Recommended

The Long Goodbye

Wide awake and dreaming in Altman's LA

Recommended

The Long Goodbye

Wide awake and dreaming in Altman's LA
Recommended

The Long Goodbye

Wide awake and dreaming in Altman's LA

When we think of noir film, our minds tend to flash to a world of shadows. A story told under cover of darkness, in code. As Angelica Bastién put it in her brilliant treatise on the genre for New York magazine, “modern noir’s biggest hang-up is that it seems only to care about the most superficial elements of the genre: its snappy dialogue, moody lighting, and interest in criminality.”

In Robert Altman’s The Long Goodbye, noir is a sun-drenched beach, a nude yoga class, a hungry cat, and a sleepy detective who’d rather not be there. Altman’s take on Raymond Chandler’s classic Philip Marlowe story is less Maltese Falcon and more Endless Bummer.

In a world where The Big Lebowski is a stoner epic, The Long Goodbye might not seem revelatory, but in the 1970s, a Marlowe revival featuring the lanky Eliot Gould as the half-baked, half-awake protagonist was relatively controversial. The movie was not loved by audiences on arrival despite critical acclaim (Pauline Kael called it “a high-flying rap on Chandler and the movies”), but like most Altman productions, it’s garnered a cult following. Count me as a member.

If you were looking for the bastard child of Chinatown and Dude Where’s My Car, you’re in luck.