Mike Hammer
Michael "Mike" Hammer is a fictional character created by the American author Mickey Spillane in the 1947 book I, the Jury. Hammer is a no-holds-barred private investigator who carries a.45 M1911A1 in a shoulder holster under his left arm. His love for his secretary Velda is outweighed only by his willingness to kill a killer. Hammer's best friend is Pat Chambers, Captain of Homicide NYPD. Hammer was a World War II army veteran who spent two years fighting jungle warfare in the Pacific theatre against Japan.
Creation
In 1946, Spillane, an established comic-book writer, worked with illustrator Mike Roy to create the private-eye character Mike Danger for proposed comic-book or comic-strip publication. Unable to sell the project as a comic, he reworked the story as the novel I, the Jury, converting Mike Danger to Mike Hammer and supporting character Holly to Velda.Character
While pulp detectives such as Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe are hard-boiled and cynical, Hammer is in many ways the archetypal "hard man": brutally violent, and fueled by a genuine rage against violent crime that never afflicts Raymond Chandler's or Dashiell Hammett's heroes. In The Big Kill Hammer describes himself to a bargirl as a misanthrope. Spillane admitted to pulp writer Carroll John Daly, generally regarded as the inventor of the hard-boiled private eye figure, that Hammer was also loosely modeled on Race Williams, Daly's most frequently used detective character.While other hardboiled heroes bend and manipulate the law, Hammer often views it as an impediment to justice, the one virtue he holds in absolute esteem. Hammer nevertheless has a strong respect for the majority of police, realizing they have a difficult job and their hands are frequently tied by the law when trying to stop criminals.
Hammer is also patriotic and anti-communist. The novels are peppered with remarks by Hammer supporting American troops in Korea, and in Survival...Zero Vietnam. In One Lonely Night, where Hammer attends a communist meeting in a park, his reaction to the speaker's propaganda is a sarcastic "Yeah."
So far as violence is concerned, the Hammer novels leave little to the imagination. Written in the first person, Hammer describes his violent encounters with relish. In all but a few novels, Hammer's victims are often left vomiting after a blow to the stomach or groin.
Hammer is an ageless character. Spillane said of his character: "See, heroes never die. John Wayne isn't dead, Elvis isn't dead. Otherwise you don't have a hero. You can't kill a hero. That's why I never let him get older."
The Washington Times obituary of Spillane said of Hammer, "In a manner similar to Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry, Hammer was a cynical loner contemptuous of the 'tedious process' of the legal system, choosing instead to enforce the law on his own terms."
Novels
By Mickey Spillane
- I, the Jury
- My Gun is Quick
- Vengeance Is Mine!
- One Lonely Night
- The Big Kill
- Kiss Me, Deadly
- The Girl Hunters
- The Snake
- The Twisted Thing - chronologically follows after Lady, Go Die!
- The Body Lovers
- Survival... Zero!
- The Killing Man
- Black Alley
By Mickey Spillane with [Max Allan Collins]
- The Goliath Bone - chronologically follows after King of the Weeds
- The Big Bang - chronologically follows after The Will To Kill
- Kiss Her Goodbye - chronologically follows after Survival... Zero!
- Lady, Go Die! - chronologically follows after I, the Jury
- Complex 90 - chronologically follows after The Big Bang
- King of the Weeds - chronologically follows after Black Alley
- Kill Me, Darling - chronologically follows after Kiss Me, Deadly
- Murder Never Knocks - chronologically follows after Complex 90
- The Will To Kill - chronologically follows after The Snake
- Killing Town - chronologically precedes I, the Jury
- Murder, My Love - chronologically follows after Masquerade for Murder
- Masquerade for Murder - chronologically follows after The Killing Man
Short stories
By Mickey Spillane
- The Night I Died
- The Duke Alexander
- The Killing Man
- Black Alley
By Mickey Spillane with Max Allan Collins
- The Big Switch
- A Long Time Dead
- Grave Matter
- Skin
- So Long, Chief
- It's In The Book
- Fallout
- A Dangerous Cat
- A Long Time Dead: A Mike Hammer Casebook, and It's In The Book )
- Tonight My Love
In other media
Movies
Feature films
- I, the Jury, filmed in 3-D starring Biff Elliot as Mike Hammer.
- Kiss Me Deadly, Robert Aldrich was the director, Ralph Meeker was cast as Hammer, while Maxine Cooper portrayed Hammer's sexy secretary/companion Velda.
- My Gun Is Quick, Robert Bray was cast as Hammer, with more of the violence originating from the villain than the detective. The film grossed $308,000 with a total of $602 overseas.
- The Girl Hunters, Mickey Spillane was given the rare opportunity to portray his own creation in this film. This is one of the few occasions in film history in which the creator of a literary character was later hired to portray that character in a film. Producer Robert Fellows and Spillane planned to follow the film with The Snake but it never materialised.
- I, the Jury, Armand Assante plays a brutal, energetic Hammer opposite Laurene Landon's sexy, athletic Velda in this hard R-rated 80s adaptation written by Larry Cohen and directed by Richard T. Heffron. Considered by the majority of Spillane fans to be the most authentic adaptation of the "psychotic" early Hammer novels.
