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== Film adaptation ==
== Film adaptation ==
{{main|The Laughing Policeman (film)}}
{{main|The Laughing Policeman (film)}}
The novel was adapted for film in 1973. [[Walter Matthau]] played the lead role, though his character was called "Jake Martin". The action was relocated to [[San Francisco]], [[California]], and many plot points were altered.
The novel was adapted for film in 1973. [[Walter Matthau]] played the lead role, though his character was called "Jake Martin." The action was relocated to [[San Francisco]], [[California]], and many plot points were altered.


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Revision as of 07:21, 5 June 2013

The Laughing Policeman
1st English edition
AuthorSjöwall and Wahlöö
Original titleDen skrattande polisen
LanguageSwedish
SeriesMartin Beck series
PublisherNorstedts Förlag (Swedish)
Pantheon Books (English)
Publication date
1968
Publication placeSweden
Published in English
1970
Pages240 pp
Preceded byThe Man on the Balcony 
Followed byThe Fire Engine That Disappeared 

The Laughing Policeman (1968), by Sjöwall and Wahlöö, is the fourth police detective novel, in the ten-part 'Martin Beck' series. Originally published in Sweden in 1968 as Den skrattande polisen, it is the first novel in the series to criticize the shortcomings of the Swedish welfare state. [citation needed] In 1971, The Laughing Policeman earned a 'Best Novel' Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. The American police procedural film, The Laughing Policeman (1973) featuring Walter Matthau, is a loose adaptation of the novel.

Explanation of the title

The novel's title, The Laughing Policeman, derives from a 1922 song so titled: Detective Beck receives the record as a Christmas gift from his daughter, Ingrid, but does not think it a funny joke, yet, Beck's first laugh, comes when the dead Det. Åke Stenström is vindicated.

Plot

A gunman shoots the passengers of a public transport bus with a sub-machine gun; he kills eight people (including Detective Åke Stenström), and wounds one. Detective Beck and his team suspect the mass-murder is to disguise the murder of Detective Stenstrom, who was spending his free time investigating the sixteen-year-old murder of a Portuguese prostitute.

Character development

To solve the case, several outsiders are called: Detective Richard Ullholm (a reactionary who informs on his fellow officers as a hobby); Per Månsson (introduced in a previous novel; is the man who can find anything); and detective Ulf Nordin (the most tenacious investigator). Åsa Torrell, Stenström's girlfriend, plays a significant, emotional, part in the story, and, after slowly recovering from the shock of her boyfriend's murder, admits to planning to join the police.

Film adaptation

The novel was adapted for film in 1973. Walter Matthau played the lead role, though his character was called "Jake Martin." The action was relocated to San Francisco, California, and many plot points were altered.

Preceded by "Martin Beck" timeline, part 4 of 10 Succeeded by