prey!"] in particular being almost a retelling of ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]''. Whether he's an [[Amateur Sleuth]], a "consulting detective" for the Autobots, or a [[Private Detective]] varies depending on the continuity, but he always has the same general hardboiled, noir-ish personality.
* Nightbeat from ''[[The Transformers (Marvel Comics)||The Transformers]]'', ''[[Transformers Classics]]'', and IDW's "-ations" is a [[Humongous Mecha]] homage to the genre, up to and including sporting a [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Image:MarvelUK-230.jpg fedora and trenchcoat] and [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Bird_of_Prey! "Bird of Prey!"] in particular being almost a retelling of ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]''. Whether he's an [[Amateur Sleuth]], a "consulting detective" for the Autobots, or a [[Private Detective]] varies depending on the continuity, but he always has the same general hardboiled, noir-ish personality.


== Film ==
== Film ==

* ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'' features [[Humphrey Bogart]] as Sam Spade, one of the most iconic hardboiled detectives of all time, seeking revenge for the death of his partner and hunting for a [[MacGuffin|missing statuette]].
* ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'' features [[Humphrey Bogart]] as Sam Spade, one of the most iconic hardboiled detectives of all time, seeking revenge for the death of his partner and hunting for a [[MacGuffin|missing statuette]].
* ''[[The Big Sleep (Film)|The Big Sleep]]'' features Bogart again as detective Philip Marlowe, probably the second best known example.
* ''[[The Big Sleep (film)|The Big Sleep]]'' features Bogart again as detective Philip Marlowe, probably the second best known example.
* Another [[Humphrey Bogart]] example is ''[[The Enforcer (Film)|The Enforcer]]'', where Bogie plays a hardboiled district attorney chasing gangsters. As a lawyer, he's more the [[Amateur Sleuth]] version in this one.
* Another [[Humphrey Bogart]] example is ''[[Dirty Harry|The Enforcer]]'', where Bogie plays a hardboiled district attorney chasing gangsters. As a lawyer, he's more the [[Amateur Sleuth]] version in this one.
* A lesser known example would be the Bogart film ''[[Dead Reckoning (Film)|Dead Reckoning]]''. He's actually an army man, so it's again more of an [[Amateur Sleuth]] type, but Bogart had a cool [[Private Eye Monologue]], which he didn't have in the more iconic Bogart films.
* A lesser known example would be the Bogart film ''[[Dead Reckoning]]''. He's actually an army man, so it's again more of an [[Amateur Sleuth]] type, but Bogart had a cool [[Private Eye Monologue]], which he didn't have in the more iconic Bogart films.
* ''Out of the Past'' is a classic [[Film Noir]] starring Robert Mitchum as a hardboiled detective trying to escape his past (no spoiler to say [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|he's unsuccessful]]).
