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  1. Murder, My Sweet (1944) -- (Movie Clip) The Smoke Didn't Move Fake psychic and jewel thief Amthor (Otto Kruger) tricking thug Moose (Mike Mazurki) into throttling P-I Marlowe (Dick Powell), whom he earlier hired to find his girlfriend, who then enters his second semi-conscious episode, in Murder, My Sweet, 1944, directed by Edward Dmytryk, from a Raymond Chandler novel.

  2. Purchase Murder, My Sweet on digital and stream instantly or download offline. Dick Powell stars as novelist Raymond Chandler's hard-bitten, world-weary private detective, Philip Marlowe. Marlowe takes a job looking for Moose Malloy's (Mike Mazurki) girlfriend Velma. Malloy's a petty criminal just released after a seven-year prison sentence, and Velma has not been seen for six years. But a ...

  3. Murder My Sweet," based on the Raymond Chandler novel "Farewell, My Lovely," featured a then controversial choice of Dick Powell to play the famous Philip Ma...

  4. Murder, My Sweet, American film noir, released in 1944, that was notable as the screen debut of author Raymond Chandler ’s hard-boiled, world-weary detective Philip Marlowe. It was based on Chandler’s 1940 novel Farewell, My Lovely. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) The cynical, smart-talking detective ...

  5. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Keep those emails coming. Murder, My Sweet (1944) is a fantastic Film Noir for many reasons, including Dick Powell’s transition from crooner to the second-best Phillip Marlowe, only paled by Humphrey Bogart as that character, to the direction of Edward Dmytryk, and the shooting techniques that I will discuss in the Summary.

  6. Original title: Murder, My Sweet. Synopsis: Detective Philip Marlowe''s search for a two-timing woman leads him to blackmail and murder.You can watch Murder, My Sweet through Rent,buy on the platforms: Google Play Movies,Amazon Video,Apple TV,YouTube,Vudu,Microsoft Store

  7. So fascinating are the "bad" characters in Murder My Sweet that the two 100% "good" characters, heroine Anne Shirley and detective Don Douglas, seem wishy-washy wimps by comparison. After years of insipid golly-gee roles, Dick Powell startled his fans with his cynical, world-weary portrayal of Philip Marlowe.