The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of - The Maltese Falcon (10/10) Movie CLIP (1941) HD
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- Опубліковано 24 жов 2012
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
Sam (Humphrey Bogart) tries to explain his moral conviction to Brigid (Mary Astor), before he sends her off to the police.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
After two previous film versions of Dashiell Hammett's detective classic The Maltese Falcon, Warner Bros. finally got it right in 1941--or, rather, John Huston, a long-established screenwriter making his directorial debut, got it right, simply by adhering as closely as possible to the original. Taking over from a recalcitrant George Raft, Humphrey Bogart achieved true stardom as Sam Spade, a hard-boiled San Francisco private eye who can be as unscrupulous as the next guy but also adheres to his own personal code of honor. Into the offices of the Spade & Archer detective agency sweeps a Miss Wonderly (Mary Astor), who offers a large retainer to Sam and his partner Miles Archer (Jerome Cowan) if they'll protect her from someone named Floyd Thursby. The detectives believe neither Miss Wonderly nor her story, but they believe her money. Since Archer saw her first, he takes the case -- and later that evening he is shot to death, as is the mysterious Thursby. Miss Wonderly's real name turns out to be Brigid O'Shaughnessey, and, as the story continues, Sam is also introduced to the effeminate Joel Cairo (Peter Lorre) and the fat, erudite Kasper Gutman (Sydney Greenstreet, in his film debut). It turns out that Brigid, Cairo and Gutman are all international scoundrels, all involved in the search for a foot-high, jewel-encrusted statuette in the shape of a falcon. Though both Cairo and Gutman offer Spade small fortunes to find the "black bird," they are obviously willing to commit mayhem and murder towards that goal: Gutman, for example, drugs Spade and allows his "gunsel" Wilmer (Elisha Cook Jr.) to kick and beat the unconscious detective. This classic film noir detective yarn gets better with each viewing, which is more than can be said for the first two Maltese Falcons and the ill-advised 1975 "sequel" The Black Bird.
CREDITS:
TM & © Warner Bros. (1941)
Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Ward Bond, Barton MacLane, Mary Astor
Director: John Huston
Producers: Henry Blanke, Hal B. Wallis
Screenwriters: John Huston, Dashiell Hammett
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'I'll have some rotten nights after I've sent you over, but that'll pass..' So cold. So brilliantly, painfully cold. Only one Bogie.
Bogart was great at using his expression to show how deeply his character was hurting. This scene, and a few from 'In a Lonely Place' you could feel the pain and sorrow flowing from him.
"The, uh, stuff that dreams are made of. . ."
One of the great finishing lines in film history. Bogart did this one and Casablanca within a year of each other and delivered two of the greatest last lines in movie history. But of course he himself was one of the all-time greats.
actually, the real last line of the movie is "Huh?"
The full quote itself comes from Shakespeare, from Act IV of The Tempest:
"We are such stuff as dreams are made on; and our little life is rounded with a sleep."
which is what Sam was referring to.
The stuff that dreams are made of. That line should be in every dictionary under "classic dialogue." Movie stars come and go, but Bogart has never been replaced, and never will be.
Bogart had a style of acting that was so natural and real-almost as if he was not acting but actually living the part-that is why you can't replace someone like that
Notice that it's the movie's second-last line! (The last is "Huh?")
Yes so what are dreams made of accordingly?
💰
@@uncasunga1800 usually that of which one can never possess.
Ehh Casablanca's "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship." is more fitting by this is close
Even the artistic direction is perfect. The elevator bars as shadows on her face. The elevator door closes. The music crescendos. Both go down.
Huston's first film
@@ricoz2016 John Huston make his director debut in first time
One of the rare times that the hero chose integrity over love.
Sam hated Miles, but a mans got to have a code.
