Maltese Falcon Techniques

744 Words2 Pages

Lucille Cousin
June 6th, 2015
APLA period 2
FYNK - The Maltese Falcon
Director John Huston’s The Maltese Falcon (1941), one of the first film noirs ever made, tells the story of the hard-boiled detective Sam Spade when he takes on a case brought by a beautiful but mysterious woman, Miss Wonderly. As he becomes involved in a complex entanglement filled with crime and deception, troubles arise not only when Spade’s partner, Miles Archer, is shot to death but also when he is confronted by a man who requests his help to find a valuable statuette known as the Maltese Falcon. In creating this film, Huston incorporated a number of different styles and elements that would later become hallmarks of film noirs. Among many others elements used in the …show more content…

In many scenes, the film will suddenly cut to an extreme close-up of a character’s face. For example, when the other characters have chosen Wilmer Cook as the “fall guy” for the two murders in the film, the film quickly cuts to a tightly framed close-up of Cook’s face to add intensity to the scene. Huston also does this to provoke feelings of anxiety when he uses extreme close-ups of Spade’s expression in stressed scenes. Moreover, it is impossible to overlook how Gutman is given a sense of height and power throughout the film through the use of low-angle shots. This technique makes Gutman appear imposing and massive, adding to his authority over the men and also making the audience feel inferior. It is through shots like these that Huston was successfully able to keep the tension high in The Maltese …show more content…

In the beginning of the film, there is a scene in which Archer is walking down a street tailing Miss Wonderly, until he is shot to death moments later. To add to the intensity of this scene, Huston uses a stark transition in music. The relatively soothing music playing in the background suddenly becomes alarming and terrifying as Archer is murdered, once again provoking fear towards Archer’s fate. This scene is especially important to the development of the plot, and Huston places emphasis on Archer’s death by dramatizing the scene with music. In another scene when Gutman, Spade, and others unwrap the bundle that is supposed to contain the Maltese Falcon, the effect of the grating noises is exciting, leaving the audience utterly absorbed in the film. The use of thrilling music is inherent to film noir and is necessary to trigger emotions that film noirs are meant to achieve from its readers, and Huston used this technique to do just

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