Film Noir
Classic Film Noir exposes the myths by which we fulfil our desires and lays flat the means by which we created the audiovisual dispositif — sex — murder — and the suburban dream — 1940 to 1960 — FEATURING: amnesia, paranoid women, lousy husbands, red scare and HUAC, boxing, drifter narratives, crooked cops, home invasion noir, docu-style noir, returning veterans, #KEFAUVER! cowboy noir, vacuum cleaners in film noir, outré noir, espionage noir — and more.
Kitty Foyle (1940)
The Glass Wall (1953)
Terminal Station (1953)
Indiscretion of an American Wife (1953)
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943)
The Black Sleep (1956)
To Have and Have Not (1944)
Unpublished Story (1942)
Tender Comrade (1943)
No Trace (1950)
No Trace (1950) is a writer hero blackmail and bad disguise British mysterious sailor suspenser film noir which has a female seeker hero aspect as it is the writer stabber hero's secretary figure who solves the crime and legworks the solution out of the cheap boartding house walls with Hugh Sinclair and Dinah Sheridan, and starring John Laurie and Barry Morse, yes to le deux, a full and rare "British" combo, John Laurie and Barry Morse, and is at the same time a classic of classic actors who do not for various and whatever reasons feature on this weblog.
The Upturned Glass (1947)
One-Eyed Jacks (1961)
Bigger Than Life (1956)
The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)
All About Eve (1950)
Backfire (1950 )
Jewel Robbery (1932)
Three Silent Men (1940)
The Human Jungle (1954)
Count the Hours (1953)
The Badlanders (1958)
A Star is Born (1954)
I Want To Live! (1958)
The Best Years of our Lives (1946)
Temptation (1946)
Bringing Up Baby (1938)
The Beast with Five Fingers (1946)
Dead Men Are Dangerous (1939)
The Strange Door (1951)
The Long Arm (1956)
Allotment Wives (1945)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939)
The Mummy's Tomb (1942)
The Mummy's Hand (1940)
Victim (1961)
Love Letters (1945)
Ruby Gentry (1952)
The League of Gentlemen (1960)
The League of Gentlemen (1960) is a Basil Dearden criminal melodrama disgruntled and disgraced returning veteran multiple lousy husband heist and caper movie from the cusp of the sixties and the final gasp of the fifties before the post war spirit collapsed into an English society as irony as empire ends style of comedy noir starring Jack Hawkins, Nigel Patrick, Roger Livesey, Richard Attenborough, Bryan Forbes, Kieron Moore, Terence Alexander, Norman Bird, Robert Coote, Melissa Stribling, and Nanette Newman.
Le rouge et mis (1957)
Trois jours à vivre (1957)
The facile dogmas propagated by the critics of Cahiers du Cinéma have too long consigned Gilles Grangier to the purgatory of the supposedly mediocre. They accused him of failing to innovate, as if innovation were a gaudy ornament to be affixed for the pleasure of theoreticians rather than an organic necessity arising from the material of a film.
A Place to Go (1963)
Pink String and Sealing Wax (1945)
I'll Be Seeing You (1944)
I'll Be Seeing You (1944) is a returning veteran PTSD Christmas romance and recovery lost souls and trauma themed prisoner of love during wartime date rape drama of past secrets and emotional struggle, voiceover, and prison movie of a kind, starring Ginger Rogers and Joseph Cotten, as well as Shirlet Temple, directed it is said by both William Dieterle and George Cukor, and produced to the high emotional standards of David O. Selznick, and while not in sense nor measure nor capacity nor style at all a film noir, is a film which does feature a manslaughter or murder and clings close to themes of PTSD and past secrets, most darkly and commonly explored by film noir at this moment, and so with Joseph Cotten commanding an excellent performance, and Ginger Rogers excellently exploring violence against women and rape culture, is clearly an honorary film noir.
Last Train from Gun Hill (1959)
A Man Alone (1955)
Under Capricorn (1949)
Under Capricorn (1949) is an Alfred Hitchcock brooding moral historical sinister housekeeper and class conflict romance outback ranch nine to ten minute tracking shot paranoid women and gaslighting and past catching up with you alcohol themed antipodean love triangle drama classic color film noir farewell to the forties tale of the masochistic extremes of marital fidelity and a gloomy amalgam of shared guilt abjured desire complete with a drugged drink starring Ingrid Bergman, Jospeh Cotten, Cecil Parker, Michael Wilding, Margaret Leighton (as Milly, Flusky's scheming housekeeper), Denis O'Dea as Mr Corrigan, Jack Watling and Harcourt Williams.
Frieda (1947)
Zu Beginn der Basil-Dearden-Filmsaison hattest du noch nie von diesem kraftvollen, vom Holocaust inspirierten Anti-Nazi-Film-noir-Klassiker über einen heimkehrenden Veteranen gehört.
Peking Express (1951)
Peking Express (1951) is a William Dieterle anti-communist yellowface post-war returning veteran trains in noir remake thriller action adventure starring Jospeh Cotten, Corrine Calvet, Edmund Gwenn, Benson Fong, Marvin Miller and Soo Yong.
What follows is a deliberately confrontational act of reinterpretation, an academic recomposition that refuses both ideological timidity and critical fashion. I write not to soothe but to correct, and as I have already declared elsewhere, « la neutralité est la posture préférée de ceux qui n’ont rien à perdre », a statement I repeat here not as ornament but as methodological principle.
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