
Those of you who’ve explored this site know that I’m a fan of film noir. My main interest is in noir from the ‘40s and ‘50s, but I also love the great neo-noirs from the ‘70s that rival anything from the classic period--films like Chinatown, The Conversation, The Long Goodbye, Klute, Dirty Harry, The French Connection, The Godfather, and Taxi Driver. These are films almost everyone has seen or intends to see, at some point. However, one of the grittiest and most unusual noirs from that era has almost been forgotten, maybe because its title and cast made it sound like it would be a buddy comedy. But make no mistake, Hickey and Boggs is as down and dirty as they get, and should be high on the must-see list for any fan of the hard-boiled genre.

Cosby and Culp play the titular private eyes as a couple of divorced, worn-out losers down to their last dime, and maybe their last hope. We meet them in a nameless gin joint drinking their lunch and discussing whether they can afford to keep their phone. They can’t--not until a “Mr. Rice” calls with a job offer. Hickey (Cosby) finds Mr. Rice sunbathing in Speedos on the beach, all leathery tan and whitened teeth and queasily close to a children’s swing set. Rice wants the boys to find a mysterious woman named Mary Jane, and he’s willing to pay a bit too much for it. Hickey and Boggs end up following a chain of bodies, mobsters, a doomed downtown florist with a buried secret, a Chicano gang, and members of a radical group similar to the Black Panthers, all having something to do with half a million in missing loot from a Pittsburgh bank heist.

Both Hickey and Boggs are still pathetically in love with their ex-wives; but Boggs’ ex is a stripper, and the only way she’ll let him see her now is along with everyone else, as a paying customer at the strip joint. Meanwhile, Hickey attempts with ham-handed humor to win back his wife, a terrific Rosalind Cash. In one of the bleaker moments in the film, when she finally agrees to let down her guard and come to his place, it can’t have happened at a worse time. Cosby brings some real depth and pathos to his situation, in one of the best performances of his career. It’s one of Culp’s best as well. Together, they are completely believable as old friends who end up with nothing in the world but each other to hang on to.

As with any good noir, the story is fragmented and convoluted, with desperate men and women in desperate situations, none of which they completely understand or can control. The real pleasure, however, is in seeing these actors successfully going against type, and in revisiting a lost time in a lost Los Angeles. If you like Ross MacDonald’s Lew Archer series, you’re going to love Hickey and Boggs.
---------