the thin man

Filmed on what MGM considered a B-picture budget and schedule (14 days, which at Universal or Columbia would have been considered extravagant), The Thin Man proved to be “sleeper,” spawning a popular film, radio, and television series. [1]

That’s certainly the case in “The Thin Man ” (1934), a murder mystery in which the murder and the mystery are insignificant compared to the personal styles of the actors. [2]

The Thin Man (1934) is the first installment of a popular series of films casting a sophisticated, glamorous, pleasure-seeking, and urbane husband-wife detective team (William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora Charles). [3]

No one in Sycamore Springs takes death too seriously, of course, and The Thin Man Goes Home employs even more comedy than its predecessors, to the point of having the dignified Loy perform a wild jitterbug. [4]

The Thin Man (1934) is a detective novel by Dashiell Hammett. [5]

View company contact information for The Thin Man on IMDbPro. [6]

This fifth entry in MGM’s off-and-on “Thin Man” series maintains the high production and story values of the first four. [4]

Powell and Myrna Loy co-star as Nick and Nora Charles, a retired detective and his rich wife, playfully in love and both always a little drunk. [2]

Per the title, retired private detective Nick Charles (William Powell) pays a visit to his home town of Sycamore Springs, with wife Nora (Myrna Loy) in tow. [4]

The Thin Man is a 1934 American comic detective film starring William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora Charles, a flirtatious married couple who banter wittily as they solve crimes with ease. [7]

An early draft of the story, written several years before the published version, and now in print in several collections of Hammett’s work, does not mention the main characters of the novel, Nick and Nora Charles, and ends after ten chapters. [5]

Including posters, Academy Awards history, film genres, film terms, film history by decade, trivia, and lots of lists of ‘best’ films, stars, scenes, quotes, resources, etc. [3]

Having just married the lovely and wealthy Nora (Myrna Loy), Nick has no desire to return to sleuthing, but the thrill-seeking Nora eagerly talks him into taking Dorothy’s case. [...] Contrary to popular belief, the title does not refer to star William Powell, but to Edward Ellis, playing the mean-spirited inventor who sets the plot in motion. [1]

Almost as welcome as a shaker full of martinis, The Complete Thin Man Collection represents an eagerly awaited DVD milestone for fans of the fizzy MGM movie series. [8]

Sources:
[1] The Thin Man 1934: Movie and film review from Answers.com
[2] The Thin Man :: rogerebert.com :: Great Movies
[3] The Thin Man (1934)
[4] The Thin Man Goes Home 1944: Movie and film review from
[5] The Thin Man - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[6] The Thin Man (1934)
[7] The Thin Man (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[8] Amazon.com: The Complete Thin Man Collection (The Thin Man

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