* ''Out of the Past'' is a classic [[Film Noir]] starring Robert Mitchum as a hardboiled detective trying to escape his past (no spoiler to say [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|he's unsuccessful]]).
* Jake Gittes in [[Roman Polanski]]'s ''[[Chinatown]]'' is an homage to the archetype.
* Jake Gittes in [[Roman Polanski]]'s ''[[Chinatown]]'' is an homage to the archetype.
* Parodied with hapless detective Rigby Reardon in the [[Steve Martin]] film, ''[[Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (Film)|Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]]'', which features lots of actual footage from classic [[Film Noir]] to add to the atmosphere.
* Parodied with hapless detective Rigby Reardon in the [[Steve Martin]] film, ''[[Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]]'', which features lots of actual footage from classic [[Film Noir]] to add to the atmosphere.
* ''[[The Animatrix (Anime)|The Animatrix]]'': "The Detective's Story" stars a hardboiled detective.
* ''[[The Animatrix]]'': "The Detective's Story" stars a hardboiled detective.
* Eddie Valiant, the protagonist of ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]'', which used appropriately parodic [[Film Noir]] atmospheric touches.
* Eddie Valiant, the protagonist of ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]'', which used appropriately parodic [[Film Noir]] atmospheric touches.
* [[HP Lovecraft]] in ''[[Cast a Deadly Spell (Film)|Cast a Deadly Spell]]'' is an [[Occult Detective]] who is also a perfect example of a Chandlerian detective.
* [[H.P. Lovecraft]] in ''[[Cast a Deadly Spell]]'' is an [[Occult Detective]] who is also a perfect example of a Chandlerian detective.
* Hoyle from the surreal and cerebral Noir/SF crossover ''[[Yesterday Was a Lie]]'' is a distaff version, with fedora, trenchcoat and all, trying to find a missing scientist.
* Hoyle from the surreal and cerebral Noir/SF crossover ''[[Yesterday Was a Lie]]'' is a distaff version, with fedora, trenchcoat and all, trying to find a missing scientist.
* Louis Simo from ''[[Hollywoodland]]'' is a deconstruction loosely based on a real detective, Milo Speriglio.
* Louis Simo from ''[[Hollywoodland]]'' is a deconstruction loosely based on a real detective, Milo Speriglio.
* The 1971 film ''Gumshoe'', starring Albert Finney, features a London man who decides to adopt a Sam Spade-like persona to escape his boring life, and quickly becomes embroiled in a plot involving drugs, gun smuggling, and gangsters.
* The 1971 film ''Gumshoe'', starring Albert Finney, features a London man who decides to adopt a Sam Spade-like persona to escape his boring life, and quickly becomes embroiled in a plot involving drugs, gun smuggling, and gangsters.
* Deckard ([[Harrison Ford]]) from ''[[Blade Runner]]'' is more of a deconstruction, being a [[Sliding Scale of Anti Heroes|Type I Antihero]] with [[Defective Detective|some serious psychological conflicts]].
* Deckard ([[Harrison Ford]]) from ''[[Blade Runner]]'' is more of a deconstruction, being a [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes|Type I Antihero]] with [[Defective Detective|some serious psychological conflicts]].


