Posted on 01/11/2015 7:45:13 PM PST by Pelham
By:Ray Olson | January 09, 2015
One responder to my previous post, Notes on noir, asked why so many movies are called film noir when, by my lights, theyre not. The simple, somewhat cheeky answer is brand creep: film noir is a bankable label for a crime movie, so its come to be liberally applied. More to the point is that professional film critics by and large dont use as restrictive a definition of noirviz., that the form tells stories about little guys and gals getting a raw deal in a world that never gives them an even chanceas mine, preferring film-stylistic rather than literary-dramatic criteria to establish whats noir. Theyre perfectly entitled to do so, of course, though the characteristics of cinematography, acting, dialogue, and music so important to them I like to think of not as essentials but as highly welcome complements.
Very similar stylistic elements figure in many movies made during the heyday of noir in the 1940s and 50s. Moreover, those elements are used to conjure the Weltanschauung of noir. The collaborations of director Sam Wood and production designer William Cameron Menzies (who coined his own job title on Gone with the Wind) look more noir than the vast preponderance of the real McCoy. But would anyone be comfortable calling the romantic comedy, The Devil and Miss Jones (1941); the small-town exposé, Kings Row (1943); and the profile of baseball great Lou Gehrig, Pride of the Yankees (1943), film noir?
Still, to pick a glorious fr-instance, the devastating last shot of Pride is as cosmically fatalistic as any in the whole corpus of the definitively noir director-cinematographer team of Anthony Mann and John Alton. Gehrig has just said his famous farewell speech (. . . today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of
(Excerpt) Read more at chroniclesmagazine.org ...
“Angel Heart” would certainly qualify for that list...
Here’s a thread you might enjoy
Angel Heart would certainly qualify for that list.”
Another excellent choice.
I’m good with that.
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