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film noir

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film Noir


Genre of dark, cynical crime film. Thematically indebted to the ‘hard-boiled’ school of fiction, and stylistically to German expressionism, French poetic realism, and the constraints imposed by B film-making, film noir first appeared in Hollywood in the 1940s and 1950s. Examples are Double Indemnity (1944) by Billy Wilder and In a Lonely Place (1950) by Nicholas Ray.

The classical film noir painted a bleak picture of American society. The world of Out of the Past (1947, directed by Jacques Tourneur), The Big Combo (1955, directed by Joseph H Lewis), and Touch of Evil (1958, directed by Orson Welles) was one of eternal night in which the city took on the contours of a modern-day Hades populated by low-lifes, corrupt officials, ruthless femme fatales, and psychotic gangsters. The pessimistic attitude of these films constituted a significant departure from Hollywood cinema before World War II.

The term film noir was originally coined by French film critics, and as it caught on internationally, it prompted a reappraisal of the old films and the emergence of a new wave of ‘neo-noirs’ such as Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974) and Arthur Penn's Night Moves (1975). In the 1990s, wide-screen, colour noir became one of the staples of genre cinema; for example, The Hot Spot (1990, directed by Dennis Hopper), Deep Cover (1992, directed by Bill Duke), Reservoir Dogs (1992, directed by Quentin Tarantino), and The Last Seduction (1994, directed by John Dahl).

© Research Machines plc 2008. All rights reserved. Helicon Publishing is a division of Research Machines plc.


 
 

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