== Literature ==
== Literature ==

* [[Raymond Chandler]]'s [[Philip Marlowe]], protagonist of ''[[The Big Sleep (Literature)|The Big Sleep]]'', ''Farewell, My Lovely'', and other novels, is an iconic and much-copied example.
* [[Raymond Chandler]]'s [[Philip Marlowe]], protagonist of ''[[The Big Sleep (Literature)|The Big Sleep]]'', ''Farewell, My Lovely'', and other novels, is an iconic and much-copied example.
* [[Dashiell Hammett]] has several, most notably, Sam Spade in ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'', as well as the recurring, nameless character called "The Continental Op".
* [[Dashiell Hammett]] has several, most notably, Sam Spade in ''[[The Maltese Falcon]]'', as well as the recurring, nameless character called "The Continental Op".
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** Stout had another, much smaller and less popular series starring Tecumseh Fox, who was much more the straight hard-boiled type.
** Stout had another, much smaller and less popular series starring Tecumseh Fox, who was much more the straight hard-boiled type.
* Mickey Spillane's ''[[Mike Hammer]]'' was an early, over-the-top, ultraviolent, [[Knight Templar]] example who is often credited with helping turn the genre into a parody of itself.
* Mickey Spillane's ''[[Mike Hammer]]'' was an early, over-the-top, ultraviolent, [[Knight Templar]] example who is often credited with helping turn the genre into a parody of itself.
* ''[[Garrett PI]]'' is the [[Hardboiled Detective]] [[Recycled in Space|recycled in]] a [[Standard Fantasy Setting]].
* ''[[Garrett P.I.]]'' is the Hardboiled Detective [[Recycled in Space|recycled in]] a [[Standard Fantasy Setting]].
* [[Neil Gaiman]] wrote some short stories featuring [[Lawrence Talbot]], the Wolfman, as a hardboiled private investigator. "Only the End of the World Again" is one.
* [[Neil Gaiman]] wrote some short stories featuring [[Lawrence Talbot]], the Wolfman, as a hardboiled private investigator. "Only the End of the World Again" is one.
* The [[Marcus Didius Falco]] series starts out as the hardboiled detective [[Recycled in Space|Recycled In]] [[Ancient Rome]] (though he mellows as the series goes on). Living centuries before Noir was invented makes him amusingly [[Genre Blind]].
* The [[Marcus Didius Falco]] series starts out as the hardboiled detective [[Recycled in Space|Recycled In]] [[Ancient Rome]] (though he mellows as the series goes on). Living centuries before Noir was invented makes him amusingly [[Genre Blind]].
* Harry Dresden from ''[[The Dresden Files]]'' is part this, part [[Sherlock Holmes]] (showing surprising deductive skills on occasion, to nigh [[Sherlock Scan]] levels), part [[Lord of the Rings|Gandalf]].
* Harry Dresden from ''[[The Dresden Files]]'' is part this, part [[Sherlock Holmes]] (showing surprising deductive skills on occasion, to nigh [[Sherlock Scan]] levels), part [[The Lord of the Rings|Gandalf]].
** With emphasis on the world weariness by around book 3. The snark continues unabated.
** With emphasis on the world weariness by around book 3. The snark continues unabated.
* [[Invoked Trope|Invoked]] by Vincent Rubio in ''[[Anonymous Rex]]''. He's a detective -- and a velociraptor! He claims he's not ''really'' hard-boiled, but he acts like he is because that's what the customers expect. He even uses the "[[Humphrey Bogart|Bogart]]" persona to pick up female dinos.
* [[Invoked Trope|Invoked]] by Vincent Rubio in ''[[Anonymous Rex]]''. He's a detective—and a velociraptor! He claims he's not ''really'' hard-boiled, but he acts like he is because that's what the customers expect. He even uses the "[[Humphrey Bogart|Bogart]]" persona to pick up female dinos.
* Sara Paretsky's [[VI Warshawski]] is a distaff version of the (usually) male hardboiled detective.
* Sara Paretsky's [[VI Warshawski]] is a distaff version of the (usually) male hardboiled detective.
* Lazlo Woodbine, from the [[Far Fetched Fiction]] of [[Robert Rankin]], is a blatant parody. He insists on using the first person, getting knocked unconscious at his first appearance and can only appear in four scenes (his office, a bar, an alleyway and a rooftop). Considering the outlandish nature of his books, often involving things such as [[Time Travel|time-traveling]] Elvis doing battle with [[Eldritch Abominations]] out to unmake existence, this makes things awkward.
* Lazlo Woodbine, from the [[Far Fetched Fiction]] of [[Robert Rankin]], is a blatant parody. He insists on using the first person, getting knocked unconscious at his first appearance and can only appear in four scenes (his office, a bar, an alleyway and a rooftop). Considering the outlandish nature of his books, often involving things such as [[Time Travel|time-traveling]] Elvis doing battle with [[Eldritch Abominations]] out to unmake existence, this makes things awkward.
* Eddie Valiant from ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit]]'' is an homage.
* Eddie Valiant from ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit?]]'' is an homage.
* Conrad Metcalf, the protagonist of Jonathan Lethem's ''Gun, With Occasional Music'' is a hard-boiled detective in a world that doesn't really have a use for them anymore.
* Conrad Metcalf, the protagonist of Jonathan Lethem's ''Gun, With Occasional Music'' is a hard-boiled detective in a world that doesn't really have a use for them anymore.
* Kinsey Milhone from Sue Grafton's "alphabet mysteries" is another example of a female hard-boiled detective.
* Kinsey Milhone from Sue Grafton's "alphabet mysteries" is another example of a female hard-boiled detective.


