***Out
in the Crime Noir Night –Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe-Take Two
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Oh yah, about Raymond Chandler, about
the guy who wrote the Marlowe stories. Like I said in another review he, along
with Brother Dashiell Hammett turned the dreary gentile drawing-room sleuth
by-the-numbers crime novels that dominated the reading market back in the day
on its head and gave us tough guy blood and guts detectives we could admire,
could get behind, warts and all. Thanks, guys.
[Hammett, the author of The Thin Man,
and creator of The Maltese Falcon’sSam Spade, maybe the most famous
tough guy detective of them all. Sam, who come to think of it like Marlowe,
also had a judgment problem when it came to women, women wearing that damn
perfume that stops a man, even a hard-boiled detective man cold, although not
an assortment of Hollywood women but one up north in Frisco town.]
In Chandler’s case he drew strength
from his startling use of language to describe Marlowe’s environment much in
the way a detective would use his heightened powers of observation during an
investigation, missing nothing. Marlowe was able to size up, let’s say, a
sizzling blonde, as a statuesque, full-bodied and ravishing dame and then pick
her apart as nothing but a low-rent gold-digger. Of course that never stopped
him from taking a run at one or two of them himself and then sending them off
into the night, or to the clink, to fend for themselves. He also knew how to
blow off a small time chiseler, a grifter, as so much flamboyance and hot air
not neglecting to notice that said grifter had moisture above his upper lip
indicating that he stood in fear of something if only his shadow as he
attempted to pull some caper, or tried to pull the wool over Marlowe’s eyes. Or
noticing a frayed collar or a misshapen dress that indicated that a guy or gal
was on cheap street and just maybe not on the level, maybe scratching like
crazy for his or her coffee and cakes.
The list of such descriptive
language goes on and on -sullen bartenders wiping a random whisky glass,
flighty chorus girls arm in arm with wrong gee gangsters, Hollywood starlet
wannabes displaying their wares a little too openly, old time geezers,
toothless, melting away in some thankless no account job, guys working out of
small-time airless no front cheap jack offices in rundown building s on the
wrong side of town doing, well, doing the best they can. And cops, good cops,
bad cops, all with that cop air about them of seen it all, done it all blasé,
and by the way spill your guts before the billy- club comes down on your
fragile head. (That spill your guts thing, by the way a trait that our Marlowe
seems organically incapable of doing, except when it suited his purposes. No
cop or gangster could force anything out of him, and they tried, believe me
they tried. ) He had come from them, from the cops, from the D.A.s office in
the old days, had worked with them on plenty of cases but generally he tried to
treat them like one might a snake not quite sure whether it is poisonous or
not.
At the same time Chandler was a
master of setting the details of the space Marlowe had to work in- the high
hill mansions and the back alley rooming houses (although usually not the
burgeoning ranchero middle class locales since apparently that segment of
society has not need of his services and therefore no need of a description of
their endless sameness and faux gentility). He had a fix on the
museum-like quality of the big houses, the places like General Sternwood’s in The
Big Sleep or Mrs. Murdock’s in The High Window reflecting old wealth
California. And he has a razor sharp sense of the arrivisite, the new blood all
splash and glitter, all high-ceiling bungalow, swimming pools, and landscaped
gardens.
But where Chandler made his mark was
in his descriptions of the gentile seedy places, the mansions of old time Los
Angeles Bunker Hill turned to rooming houses with that faint smell of urine,
that strong smell of liquor, that loud noise that comes with people living too
close together, too close to breath their simple dreams. Or the descriptions of
the back alley offices in the rundown buildings that had seen better days
populated by the failed dentists, the sly repo men, the penny- ante insurance
brokers, the con artists, the flotsam and jetsam of the losers in the great
American West night just trying to hang on from rent payment to rent payment.
Those denizens of these quarters usually had a walk on role, or wound up with
two slugs to the head, but Chandler knew the type, had the type down solid.
Nor was Chandler above putting a
little social commentary in Marlowe’s mouth. Reflections on such topics as that
very real change after World War II in the kind of swarms that were heading
west to populate the American Western shore night. The rise of the corner boys
hanging, just hanging, around blasted storefronts, a few breaking off into the
cranked up hot rod hell’s highway night. The restless mobsters for broken back
east looking to bake out in the southern California sun while taking over the
vast crime markets. The wannabe starlets ready to settle for less than stardom
for the right price. The old California money (the gold rush, gold coast,
golden era money) befuddled by the all new waves coming in. And above all a
strong sense of the rootlessness, the living in the moment, the grabbing while
the grabbing was good mentality that offended old Marlowe’s code of honor.
And of course over a series of books Chandler expanded the
Marlowe character, expanded his range of emotions, detailed his growing
world-weariness, his growing wariness, his small compromises with that code of
honor that he had honed back in the 1930s. Yes, Marlowe the loner, the avenging
angel , the righter of wrongs, maybe little wrongs but wrongs in this wicked
old world. The guy who sometimes had to dig deep in his office desk drawer to
grab a shot or six of whiskey to help him think things through. Marlowe the guy
of a thousand punches, the guy of a hundred knocks on the head, the guy who had
taken a more than one slug for the cause, the guy who was every insurance
company’s nightmare and a guy who could have used some serious Obamacare health
insurance no questions asked . Yah, Marlowe.
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