Film Noir: Reflections in a Dark Mirror
Released: Jan 01, 1989
Publisher: Continuum Intl Pub Group
Format: Paperback, 192 pages
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Description:
With the advent of the Second World War a new mood was discernible in film drama – an atmosphere of disillusion and a sense of foreboding, a dark quality that derived as much from the characters depicted as from the cinematographer’s art. These films, among them such classics as Double Indemnity, The Woman in the Window, Touch of Evil and Sunset Boulevard, emerged retrospectively as a genre in themselves when a film critic referred to them collectively as film noir.Bruce Crowther looks into noir’s literary origins (often in the novels of so-called ‘hard-boiled’ school typified by Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett and Cornell Woolrich), and at how the material translated into the screen, noting in particular influences from German expressionist films and the almost indispensable techniques of flashback and voice-over narration.He also assesses the contribution made by the players – by actors such as Robert Mitchum, Dick Powell, Alan Ladd and John Garfield and actresses such as Barbara Stanwyck, Lizabeth Scott, Joan Crawford and Gloria Grahame, together with a roll-call of supporting players whose screen presence could lend almost any film the noir imprimatur.Noir was in its heyday from 1945 to 1955, a time when paranoia and disillusion, anxiety and violence could be said to have been part of the fabric of American, and particularly Hollywood, society, yet its impact and its influence are with us still – in films as diverse as The French Connection, Chinatown and Body Heat. This book commemorates a special period in film-making and a unique combination of talent resulting in a spectrum of films that are as welcome today on their small screen as they were when they were first shown in the cinema.
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