== Live Action TV ==
== Live-Action TV ==

* The 1980s TV adaption of ''[[Mike Hammer]]'' is either a straight example or a parody, depending on who you ask.
* The 1980s TV adaption of ''[[Mike Hammer]]'' is either a straight example or a parody, depending on who you ask.
* ''[[Spenser For Hire]]'' was a rarity; a [[Hardboiled Detective]] with an even harder-boiled partner.
* ''[[Spenser For Hire]]'' was a rarity; a Hardboiled Detective with an even harder-boiled partner.
* Michael Garibaldi of ''[[Babylon 5 (TV)|Babylon 5]]'' has flashes of this from time to time. Picked up, bizarrely enough, by G'Kar of all people.
* Michael Garibaldi of ''[[Babylon 5]]'' has flashes of this from time to time. Picked up, bizarrely enough, by G'Kar of all people.
* In ''[[Star Trek the Next Generation (TV)|Star Trek the Next Generation]]'', Dixon Hill is a hardboiled detective holodeck character that Captain Picard is fond of playing.
* In ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'', Dixon Hill is a hardboiled detective holodeck character that Captain Picard is fond of playing.
* Parodied in the [[PBS Kids]]' show, ''[[Between the Lions (TV)|Between the Lions]]'', which had a recurring skit featuring "Sam Spud, [[Incredibly Lame Pun|parboiled potato]] detective".
* Parodied in the [[PBS Kids]]' show, ''[[Between the Lions]]'', which had a recurring skit featuring "Sam Spud, [[Incredibly Lame Pun|parboiled potato]] detective".
* ''[[The Electric Company]]'''s [[Punny Name|Fargo North, Decoder]] was as hard boiled as a kid's show could show.
* ''[[The Electric Company]]'''s [[Punny Name|Fargo North, Decoder]] was as hard boiled as a kid's show could show.
* ''[[Kamen Rider Double]]'' uses this concept as its main motif. Protagonist Shotaro Hidari very much wants to be hard-boiled but is too emotional, leading his friends to dub him "half-boiled"; eventually he realizes that [[The Heart|this is a strength]]. Each two-episode [[Story Arc]] [[Book Ends|begins and ends]] with him doing a [[Private Eye Monologue]], and the second half starts with [[String Theory|a corkboard diagram showing the character relationships]].
* ''[[Kamen Rider Double]]'' uses this concept as its main motif. Protagonist Shotaro Hidari very much wants to be hard-boiled but is too emotional, leading his friends to dub him "half-boiled"; eventually he realizes that [[The Heart|this is a strength]]. Each two-episode [[Story Arc]] [[Book Ends|begins and ends]] with him doing a [[Private Eye Monologue]], and the second half starts with [[String Theory|a corkboard diagram showing the character relationships]].
** His [[Mentor Occupational Hazard|late mentor]] Sokichi "Boss" Narumi, on the other hand, had [[Ensemble Darkhorse|much more]] [[Memetic Badass|success]] modeling himself on the Chandler-esque ideal of manliness. Chandler is name-dropped in [[The Movie]], and Sokichi named the young man who would become Shotaro's partner after [[Philip Marlowe]].
** His [[Mentor Occupational Hazard|late mentor]] Sokichi "Boss" Narumi, on the other hand, had [[Ensemble Darkhorse|much more]] [[Memetic Badass|success]] modeling himself on the Chandler-esque ideal of manliness. Chandler is name-dropped in [[The Movie]], and Sokichi named the young man who would become Shotaro's partner after [[Philip Marlowe]].
* In a [[Storybook Episode]] of ''[[Fringe]]'', Walter casts Olivia as this.
* In a [[Storybook Episode]] of ''[[Fringe]]'', Walter casts Olivia as this.
* [[Magnum PI]] has the [[Private Eye Monologue|voice over]] and cynicism, but wears loud hawaiian shirts instead of a trenchcoat,
* [[Magnum, P.I.]] has the [[Private Eye Monologue|voice over]] and cynicism, but wears loud hawaiian shirts instead of a trenchcoat,
** [[Magnum, P.I.]]: is a crossover between hardboiled and cozy but it is mostly hardboiled. Magnum is a character more typical of hardboiled. While he isn't cynical per se, he depends a lot on his street smarts. Moreover the setting often includes sorties into the more [[Wretched Hive|vice ridden]] parts of Honolulu. On the other hand, Magnum has a standing room-and-board contract as a security agent for a rich playboy, and mingles with the upper class regularly. Furthermore some episodes resemble cozies more then hardboileds.


