Marlowe Essay

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    the early 1930s where private detective Phillip Marlowe is hired by General Sternwood because of the recent blackmailing of his teenage daughter. Sternwood played a role in the American oil industry which he profited a large amount of money from the business. Arthur Geiger is responsible for the blackmailing of Sternwood’s daughter. One night detective Marlowe follows Sternwood’s daughter down the street, all the sudden she enters Geiger’s house. Marlowe abruptly approaches the house and a bright flash

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    Philip Marlowe, a private investigator was hired by a wealthy general to help in resolving the blackmailing and gambling debts of his wild daughter, Carmen. Things get off to a quick start in the movie and it immediately begins to unravel, Marlowe suddenly had found himself in a deep web of love triangles, blackmail, murder, gambling, and organized crime. Vivian the oldest daughter of the general, quickly jumps in to help Marlowe and warn him of the dangers to come (sort of). As Marlowe begins to

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    His Love” and “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” by Christopher Marlowe and “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” by Sir Walter Raleigh are pastorals that express the author's’ feelings and thoughts about nature of love. These two poems differ with each other in their tone,imagery and point of view. In “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love”, Christopher Marlowe shows his idea that love is a passion expressed by material substance and his hope that love is long lasted

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    Outline For The Big Sleep

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    set in 1930’s Los Angeles written by Raymond Chandler. Phillip Marlowe is a private detective hired to take care of a blackmailing scheme. General Sternwood is a wealthy old man with two troublesome socialite daughters. The General wants Marlowe to handle a man named Arthur Gwynn Geiger who has some type of dirt on the youngest daughter, Carmen. Upon meeting Marlowe, General Sternwood drops hints that he has an ulterior motive for Marlowe to find his missing son-in-law Rusty Regan, a former bootlegger

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    main character, Philip Marlowe, is a new type of detective who represents someone who makes jokes and seems to be at ease with people of all standing, and the simple fact that Marlowe enjoys the company of women and women enjoy his company also sets him apart from the rest of the detectives of the time period (Dugdale). Despite the many similarities existing within the plot and characters such as Carmen Sternwood, a few key changes within the depiction of Detective Philip Marlowe differentiate the masterful

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    Christopher Marlowe is well known for his tragic Marlovian character, the morally ambiguous hero. Barabas of The Jew of Malta is a prime example. His character is greedy, ruthless, and the murderer of the citizens of Malta. Yet the audience still roots for this character as he commits sin after sin in the name of justice. He is ambitious and charismatic, and unjust circumstances earn him sympathy. Shakespeare, inspired by the idea of a villainous hero, creates a marlovian character with a twist.

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    Sleep it is man versus man. In the story General Sternwood is being blackmailed with provocative photos of his youngest daughter, the general believes it is Arthur Gwynn Geiger. This is the conflict because throughout the novel the private detective Marlowe is trying to solve if it is indeed Arthur Gwynn Geiger or if it is some else who is blackmailing General Sternwood. However, at the end Owen Taylor the Sternwood’s chauffeur kills Geiger to clear Carmen’s name although his death is unclear. The

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    known as a famous 1946 mystery film by Howard Hanks, and it is known for its “impossibly twisted story line” (Sluyter 33). The main character is Philip Marlowe, a private detective who is hired by General Sternwood. Behind the obvious facts about the film, this cinema is supposed to not only look “lot like the six realms” of Samsara while Marlowe is supposed to represent us as individuals working our way through these six realms and find a way to achieve enlightenment (Sluyter 35). Overall, by picking

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    The Characterization of Phillip Marlowe, Carmen Sternwood, Vivian Reagan and General Sternwood allows the reader to understand who these characters are, if they changed as a result of events that occurred though out the book and how they work together to answer the developed themes of the book. The novel is written in the perspective of Phillip Marlowe, therefore the readers know about Marlowe’s thoughts, intentions and whereabouts throughout the book. Marlowe is a private detective who is hired

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    The Big Sleep Heroism

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    Big Sleep, in which Philip Marlowe is hired to investigate the blackmail of a rich man with two troublesome, fun-loving daughters. As Marlowe gains more information throughout the course of his investigation, he becomes closer with the daughters, Vivian and Carmen Sternwood, and learns many dirty secrets about the family and people close to them. This becomes as much of an exploration of the exploitation of General Sternwood, as much as it is an exploration of Marlowe himself and his role in life

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