The.long.goodbye.1973.720p.bluray.x264-amiable -publichd- Jun 2026
Today, most people stream or download from Netflix, Amazon, or Disney+. Torrenting still exists, but the classic “scene” is a shadow of its former self: release groups now leak to private trackers (PTP, BTN, HDBits) rather than public indexers.
Unlike Chandler’s novel, Altman’s Marlowe eventually discovers that Terry did kill his wife. The final scene—Marlowe walking away after shooting Terry, humming the title song—is one of cinema’s most cynical endings. It’s a perfect “long goodbye” to the old Hollywood detective.
Scene releases always include an .sfv file for checksums. If your download lacks that, the file may have been modified or repacked. You can search for The.Long.Goodbye.1973.720p.BluRay.X264-AMIABLE.sfv on archives like srrdb.com to get the original CRC. The.Long.Goodbye.1973.720p.BluRay.X264-AMIABLE -PublicHD-
: Manageable storage footprint without sacrificing the film's unique texture.
Set in 1970s Hollywood (not the 1940s or 1950s), Marlowe wanders through a world he no longer fits. His friend Terry Lennox (Jim Bouton) asks for a ride to Mexico, then is accused of murdering his wife. Marlowe refuses to believe Terry is guilty and finds himself tangled with gangster Marty Augustine (a terrifying Mark Rydell), a drunk writer Roger Wade (Sterling Hayden), and his wife Eileen (Nina van Pallandt). Today, most people stream or download from Netflix,
Just finished watching The.Long.Goodbye.1973.720p.BluRay.X264-AMIABLE -PublicHD- and it’s still the definitive way to experience Altman’s masterpiece for anyone who grabbed it back in the day.
This indicates the source is the retail BluRay disc (presumably the 2014 Kino Lorber). Not a HDTV broadcast, webrip, or upscale. The final scene—Marlowe walking away after shooting Terry,
Robert Altman’s 1973 masterpiece, , is a neon-soaked, subverted take on the hard-boiled detective genre. This specific release— The.Long.Goodbye.1973.720p.BluRay.X264-AMIABLE —captures the sun-bleached, hazy aesthetic of Vilmos Zsigmond’s revolutionary cinematography in a crisp, high-definition format. The Film: A "Rip Van Marlowe" Story
On release, The Long Goodbye confused audiences expecting Bogart. Roger Ebert gave it 3.5/4 stars, but many critics called it meandering. Over decades, it became a cult masterpiece. Today, it sits at and is in the Criterion Collection (spine #1118).