== Newspaper Comics ==
== Newspaper Comics ==

* In ''[[Calvin and Hobbes]]'', Calvin's imaginary alter-ego, Tracer Bullet, is a pure parody of the hardboiled detective.
* In ''[[Calvin and Hobbes]]'', Calvin's imaginary alter-ego, Tracer Bullet, is a pure parody of the hardboiled detective.
{{quote| "I have two magnums in my desk. One is a gun, and I keep it loaded. One is a bottle, and it keeps me loaded. My name is Tracer Bullet. I'm a professional snoop."}}
{{quote|"I have two magnums in my desk. One is a gun, and I keep it loaded. One is a bottle, and it keeps me loaded. My name is Tracer Bullet. I'm a professional snoop."}}



== Radio ==
== Radio ==

* On ''[[A Prairie Home Companion]]'', the character of Guy Noir is an example.
* On ''[[A Prairie Home Companion]]'', the character of Guy Noir is an example.


== Webcomics ==
== Recorded and Stand-Up Comedy ==
* On the [[Firesign Theater]]'s album, ''How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You're Not Anywhere at All?'', the character Nick Danger, Third Eye is a surrealist take on the trope.

* In addition to the [[Neil Gaiman]] example above, [[Lawrence Talbot]] also headined a short-lived webcomic in this vein, complete with trenchcoat, fedora, and [[Private Eye Monologue]].
* Parodied in ''[[Problem Sleuth (Webcomic)|Problem Sleuth]]'', where the main characters think they are this, and occasionally do things like practice their hardboiled monologues or are drawn in [[Chiaroscuro]]. From the reader's perspective, they act more like unspeakably, unspeakably silly [[Eastern RPG]] characters.
* ''[[Muktuk Wolfsbreath Hard Boiled Shaman]]'' is based on "the realization that shamans were kind of like detectives".


== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==

* Richmond from ''[[Suikoden II]]'' is an homage to the classic noir version.
* Richmond from ''[[Suikoden II]]'' is an homage to the classic noir version.
* [[Tex Murphy]] from the ''Tex Murphy''/''Mean Streets'' series of noir/thriller video games is an [[Affectionate Parody]] of the genre.
* [[Tex Murphy]] from the ''Tex Murphy''/''Mean Streets'' series of noir/thriller video games is an [[Affectionate Parody]] of the genre.
* Scott Shelby from the game ''[[Heavy Rain]]'' is an aging, asthmatic retired-cop-turned-PI who's on the edge of hardboiled. (Softboiled?)'
* Scott Shelby from the game ''[[Heavy Rain]]'' is an aging, asthmatic retired-cop-turned-PI who's on the edge of hardboiled. (Softboiled?)'
** [[Kamen Rider Double|Halfboiled.]]
** [[Kamen Rider Double|Halfboiled.]]
* [[Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney|Tyrell Badd's]] appearance and demeanor are intended to evoke the hardboiled detective image. He has a bullethole-riddled trenchcoat, [[Perma Stubble]], a gruff and cynical attitude, and his color scheme is [[Deliberately Monochrome]]. However, he works for the actual police {{spoiler|when he's not moonlighting as a [[Phantom Thief]].}}
* [[Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney|Tyrell Badd's]] appearance and demeanor are intended to evoke the hardboiled detective image. He has a bullethole-riddled trenchcoat, [[Perma-Stubble]], a gruff and cynical attitude, and his color scheme is [[Deliberately Monochrome]]. However, he works for the actual police {{spoiler|when he's not moonlighting as a [[Phantom Thief]].}}


