Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Getting The Bird, Part 1: The Anti-Climax

The Maltese Falcon focuses on the eponymous statue of a black bird, described by Gutman as having an enamel overlay atop gold and gems in the shape of a falcon. However, when Spade, Gutman, Brigid, Cairo, and Wilmer are all together and the bird's enamel is tested by Gutman's knife, they discover it to be a fake, presumably prepared and planted for them by the previous owner.

It's an anti-climactic end. After everything else that occurs in the novel, at least three murders and the destruction of a ship, on top of whatever Gutman and his gang did to swindle it in the first place, the statue is simply lead and enamel, it's disappointing. Gutman laughs it off and characterizes the disappointment as merely another step in his years of seeking the falcon and he and whoever will join him (with an invitation to Spade) will continue seeking it. Gutman assumes the Russian general, Kemidov, they stole the bird from produced a fake to throw them off, not thinking, in the Falcon's long, tortured history, it might be the statue Kemidov had, himself falsely believing it was the real falcon (if so, then why he never removed the enamel is never addressed), or even that this statue is the statute in question, either the one that had always existed or something around which stories had grown and evolved. Either way, Gutman sees himself as the next to possess the bird, even if it seems he doesn't see far enough to understand he'll just be another piece of its history.

But Gutman isn't the protagonist: Spade is. It's easy to forget it's not about finding the falcon but about Spade maintaining his own professional integrity and clearing any doubt about his own innocence regarding Archer's murder. Refocusing our attention on Spade means seeing the revelation of Archer's murderer, a successful identification, as the climax rather than discovering the falcon is a fake.

But that's not as interesting.

The falcon is what's interesting, with its mystique, singularity, and value. Having the falcon means having a piece of history. It's value can be considered in the materials that went into its construction, the artful craftsmanship that brought them together, and the long, sordid past that has seen it hidden. But, as addressed, this isn't the falcon we get at the novel's end. What we do get is, well, worthless.

What would it mean if Gutman obtained the real falcon? For Spade, a payout and having to keep quiet, or still turn them over, but then have to deal with the real falcon. That would be an entirely different story, and likely not one Spade would be interested in (finding the bird means finding Archer's killer, after all: Spade has to deal with Iva next, not statuary). What's more, it would represent, for Gutman, a success after years of searching and whatever nefarious acts he was engaged in, validating crime. Villains victorious, even if they are arrested, and that's not how detective novels end. That story would need to focus on Gutman, not Spade. Spade's role as protagonist almost guarantees Gutman's capture and his loss of the falcon.

What, then, does the false bird represent?

I would argue, something more significant than the false one. As something mundane but believed to be worthwhile, a sad truth where one expects a great treasure, it's possible to see the falcon as representative of those changes, that shift to modernism, that helped mark Hammett's fiction as so different from Doyle's.

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