Double Feature


The Long Goodbye
Elliott Gould is a rumpled, rambling version of Raymond Chandler’s Phillip Marlowe in The Long Goodbye, Robert Altman’s free-spirited adaptation of the iconic detective tale. A private eye out of time in the hippy Hollywood Hills of the early 70’s, Marlowe ingrains himself in a twisted mystery to save a long-time (and newlydead) friend’s reputation. Sterling Hayden co-stars as a neurotic, violent Hemingwayesque writer whose alcohol-addled memory may hold the key to Marlowe’s mystery.
“Raymond Chandler’s sentimental foolishness is the taking-off place for Robert Altman’s heady, whirling sideshow of a movie, set in the early-seventies L.A. of the stoned sensibility.” – Pauline Kael, The New Yorker
“Altman’s achievement has been to make a tough, funny, hugely entertaining movie that acknowledges its Chandler origins without ever turning into an anachronism… It’s an original work, complex without being obscure, visually breathtaking without seeming to be inappropriately fancy.” – Vincent Canby, The New York Times
Kim Morgan interviews Elliott Gould for the New Beverly blog.
- Director
- Robert Altman
- Writer
- screenplay by Leigh Brackett based on the novel by Raymond Chandler
- Composer
- John Williams
- Starring
- Elliott Gould, Nina van Pallandt, Sterling Hayden, Mark Rydell, Henry Gibson, David Arkin
- Year
- 1973
- Rated
- R
- Country
- USA
- Format
- 35mm
- Running Time
- 112 minutes
Night Moves
L.A. detective Harry Moseby (Gene Hackman) has problems. Missing persons and bedroom stakeouts are no match for his glory days as a pro football player. His wife is having a not-so-secret affair. And while sorting things out, he takes on the case of a runaway teenager that may be a lot more than he can handle. Director Arthur Penn, who worked with Hackman on Bonnie and Clyde and Target, guides this spellbinding, first-rate thriller where solutions to murderous riddles don’t come easily. Joining Hackman and Penn are two actors just starting out on the road to stardom: James Woods and Melanie Griffith. The stars come out – and so does the excitement – when the Night Moves. (Warner Bros)
- Director
- Arthur Penn
- Writer
- Alan Sharp
- Starring
- Gene Hackman, Susan Clark, Jennifer Warren, Edward Binns, Melanie Griffith
- Year
- 1975
- Rated
- R
- Country
- USA
- Format
- 35mm
- Running Time
- 99 minutes