== Western Animation ==
== Web Comics ==
* In addition to the [[Neil Gaiman]] example above, [[Lawrence Talbot]] also headined a short-lived webcomic in this vein, complete with trenchcoat, fedora, and [[Private Eye Monologue]].
* Parodied in ''[[Problem Sleuth]]'', where the main characters think they are this, and occasionally do things like practice their hardboiled monologues or are drawn in [[Chiaroscuro]]. From the reader's perspective, they act more like unspeakably, unspeakably silly [[Eastern RPG]] characters.
* ''[[Muktuk Wolfsbreath, Hard-Boiled Shaman]]'' is based on "the realization that shamans were kind of like detectives".
* ''[[Girl Genius]]'' [[Bonus Material|side story]]/[[Noir Episode]] "Ivo Sharktooth, P.J." — a private ''Jäger'' investigator (he's permanently in reserve because he "ain't much ov a team player dese days").
{{quote|'''Agatha''': About Sharktooth… he didn't really ''investigate'' much, ''did'' he? He mostly just walked around and caused trouble.
'''Vanamonde''': Well, he isn't a private ''investigator'', he's a private ''[[Boisterous Bruiser|Jäger]]''.
'''Agatha''': Oh. I ''see''.}}


== Western Animation ==
* ''[[The Fairly Odd Parents]]'' in ''Where's Wanda''; Timmy wishes to become such a detective after the disappearance of Wanda, and ends up spoofing Sam Spade and Rick Blaine.
* ''[[The Fairly OddParents]]'' in ''Where's Wanda''; Timmy wishes to become such a detective after the disappearance of Wanda, and ends up spoofing Sam Spade and Rick Blaine.


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[[Category:Hardboiled Detective]]
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[[Category:Trope]]

Latest revision as of 22:31, 28 September 2022

"I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun."
Philip Marlowe, Farewell My Lovely by Raymond Chandler

A tough, cynical guy with a gun and a lot of Street Smarts, who solves mysteries with dogged persistence rather than astounding insight, the Hardboiled Detective was America's Darker and Edgier response to the classic ideal of the Great Detective.

The hardboiled detective is generally a Knight in Sour Armor or even an Anti-Hero who lives in a world of Black and Grey Morality. He's a Private Detective or Amateur Sleuth—usually the former. His services are required because Police Are Useless, so he'll never be a cop, though he may be a retired one. Expect him to keep a bottle of scotch in his desk, which is probably located in an office in the low rent district. Recent depictions typically include the trademark trenchcoat and fedora made popular by Humphrey Bogart.

Originating in the early part of the twentieth century, hardboiled detective stories quickly became a major subgenre of Mystery Fiction. Later, they became strongly associated with Film Noir. Raymond Chandler is considered the master of the genre, but it was Humphrey Bogart's depiction of detective Sam Spade in the 1941 film, The Maltese Falcon (based on a novel by Dashiell Hammett), that became the Trope Codifier.

By the 1960s, the hardboiled detective had nearly become a Dead Horse Trope, but continuing interest in Film Noir kept it from the brink of extinction. Today it is most often seen in parodies and genre crossovers (the Hardboiled Detective In SPACE!!), but can still be played straight in Noir revival or homage. The style and language of the hard-boiled detective tends to remain solidly anchored in the 1930s and 1940s, though, no matter where he appears. Expect him to call his gun a "gat", to refer to women as "dames" and their legs as "gams".

See also: Private Detective, Amateur Sleuth, Film Noir and Fantastic Noir. Contrast with Great Detective, Kid Detective, and Little Old Lady Investigates. If the character simply provides first-person narration the way detectives in Film Noir often do, that's Private Eye Monologue.

