Maltese Falcon as a Film Noir

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Maltese Falcon as a Film Noir

Film Noir is a French word which means: dark or black film. This is

very fitting as Film Noir and the Maltese falcon are stories of dark

deceptive people who often cannot be trusted. Film Noir is a good

example of this as the story is about a detective called Sam Spade who

gets dragged into the quest for the Maltese Falcon with a compulsive

liar Kasper Gutman. The Maltese Falcon is a large bird made of solid

gold worth millions. The main six conventions of Film Noir as I can

see are

The plot, lighting , dialogue, body language, stock characters and

camera angles.

The film is about a group of 5 people fighting to find and keep the

golden jewel encrusted Maltese Falcon which was a present for King

Charles 5th and is worth millions. The bird had been covered in a

black layer to keep it a secret. The story runs through many twists

and turns confusing each character and the viewer.

We are introduced to many different characters and it is hard to

remember which one is which. When Archer and Thursby are killed and

Spade does not act surprised or upset this leads to you thinking that

he could have performed the murders. The final and most important

twist is the very last scene which is one of the longest in film noir

history coming to a total of 27 minutes. In this scene we see Cairo,

Brigid, Wilmer and Kasper finally getting the sought after bird and

discovering it is in fact a fake. Kasper discovers this by taking out

a small knife and scraping away the top layer of black only to find

that the whole thing was made of lead.

A typical film noir convention is the use of low or shadowing light...

... middle of paper ...

...d threatening. This works because the larger character takes

up the majority of the screen and so we automatically think of them

being more dominant. Often the females would be made to look a lot

smaller than the males. This made us think of the girls as innocent

and helpless towards the men as they were half the size of them. As in

the cases of most Film Noir this was not true but actually a carefully

crafted way of fooling us when actually the females were ruling over

the males. A good example of the camera angle being used to gain

emotion and atmosphere is the part where Spade and Kasper are in

Gutmans house and are having a conversation about the bird. The camera

is placed so that it is looking up to Kasper, he looks tall and

overpowering. It is at this stage we realise that he is not the good

man but actually bad.

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