Okay you say Sam Spade is a hero I say psychopath not only did he have an affair with a partner he hated wife and as soon as the partner was dead he threw her out he enjoyed the violence enjoyed strong-arming Cairo when they get the falcon he grabs his girl Friday zone so hard he hurts her he extorts x out of the girl so he would help her and then he turns her in
@@ohkay7418that’s not what a psychopath is
I'm not sure it is integrity that Sam turned Brigid over the police, it is more that if he left her get away with it she will always have something on him and a threat to his life. Notice that as Brigid was descending (to hell) in the elevator as she took the fall for killing Miles, Sam was also walking the stairs with the falcon in hands, presumably to join her as he said he will wait for her in 20 years if they left her off the noose. In a sense, Sam's integrity is no better than Brigid's
If you are an actor and are lucky, you get maybe one really classic line in your career. I don't mean catchy, fun throw-aways like "I'll be back", but really CLASSIC lines. Humphrey Bogart got two...and probably the greatest two ever, delivered like no one else could:
"The uh...stuff that dreams are made of", and of course "Here's looking at you, kid".
Gives me chills.
More than that. Half his lines in Casablanca are known by people who have never seen the film. Only Brando can compete in that category considering he might have the 2 most famous lines in movie history.
Also of all the gin joints
And this was an ad-lib
Not many scenes like this in movies. The ending of blade runner is one. Can't think of to many.
And don't forget, as Dobbs in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, his line was the entre to an equally famous line. . Dobbs: "If you're the police, where are your badges?"
Gold Hat: "Badges? We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinkin' badges!"
Like the way the "prison" bars close on Bridged's face.
Someone said that when she goes down the elevator and he goes down the stairs, the subtext is that they're both going to hell, but he's taking the longer route.
Brilliant touch by John Huston.
@@Blaqjaqshellaq -- BINGO! You got it.
The way the pattern casts its shadow on her face has always made me think of a falcon’s claw, too.
The best detective movie ever made. Doesn't get any better.
Following Philip Marlowe, Nick Charles & Philo Vance
Bogarts entire soliloquy at the end of this movie is full of classic lines........I'm sending you over.......nights will be tough for a while, but that will pass.........don't be so sure I'm really as crooked as I'm supposed to be........when somebody kills your partner, you're supposed to do something about it even if you didn't like him. Yes, this was indeed the role Bogart was born to play.
A real master of suspense movies, Bogart masterfully walks us through the gamut of emotions and a well-written script that is emotionally draining of the player.
The atmosphere of unease is reinforced by the character of Bogart through his interactions with a few other individuals and his own inner turmoil, all the while struggling with his emotional responses to the death of his partner.
The cinematography is excellent with the beautiful backdrops in the opening establishing shot of the town Bogart calls home, contrasted with the murky lightings and eerie surroundings of the police station as the story begins to unfold.
Bogart, who played the lead as the emotionally torn private eye, successfully portrays a troubled man, while the supporting characters play a role in showing a different facet of his life, but most of all, they allow Bogart to show the strength and determination of an individual who is trying to stay alive.
Those two are just scratching the surface. He also had, "Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world... she walks into mine," and, "Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon, and for the rest of your life," and, "We'll always have Paris," and probably the most paraphrased of all, "Louie, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."
Yes. They don't write dialogue like that anymore.
the vulnerability of men is a lost art.
Don't be so certain. There is a lot of loud bravado in the world right now, sure. But it's only loud, it can't walk. Even if they're quiet about it sometimes, there are men smart enough to recognize that. Even now.
Drugs and emasculating culture lady
Women want to have their cake and eat it too..
You don't want a man you want a doormat.
LOVE is what is lost.
@@uncasunga1800 Well said, yes.
@@uncasunga1800 Right here, this viewpoint is exactly why @Still GlamorUs is correct, and it tells me you didn't grasp any of what this scene means. Please look up the difference between masculinity and toxic masculinity before you spawn more idiot Chads.
@@tatertots3337 you have never grasped reality troglodyte
... I won't because all of me wants to..." It just doesn't get a lot better than that.