Examples of Hardboiled Detective include:

Anime and Manga

  • Gai Kurasawa, a minor character in Darker than Black is an affectionate parody of the hardboiled detective.

Comic Books

  • Hannibal King from Marvel Comics is a vampiric hardboiled detective.
  • Rorschach from Watchmen has some elements that seem like a shout-out to the trope, including the trenchcoat and fedora and the Private Eye Monologue (which is actually excerpts from his journal).
  • Dr. Occult from The DCU is a hardboiled Occult Detective.
  • From the Batman universe, Harvey Bullock is usually one of these.
  • The nameless protagonist of Potter's Field by Mark Waid is another.
  • Hellboy is an otherworldly version of the noir classic model, a heavy-drinking, chain-smoking, cynical demon with Badass Longcoat who sticks his nose where it doesn't belong, takes a beating, etc. etc. He's often referred to as "The World's Greatest Paranormal Investigator".
  • The DC comic character Ms. Tree, created by Max Allan Collins, is a relatively rare female hardboiled detective.
  • Steve Ditko loved Hardboiled Detectives, and his two (very similar) characters Mr. A and The Question are objectivist takes on the Trope.
  • The title character of the Spanish comic Blacksad is a hardboiled detective in the 1950s—and a cat.
  • Nightbeat from |The Transformers, Transformers Classics, and IDW's "-ations" is a Humongous Mecha homage to the genre, up to and including sporting a fedora and trenchcoat and "Bird of Prey!" in particular being almost a retelling of The Maltese Falcon. Whether he's an Amateur Sleuth, a "consulting detective" for the Autobots, or a Private Detective varies depending on the continuity, but he always has the same general hardboiled, noir-ish personality.

Film

Literature

  • Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe, protagonist of The Big Sleep, Farewell, My Lovely, and other novels, is an iconic and much-copied example.
  • Dashiell Hammett has several, most notably, Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon, as well as the recurring, nameless character called "The Continental Op".
  • Archie Goodwin, in Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe series, was a partial deconstruction. Created during the trope's peak years, Goodwin had many of the classic elements, but he worked for Wolfe, the fat, home-bound Great Detective. Archie did all the footwork and fighting, but tended to avoid the cynicism and world-weariness of the true hardboiled detective.
    • Stout had another, much smaller and less popular series starring Tecumseh Fox, who was much more the straight hard-boiled type.
  • Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer was an early, over-the-top, ultraviolent, Knight Templar example who is often credited with helping turn the genre into a parody of itself.
  • Garrett P.I. is the Hardboiled Detective recycled in a Standard Fantasy Setting.
  • Neil Gaiman wrote some short stories featuring Lawrence Talbot, the Wolfman, as a hardboiled private investigator. "Only the End of the World Again" is one.
  • The Marcus Didius Falco series starts out as the hardboiled detective Recycled In Ancient Rome (though he mellows as the series goes on). Living centuries before Noir was invented makes him amusingly Genre Blind.
  • Harry Dresden from The Dresden Files is part this, part Sherlock Holmes (showing surprising deductive skills on occasion, to nigh Sherlock Scan levels), part Gandalf.
    • With emphasis on the world weariness by around book 3. The snark continues unabated.
  • Invoked by Vincent Rubio in Anonymous Rex. He's a detective—and a velociraptor! He claims he's not really hard-boiled, but he acts like he is because that's what the customers expect. He even uses the "Bogart" persona to pick up female dinos.
  • Sara Paretsky's VI Warshawski is a distaff version of the (usually) male hardboiled detective.
  • Lazlo Woodbine, from the Far Fetched Fiction of Robert Rankin, is a blatant parody. He insists on using the first person, getting knocked unconscious at his first appearance and can only appear in four scenes (his office, a bar, an alleyway and a rooftop). Considering the outlandish nature of his books, often involving things such as time-traveling Elvis doing battle with Eldritch Abominations out to unmake existence, this makes things awkward.
  • Eddie Valiant from Who Censored Roger Rabbit? is an homage.
  • Conrad Metcalf, the protagonist of Jonathan Lethem's Gun, With Occasional Music is a hard-boiled detective in a world that doesn't really have a use for them anymore.
  • Kinsey Milhone from Sue Grafton's "alphabet mysteries" is another example of a female hard-boiled detective.

