The Long Goodbye: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Film.TheLongGoodbye 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Film.TheLongGoodbye, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
m (Reverted edits by DemonDuckofDoom (talk) to last revision by Robkelk)
Tag: Rollback
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{work}}
''The Long Goodbye'' is a 1973 film directed by [[Robert Altman]] and starring Elliott Gould as detective Philip Marlowe. It was adapted from the [[Raymond Chandler]] novel of the same name by Leigh Brackett (who earlier co-wrote the most famous film version of Chandler's ''[[The Big Sleep (Film)|The Big Sleep]]'').
'''''The Long Goodbye''''' is a 1973 film directed by [[Robert Altman]] and starring [[Elliott Gould]] as detective Philip Marlowe. It was adapted from the [[Raymond Chandler]] novel of the same name by Leigh Brackett (who earlier co-wrote the most famous film version of Chandler's ''[[The Big Sleep (film)|The Big Sleep]]'').


{{Needs More Info}}
=== This film has examples of: ===


''The Long Goodbye'' was added to the [[National Film Registry]] in 2021.

{{tropelist}}
* [[The Alcoholic]]: Roger Wade
* [[The Alcoholic]]: Roger Wade
* [[Ambulance Cut]]: Marlowe runs into the street, gets hit by a car, and we cut to the ambulance.
* [[Ambulance Cut]]: Marlowe runs into the street, gets hit by a car, and we cut to the ambulance.
* [[Angry Guard Dog]]: The Wade's dog is never violent, but it is always barking angrily whenever Marlowe is around.
* [[Angry Guard Dog]]: The Wade's dog is never violent, but it is always barking angrily whenever Marlowe is around.
* [[Appeal to Worse Problems]]: A variation of the "starving children in Africa" argument: when the cat doesn't want to eat, he says, "What about all the tigers in India they're killing because they don't got enough to eat?"
* [[Appeal to Worse Problems]]: A variation of the "starving children in Africa" argument: when the cat doesn't want to eat, he says, "What about all the tigers in India they're killing because they don't got enough to eat?"
* [[Badass in A Nice Suit]]: Marlowe is a professional -- he's always got that suit.
* [[Badass in a Nice Suit]]: Marlowe is a professional -- he's always got that suit.
* [[Book Ends]]: The song ''Hooray For Hollywood'' plays at the beginning and the end of the film.
* [[Book Ends]]: The song ''Hooray For Hollywood'' plays at the beginning and the end of the film.
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "It's OK with me."
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "It's OK with me."
* [[Cut Himself Shaving]]: Marlowe notices a bruise on Eileen's cheek, and says it doesn't look like she walked into a door. She says that she didn't. She fell out of bed.
* [[Cut Himself Shaving]]: Marlowe notices a bruise on Eileen's cheek, and says it doesn't look like she walked into a door. She says that she didn't. She fell out of bed.
* [[Cluster F Bomb]]: A few.
* [[Cluster F-Bomb]]: A few.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Practically everything Marlowe says is a snark.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Practically everything Marlowe says is a snark.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Roger.}}
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Roger.}}
* [[Faking the Dead]]: {{spoiler|Lennox is still alive.}}
* [[Faking the Dead]]: {{spoiler|Lennox is still alive.}}
* [[First Name Basis]]: Mrs. Wade asks Marlowe to start calling her Eileen.
* [[First-Name Basis]]: Mrs. Wade asks Marlowe to start calling her Eileen.
* [[Genre Busting]]: It's a neo-noir with a heavy dose of surrealism and black comedy.
* [[Genre Busting]]: It's a neo-noir with a heavy dose of surrealism and black comedy.
* [[Gratuitous Spanish]]: The cat door has "El Porto del Gato" written on it. Also, Augustine talks to his Mexican [[Mook]] in Spanish, even though the guy always answers in English.
* [[Gratuitous Spanish]]: The cat door has "El Porto del Gato" written on it. Also, Augustine talks to his Mexican [[Mook]] in Spanish, even though the guy always answers in English.
Line 27: Line 30:
* [[Recurring Riff]]: Every piece of music, even a doorbell ring, is the tune of the titular song.
* [[Recurring Riff]]: Every piece of music, even a doorbell ring, is the tune of the titular song.
* [[Rhetorical Question Blunder]]: In the interrogation room.
* [[Rhetorical Question Blunder]]: In the interrogation room.
{{quote| '''Cop:''' Are you crazy?<br />
{{quote|'''Cop:''' Are you crazy?
'''Marlowe:''' [[Blunt Yes|Yes]]. }}
'''Marlowe:''' [[Blunt Yes|Yes]]. }}
* [[Smoking Is Cool]]: Marlowe smokes cigarettes incessantly and in nearly every scene.
* [[Smoking Is Cool]]: Marlowe smokes cigarettes incessantly and in nearly every scene.
Line 33: Line 36:
* [[Vanity License Plate]]: Mrs. Wade's says "Lov You."
* [[Vanity License Plate]]: Mrs. Wade's says "Lov You."
* [[Vigilante Execution]]: {{spoiler|Marlowe blows Terry Lennox away after discovering he murdered his wife and betrayed his best friend.}}
* [[Vigilante Execution]]: {{spoiler|Marlowe blows Terry Lennox away after discovering he murdered his wife and betrayed his best friend.}}
* [[Writers Block]]: Roger Wade suffers from this.
* [[Writer's Block]]: Roger Wade suffers from this.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Danny Peary Cult Movies List]]
[[Category:Danny Peary Cult Movies List]]
[[Category:Films of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1970s]]
[[Category:The Long Goodbye]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:National Film Registry]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Long Goodbye, The}}

Latest revision as of 03:38, 17 June 2023

The Long Goodbye is a 1973 film directed by Robert Altman and starring Elliott Gould as detective Philip Marlowe. It was adapted from the Raymond Chandler novel of the same name by Leigh Brackett (who earlier co-wrote the most famous film version of Chandler's The Big Sleep).

The Long Goodbye was added to the National Film Registry in 2021.

Tropes used in The Long Goodbye include:

Cop: Are you crazy?
Marlowe: Yes.