My favorite part is after Bogart says the immortal line, "the stuff dreams are made of..." his face waxes philosophical as if he's transported to another world. But then the goon not to bright cop says "huh?" and that glance Bogart gives him as he takes the statue. It is at once a glance that a) that guy would never understand, b} I broke my manhood frame and c) I indulged in grand philosophical introspection; all of it conveyed in a simple eye roll. Bogart was the best. There's a reason his appeal transcends time.
Bogart uses every part of his body like a musical instrument.
Brigid goes to jail for murder Miles Archer
And he's quoting Shakespeare which means he's not just a dumb gumshoe.
"When a man's partner is killed he's supposed to do something about it.
It doesn't make any difference what you thought of him, he was your
partner and you are supposed to do something about it."
That is one of best descriptions of integrity that has ever been.
Yes sir.
agreed
Exactly! I have a buddy I’ve been working with for 15 years and we don’t always like each other but if something happened to him I wouldn’t rest until I got justice for him.
Amen!
That's like in UNFORGIVEN when Clint Eastwood kills Gene Hackman to avenge his partner Morgan Freeman.
"I don't deserve to die this way! I've built a house!" "Deserve's got nothing to do with it."
Easy bar bet - the last line from Maltese Falcon.
They'll say it's 'the stuff that dreams are made of', by Humphrey Bogart.
You tell them it's actually 'huh?' by Ward Bond.
The way Bogie looks at the guy as he says "huh"? The knowingness that he'll never understand that line. What men will do for riches beyond the dreams of avarice.
Exactly!
Women do a lot for riches two. They come equipped with a gold mine from the start. They develop it later in life.
@@jimmyparks6095 Astors' gold mine gave birth to Larry Hagman, too. !!!
This coming January will mark 60 years since Humphrey DeForest Bogart passed away.
"Wait until I'm through then you can talk"
2:36 “What’s the matter with your little playmate? He looks broken-hearted.” 😜
My top Bogart movies:
1. The Treasure of Sierra Madre
2. The Maltese Falcon
3. Petrified Forest
4. Sabrina
5. Casablanca
6. Key Largo
7. High Sierra
8. Big Sleep
9. Dark Passage
When a fella leaves the African Queen off of his best Bogart list a man's supposed to do something. It doesn't matter if he likes the list or doesn't like the list. A man's supposed to do something. I'm canceling your Humphrey Bogart Fan Club Membership. I'm sorry.
Bogart is considered the greatest film actor of the first half of the twentieth century, this proves it.
Greatest films star, maybe. Not the same thing.
@@TuboUser666greatest film actor as well
@@randywhite3947 I guess that settles it then. I didn't realize Randy White was in the house.
Miss Wunderly takes the elevator to hell, Sam Spade takes the stairs.
The greatest movie star in his greatest movie in the movie's greatest scene.
I actually put this at number 5 of Bogart films. Behind Casablanca, The Big Sleep, To have and have not, and African Queen. Then Maltese Falcon, Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Key, Largo, Caine Mutiny, Sabrina and High Sierra.
@@beowulfthedane what about In a Lonely Place?
@@randywhite3947 I haven't seen it.
@@beowulfthedane Great list. I still go with Falcon because it set the tone for his screen image of a tough guy wounded by life that ultimately always does the right thing.
Imagine being 14 in 1975 , in a haze of pot smoke stumbling home and this is on the late late show... it shaped me for now and forever.
Bogart created more singularly memorable fictional film characters than any other actor ever has. Besides Spade there's Duke Mantee, Fred C. Dobbs, Rick Blaine, Capt. Queeg & Charlie Allnutt.
and the only Marlowe that really counts...
The incomparable John Huston created film noir with this masterwork which is still one of the 10 greatest American films of all-time. Bogart displaying his unequaled screen presence as he appears in all but one scene and dares the viewer to take their eyes off him.
What’s the top 10?
