Below: A (probably incomplete) list of films mentioned in Thomas Pynchon’s novel Inherent Vice.
I’ve listed them in the order in which they show up, and also in the editorial style in which they appear—initially, Pynchon separates the release year with a comma or doesn’t give a year at all, before settling on parenthetical citations—with the one quirk of A Summer Place—its year is indicated in brackets. Obviously this inconsistency is actually some kind of super-meaningful clue, a key that will unlock any unresolved mysteries of Inherent Vice—right?
Black Narcissus, 1947
Caligari
Metropolis
Dr. No, 1962
Now, Voyager (1942)
Fort Apache (1948)
He Ran All the Way (1951)
I Walked with a Zombie (1943)
Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Monster (1964)
Roman Holiday (1953)
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Vertigo (1958)
The Big Bounce (1969)
Champion (1949)
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946)
A Summer Place [1959]
The Sea Wolf (1941)
Little Miss Broadway (1938)
My thought about that bracketed year was simply that it was the only time a film was mentioned by a character, as opposed to the narrator-voice. Some super specific grammar rule about brackets within quotations? Or is it the narrator, in his own voice, asserting the date within the character’s comment in order to clarify his character’s film reference? A voice within a voice??
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No, the characters name some of those films in dialogue—sometimes with the parentheses, and with out them! I think it’s a goof.
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