Live-Action TV

  • The 1980s TV adaption of Mike Hammer is either a straight example or a parody, depending on who you ask.
  • Spenser For Hire was a rarity; a Hardboiled Detective with an even harder-boiled partner.
  • Michael Garibaldi of Babylon 5 has flashes of this from time to time. Picked up, bizarrely enough, by G'Kar of all people.
  • In Star Trek: The Next Generation, Dixon Hill is a hardboiled detective holodeck character that Captain Picard is fond of playing.
  • Parodied in the PBS Kids' show, Between the Lions, which had a recurring skit featuring "Sam Spud, parboiled potato detective".
  • The Electric Company's Fargo North, Decoder was as hard boiled as a kid's show could show.
  • Kamen Rider Double uses this concept as its main motif. Protagonist Shotaro Hidari very much wants to be hard-boiled but is too emotional, leading his friends to dub him "half-boiled"; eventually he realizes that this is a strength. Each two-episode Story Arc begins and ends with him doing a Private Eye Monologue, and the second half starts with a corkboard diagram showing the character relationships.
    • His late mentor Sokichi "Boss" Narumi, on the other hand, had much more success modeling himself on the Chandler-esque ideal of manliness. Chandler is name-dropped in The Movie, and Sokichi named the young man who would become Shotaro's partner after Philip Marlowe.
  • In a Storybook Episode of Fringe, Walter casts Olivia as this.
  • Magnum, P.I. has the voice over and cynicism, but wears loud hawaiian shirts instead of a trenchcoat,
    • Magnum, P.I.: is a crossover between hardboiled and cozy but it is mostly hardboiled. Magnum is a character more typical of hardboiled. While he isn't cynical per se, he depends a lot on his street smarts. Moreover the setting often includes sorties into the more vice ridden parts of Honolulu. On the other hand, Magnum has a standing room-and-board contract as a security agent for a rich playboy, and mingles with the upper class regularly. Furthermore some episodes resemble cozies more then hardboileds.

Newspaper Comics

  • In Calvin and Hobbes, Calvin's imaginary alter-ego, Tracer Bullet, is a pure parody of the hardboiled detective.

"I have two magnums in my desk. One is a gun, and I keep it loaded. One is a bottle, and it keeps me loaded. My name is Tracer Bullet. I'm a professional snoop."

Radio

Recorded and Stand-Up Comedy

  • On the Firesign Theater's album, How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You're Not Anywhere at All?, the character Nick Danger, Third Eye is a surrealist take on the trope.

Video Games

  • Richmond from Suikoden II is an homage to the classic noir version.
  • Tex Murphy from the Tex Murphy/Mean Streets series of noir/thriller video games is an Affectionate Parody of the genre.
  • Scott Shelby from the game Heavy Rain is an aging, asthmatic retired-cop-turned-PI who's on the edge of hardboiled. (Softboiled?)'
  • Tyrell Badd's appearance and demeanor are intended to evoke the hardboiled detective image. He has a bullethole-riddled trenchcoat, Perma-Stubble, a gruff and cynical attitude, and his color scheme is Deliberately Monochrome. However, he works for the actual police when he's not moonlighting as a Phantom Thief.

Web Comics

Agatha: About Sharktooth… he didn't really investigate much, did he? He mostly just walked around and caused trouble.
Vanamonde: Well, he isn't a private investigator, he's a private Jäger.
Agatha: Oh. I see.

Western Animation

  • The Fairly OddParents in Where's Wanda; Timmy wishes to become such a detective after the disappearance of Wanda, and ends up spoofing Sam Spade and Rick Blaine.