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre / Midnight Cowboy / E.T.- the... / The Good Earth / The Wizard of Oz / Dr. Strangelove or ... / Paths of Glory / The Godfather Epic / M*A*S*H / TMF / (11) The Asphalt Jungle@@randywhite3947
Another John Huston's masterpiece !!! Too bad for George Raft, who declined the role as Sam Spade... The same thing happened with High Sierra : Humphrey Bogart was too happy to take the cake !!!
And what about the other side? All we got is maybe you love me and maybe I love you.
What is it? The stuff that dreams are made of...
Just got done watching this classic...the definitive private eye murder mystery...Bogart at his smoothest
Best ending line in a film. EVER.
I love the film’s ending. It’s just a series of disappointments. Every main character is disappointed by the end. Gutman and Cairo, aiming to find the Maltese Falcon, have to spend at least another year in their quest for it. Spade, thinking he may have found a love interest, finds out that she was his partner’s murderer. Finally, Brigid hopes to find a sense of safety in Spade, only for him to be the reason for her arrest. It’s not only surprising, but innovative, especially for an 82-year old film.
It won’t be 82 until October
Just finished reading the book, the movie is pretty much how I played it out in my head 😊
This movie was a remake, though superior to the two previous versions.
The original was made in 1931 and TCM shows it from time to time. Agreed the Bogart version was superior.
One of the finest endings in all film history. Hammet's marvellous words about solidarity and brotherhood (remember this film was released as America made a commitment to fight Fascism and this is a great anti-fascist speech) stay in the memory. I think Bogart almost, (almost), gets a little too theatrical and loses his peerless naturalness at the moment he picks Mary Astor up and gives her the final hard words 'I won't because all of me wants to'. But this is momentary and his final words as his eyes are fixed on the elevator/gallows as Astor is put behind 'bars' are sublime acting. Astor is brilliant throughout as well and just oozes sexiness. Brigid O'Shaughnessy thought that would be enough, Sam Spade showed her it wasn't.
Nah bogart was perfectly fine
The "rotten nights" part of the speech at 1:18 is about the most cold-blooded I've ever heard in the movies!
yes … but awesome!
Not cold-blooded at all. Merely truthful and painfully honest. There's a cold-blooded murderer in the room and it isn't Sam Spade. Spade is just accurately laying out for Brigid his options and their respective consequences. Cold-blooded would be to keep her protected from justice, betray his dead partner and proceed to blackmail her.
A couple of days ago, I watched this movie on its 75th anniversary of it's release. They don't make movies like this anymore!!!.
You said it! If I even hear of a remake of this, I will simply ........well, you get the idea. Have a safe holiday.
nor actors...this one had Bogie and other great ones...
I’m 22 years old and love older classic films such as this. Though I do like how now a days women, children, and ethnic groups are portrayed much better now than then. Sidney Poitier, Gene Kelly, Vincent Price, Katharine Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, Grace Kelly, and Spencer Tracy are some of my favorite actors and actresses from old.
Yes thank God they don’t do this kind of films now.
Anne B. They make desparate housewives now😂😂 which you seem to love a lot more.
"I'll have some rotten nights after I send you over, but that'll pass." Lord Have Mercy - what a brick!!
Love was so angry in those days. And it was all for a MacGuffin.
Such a great ending for a great movie
I don't care what anyone else says; Marlon Brando may have been a great actor, but he had nothing on Bogie.
Sanford Meisner said, "Acting is behaving truthfully under imaginary circumstances." Bogie wasn't truthful - he was brutally truthful, the epitome of subtlety.
Bogart’s good. Brando was just so natural though.
I actually think Brando wasn’t as good as a lot of actors during his time, he was just birthing a new era of acting. Still, a massive accomplishment, but for example I thought Lee J Cobb, Karl Malden, Rod Steiger and Eva Marie Saint all gave significantly better performances than Brando in On the Waterfront. Brando was still really good, but they left a much bigger impact on me
@@shotbro4998 better is arguably.
But ceetainly no significant. You make it sound like brando gave a bad performance lol
@@Gmthekiller all of these actors had back up by great thespians. you can't do it alone, most of the time. Maybe "Lost"!!