TV movies
- Margin For Murder, Kevin Dobson plays Hammer in this made-for-TV movie.
- Murder Me, Murder You, Stacy Keach played Hammer in this TV pilot for the TV Series that ran in the 1980s. This update featured a traitor to the U.S. and a daughter Hammer does not know he has.
- More Than Murder, Stacy Keach again played Hammer as a high-stakes poker game is robbed and police Captain Pat Chambers intervenes as the thieves make their getaway. He is shot in the back and then framed as a drug dealer. Hammer makes it his job to clear Pat and find out who nearly killed him.
- The Return of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, Stacy Keach reprises his role as Hammer in this pilot for the third season of his Hammer TV show AKA The New Mike Hammer. In this April 1986 TV movie, a young girl is kidnapped and there is an attempt on the daughter of a well-known actress, after which the kidnapper then turns up dead. Hammer is hired to protect the girl and travels to Los Angeles.
- , Keach reprises his role of Hammer co-starring Lynda Carter, Michelle Phillips and the pre-stardom Jim Carrey. He is asked by a Las Vegas entertainer named Johnny Roman to come to Vegas. Mike refuses, he is then knocked out and dropped literally into Las Vegas.
- Come Die with Me: A Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer Mystery, Rob Estes plays Hammer in this TV movie, opposite Pamela Anderson as his secretary, Velda.
- Mike Hammer: Song Bird – a direct-to-video compilation of Mike Hammer, Private Eye's 1998 episodes of "Songbird: Part 1" and "Songbird: Part 2", where Stacy Keach played Mike Hammer and Shannon Whirry played his secretary Velda.
Television
- A 1954 television pilot was developed starring Brian Keith that was written and directed by Blake Edwards, it was not picked up.
- Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
- Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
- The New Mike Hammer
- Mike Hammer, Private Eye
Comics
In 1956 the Turkish comics artist Oğuz Aral created a parody of Mike Hammer titled Hayk Mammer.
Walt Kelly wrote two parodies of Mike Hammer first published in collections of original work of his Pogo comic strip. They were: "The Bloody Drip - by Mucky Spleen" and "Gore Blimey - The Bloody Drip Writhes Again ".
In 2013 Hermes Press reprinted the complete "Mike Hammer" comic strip, with a special introduction by Max Collins.
Audio
- Radio Series - A December 1952 to October 1954 Mutual Broadcasting System radio series titled That Hammer Guy starred Larry Haines then George Petrie and Ted DeCorsia as Mike Hammer and Jan Miner as Hammer's secretary Velda and the voice of other female characters on the show. It was written by Ed Adamson and was directed by Richard Lewis.
- Audiobooks - An array of Spillane's novels have been produced as audiobooks. Several of these are performed by Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer veteran Stacy Keach. Examples include Black Alley, The Big Kill and The Killing Man. Also, in 2015, Simon & Schuster released the unabridged version of , narrated by Mike Dennis.
- Blackstone Audio Productions - In 2008, Stacy Keach reprised the role of Mike Hammer in the first of a series of radio-style dramas entitled The New Adventures of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer. Keach refers to the production style, that is somewhere between an audiobook and radio drama, as a "radio novel." http://supportforgames.com/The Audie-nominated inaugural production features the episodes, Dangerous Days and Oil and Water. Both were written exclusively for audio by M.J. Elliott and produced with a full cast, music and sound effects in radio drama style by Carl Amari of Falcon Picture Group, who personally selected Elliott to script the Audie Award-nominated dramas. Volume 2 of the series was released in 2009, featuring a 2.5 hour story entitled The Little Death. The story was written exclusively for audio by Max Allan Collins from a story by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins. Volume 3, Encore for Murder, was released in March 2011. All three volumes have been released by Blackstone Audio and star Keach in the title role. Keach also arranges and performs the music featured in the productions and his wife, Malgosia Tomassi, portrays yoga instructor Maya Ricci.
In popular culture
- Novels featuring Hammer were referenced several times in . Both Odo and Miles O'Brien were fans.
- The film The Hebrew Hammer makes a reference to Mike Hammer as well.
- Four direct to video films known as the "Maiku Hama" films were released in Japan:
- * Waga jinsei saiaku no toki, 1994 – https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108509/
- * Harukana jidai no kaidan o, 1995 – https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109991/
- * Wana, 1996 – https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118116/
- * Shiritsu tantei Hama Maiku: Namae no nai mori - 2002 - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0327828/
- The Japanese TV series Detective Mike stars a young detective called 'Hama Mike'.
- The 1986 video game Killed Until Dead by Artech Digital Entertainment features spoofs of famous characters including a "Mike Stammer".
- John Zorn's Spillane is a tribute to Mickey Spillane, which uses quotes of Mike Hammer voiced by John Lurie.
- The popular Canadian band Moist wrote a song titled "Mike Hammer" on their fourth studio album Mercedes 5 and Dime.
- A police detective sarcastically identifies himself as 'Mike Hammer' in El secreto de sus ojos, the Academy Award-winning 2009 Argentine film.