When he said " the stuff that dreams are made of" the cop said "huh?" his response was silence.
I was 13 years old when I first saw this, I said that's a fucking "PIMP"!!!
Sam fell into a momentary philosophical reflection when he said "the stuff dreams are made of." Then it was broken when the beefy, none too bright cop said "Huh?" I love that momentary look Bogie giveshim as if to say "you could not understand., it's too sophisicated a concept for you to ever grasp" and walks out of frame weary but steely in the face of a twisted world. Just brilliant.
High Serra made Bogie a star and The Maltese Falcon made him a legend.
Ricardo Cantoral I would say Casablanca made him a legend
@@randywhite3947 I'd say Casablanca cemented Bogart's image as a lover. This film already established the image that made him immortal.
I still ask myself if there was a chance that falcon was the real falcon...
3:00 for the line.
simply put, the most perfect film ever made
The stuff that macguffins are made of :)
You almost want a sequel where they go to Istanbul to get the Falcon.
On the way, they should stop off in Morocco at Rick's Cafe American.
' THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF ' AND HOW ! WOW !
The elevator nd the lighting making her look like she is going to jail is why I love Film noir. Brilliant filmmaking.
I love this movie I watched it on HBO MAX its available on HBO MAX
Even the greatest films ever made tend to date. A shot or a line that's been copied countless times, a once-topical reference, a dated fashion, piece of design or technology, an outmoded cultural attitude, a bit of slang. And then there's *The Maltese Falcon*. 80 years of trends, genres, events, and countless imitators have long since come and gone. And it hasn't aged a day.
"Fashion comes and fashion goes, but style lasts forever."
Yves Saint Laurent
Finаllу I'veее fоund full Тhе Маltеsе Fаlсоn mоviе hеrе => twitter.com/496b2dfde684ac49b/status/795843018712498176 Тhе Stuff Тhаааt Drеаms ААААrееe Мadе Оf Тhеее Маltеsе Fаlсоn 10 10 Моviе CLIР 1941 HD
"I won't play the sap for you" - this is a principle that can be applied to pretty much any situation
Hammet was a great writer. If you haven’t read the novel, do yourself a solid. His descriptions are incredible!
I’m reading it now. I’ve seen the movie so many times that my husband finally got it on DVD for me
Bogart and Clark Gable are two of my most favourite actors. Wish they had made a film together.
If John Huston had gotten his way, they would have as he wanted to film "The Man who Would be King" some 20 or more years before he made it in the '70s. Gable would have played Connery's part and Bogie would have been in Michael Caine's role. Don't know who would have played Christopher Plummer's part.
"... the stuff dreams are made of ..."
A classic line ever since Shakespeare first wrote it.
One of the best last lines ever.
"get ya' hats!"
Brando...exactly!
Brilliant scene from one of my favourite films of all time. Bogart is still the best.
"The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of" this is the official slogan for Warner Bros Discovery merger....
Makes sense since the film is from a Warner Bros film.
"I'll have some rotten nights after I've sent you over but that'll pass..."
Stone cold masculinity right there in all its glory. If you said something so honest like that today, you'd lose your job.
How times have changed... not for the better.
Of a career of splendid performances, none are more economical, sincere, without affectation - and moving! - than Bogart’s Sam Spade.
Perfection
The most famous "Uh" in movie history!
Ahhhhh lve seen em all!
The actor who played Brigid was hot as hell!
Mary Astor also had great legs, which weren't even featured in this film.
Lol I’m pretty sure this is how they talked to each other lol 😂🤦🏾♂️
I cant’t be the only one that hears “the stuff that dreams are made out”, it clearly says out
"Friends of Mister Cairo"...
Deep eyes Humphrey had? ...very deep ...Capricorn deep 😎
Walkin around
does anyone know which exact song is used here in the background?
Films like this can never be replicated and here’s why… when you take a film like the Maltese falcon. it’s a legendary film it’s got everything you want from a noir movie but when you remake a film like this, the great aspects of this film get completely blocked out and everyone will just pay attention to the remake and films like this will just be ignored because modern audiences want things that capture them and there’s nothing wrong with that but the thing is films like these should not be ignored if people would ever to remake it….
Perfection 👍
That dame has legs!
The other guy probably spent the rest of his life bragging that I was the one whom Bogey said those lines to.
That's the great Ward Bond, a Hollywood legend.
Ward Bond was John Wayne’s best friend. He was very conservative politically. Bogie and Bacall were on the other side. A lot of the Hollywood community didn’t care for me. Bond.
Carly Simon uses that line inone of her songs
Slippery DAMES!!!
You know it’s funny now there’s Logan: Noir and now there is a fan made (although I actually wish was real) Batman: Noir 1989, wonder what Spider-Man Movie (and I am familiar with the Spider-Man: Noir comics) would look good as a Noir Movie
MY FAVORITE SCENE IN THE HISTORY OF FILMS.... EVERBODY HERE WAS A BEAST SIMPLY A BEAST!.... MARY WAS ABSOLUTELY RUTHLESS
On the movie posters I've seen for this film they always show Sam Spade holding a pistol but he doesn't like guns.
Bogart was excellent in this season. And Astor held her own.
Sure!
I love this movie I love it so much that I also have statue of the stuff dreams are made of
you know they say that line was never in the script , bogart just mprovised .
@@MrForttunate thats why these actors are so good its the perfect line
I read The Maltese Falcon today. The movie has lots of dialogue from the book but that line isn't in the book.
And one of the best lines in the book is not in the movie, Spade's adamant, "This is my game and my town..." when somebody starts to second guess him, as I recall!
i might be a little perverse, but i really enjoyed the interactions between bogart and elisha cooke jr. priceles .
The stuff that history is made of...
Good film. Doesn't make sense as neither did the book, but good film. Bogart is such an icon.
Sigma Male Sam Spade.
Qué desolación! Qué final!
The real last line of the movie is actually "Huh?"
He look like Michael Corleone
❤️❤️❤️❤️
Let her go!
He got her baby
Girl was trouble
We crave a different kind of buzz?
What does the stuff that dreams are made of mean?
Comes from Shakespeare: In Act IV of The Tempest, Prospero says "We are such stuff / As dreams are made on, and our little life / Is rounded with a sleep".
People always yearns for their dreams, though some have to settle for what reality offers them. Once they see in their sights something that certainly make those dreams a reality, that would do anything to attempt it, by any means necessary. Lies, murder, greed, betrayal, and morals have been displayed in this film to show the lengths men are driven to for "the stuff that dreams are made of".
Thank you both for helping me
Dames
Still not too sure what Sam sees in Brigid. Because from where I'm standing she seems like kind of an awful person all around.
Awful and smokin' hot. She looks absolutely incredulous when being led away that Spade hasn't taken the bait like every man who went before. Reason and the 'right thing' triumphing over lust and the quick buck. She can't understand it and that's why she is awful.
@@kieronjohnson8834 I just don't think that counts as love, then. Like you said, it's just lust.
@@coralroper6876 That's the thing, Spade says ' maybe ' he loves her. Notice that there is no reciprocal response from Brigid, since she doesn't love him. She asks for confirmation of his love but gives none of her own. She needs him to believe she loves him so he won't send her over.
Spade is on the verge of realising his love is just lust. In which case his agonizing over turning her in would be unwarranted and pointless. Spade is not the cold mercenary here, his desire to do right by his partner proves that. Rather he knows he's being played for a sucker yet still seems willing to consider treachery for the outside chance that he could find happiness with this woman. He teeters on the brink, before deciding to do the right thing out of loyalty to his partner and all other detectives.
Huh?
More than a few actors in films tried this exact scene in the 30’s ‘about taking the fall’, one with Bette Davis and I forget the guy. They all flopped.
Bogie got it right.
Joe Burns...that was Warren William in "Satan was a Lady".
So she killed him