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What’s Happening in 2010

The Mask of Dimitrios

I will be reviewing a big backlog of noirs this year, and widening my focus to include reviews of noir fiction and books of commentary.  Reviews will generally be shorter than in the past, with an emphasis on a particular feature of interest.

Movies slated for review include:

A Colt is My Passport (1967 Japan)
The Amazing Mr. X (1948)
Asphalt (1929 Germany)
La Chienne (1931 France)
Harikomi (aka Stakeout 1958 Japan)
The Las Vegas Story (1952)
Leave her to Heaven (1946)
The Long Night (1947)
The Mask Of Dimitrios (1944)
Obsession (1948 UK)
Obsession (1949)
Odd Man Out(1947 UK)
Of Missing Persons (1956 Argentina)
Out of the Past (1947)
Phantom Lady (1944)
The Phenix City Story (1955)
Private Hell 36 (1954)
Pursued (1947)
Railroaded (1947)
Raw Deal (1948)
Scandal Sheet (1952)
The Second Woman (1950)
The Sleeping City (1950)
The Sound of Fury (1950)
Strange Illusion (1945)
The Strange Love Martha Ivers (1946)
Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
Tread Softly Stranger (1958 UK)
The Unfaithful(1947)
The Unsuspected (1947)
The Web (1947)
The Well (1951)
The Woman On the Beach (1947)
Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950)
World For Ransom (1954)

> Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 5:37 pm

January 9, 2010


L.A. 1939: Ask the dust

MaxYavno-Underneath-Third-Avenue-El-1938
Max Yavno (Los Angeles: Underneath Third Avenue El -  1938)

I am currently reading a very interesting book, Unless the Threat of Death Is Behind Them: Hard-Boiled Fiction and Film Noir (2006 The Johns Hopkins University Press) by John T. Irwin, which studies five novels and the films based on them – The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, Double Indemnity, High Sierra, and Night Has a Thousand Eyes.  Irwin’s thesis seems to be that noir is concerned with death metaphysically as life-in-being and death also in an existential sense bred of social alienation.  The following excerpts for me express the kind of prose Irwin is concerned with, and are passages from my own reading that have particularly struck me as being relevant.

“I went up to my room, up the dusty stairs of Bunker Hill, past the soot-covered frame buildings along that dark street, sand and oil and grease choking the futile palm trees standing like dying prisoners, chained to a little plot of ground with black pavement hiding their feet. Dust and old buildings and old people sitting at windows, old people tottering out of doors, old people moving painfully along the dark street. The old folk from Indiana and Iowa and Illinois, from Boston and Kansas City and Des Moines, they sold their homes and their stores, and they came here by train and by automobile to the land of sunshine, to die in the sun, with just enough money to live until the sun killed them, tore themselves out by the roots in their last days, deserted the smug prosperity of Kansas City and Chicago and Peoria to find a place in the sun. And when they got here they found that other and greater thieves had already taken possession, that even the sun belonged to the others; Smith and Jones and Parker, druggist, banker, baker, dust of Chicago and Cincinnati and Cleveland on their shoes, doomed to die in the sun, a few dollars in the bank, enough to subscribe to the Los Angeles Times, enough to keep alive the illusion that this was paradise, that their little papier-mache homes were castles. The uprooted ones, the empty sad folks, the old and the young folks, the folks from back home. These were my countrymen, these were the new Californians. With their bright polo shirts and sunglasses, they were in paradise, they belonged. But down on Main Street, down on Towne and San Pedro, and for a mile on lower Fifth Street were the tens of thousands of others; they couldn’t afford sunglasses or a four-bit polo shirt and they hid in the alleys by day and slunk off to flop houses by night. A cop won’t pick you up for vagrancy in Los Angeles if you wear a fancy polo shirt and a pair of sunglasses. But if there is dust on your shoes and that sweater you wear is thick like the sweaters they wear in the snow countries, he’ll grab you. So get yourselves a polo shirt boys, and a pair of sunglasses, and white shoes, if you can. Be collegiate. It’ll get you anyway. After a while, after big doses of the Times and the Examiner, you too will whoop it up for the sunny south. You’ll eat hamburgers year after year and live in dusty, vermin-infested apartments and hotels, but every morning you’ll see the mighty sun, the eternal blue of the sky, and the streets will be full of sleek women you never will possess, and the hot semi-tropical nights will reek of romance, you’ll never have, but you’ll still be in paradise, boys, in the land of sunshine.”

- John Fante, Ask the Dust (1939)

“No feelings at all was exactly right. I was as hollow and empty as the spaces between the stars. . . . Out there in the night of a thousand crimes people were dying, being maimed, cut by flying glass, crushed against steering wheels or under heavy tires. People were being beaten, robbed, strangled, raped, and murdered. People were hungry, sick; bored, desperate with loneliness or remorse or fear, angry, cruel, feverish, shaken by sobs. A city no worse than others, a city rich and vigorous and full of pride, a city lost and beaten and full of emptiness. It all depends on where you sit and what your own private score is. I didn’t have one. I didn’t care.”

- Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep (1939)

> Articles,Books,Lobby,Noir Cities — Tony D'Ambra @ 10:13 am

January 7, 2010


The Year in Review: 2009

I Wake Up Screaming (1941)

Joel Bocko of  The Sun’s Not Yellow yearly roundup of posts from his Blogroll has given me the idea to highlight some of my posts from the past year.  My next post will look at what I have planned for 2010.

My commitment to blogging has waxed and waned this year, and I have not been as prolific as 2008, but I did pursue my writing of short fiction pieces inspired by my interest in film noir, and these are collected here: Noir Fiction.

Other 2009  posts on movies I found particularly interesting:

The Lost Weekend (1945): “I can’t take quiet desperation”

Christ in Concrete (1949): Simply a masterpiece

Caged (1950): “the plot of our life sweats in the dark like a face”

I Wake Up Screaming (1941): Bizarre Transference

Le quai des brumes (Port of Shadows – France 1938): Poetic Realism

> Links,Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 1:40 pm

December 28, 2009


Patterns (1956): Corporate Noir

Ruthless machinations in the executive suite.  An older executive with a social conscience is ‘pushed’ to make way for a younger talented manager from a regional office. Murder by another name.  Rod Serling’s 1954 tele-play hit the big screen in 1956 with powerhouse performances from Van Heflin, Ed Begley, and Everett Sloane.

YouTube Preview Image

Patterns (of Power) United Artists (1956) Dir: Fielder Cook | DP: Boris Kaufman

> Films,Lobby,Trailers — Tony D'Ambra @ 8:52 pm

December 27, 2009


Christmas Noir

Kiss Me Deadly (1955)

In the opening sequence of Robert Aldrich’s Kiss Me Deadly (1955), on Mike Hammer’s  car radio after picking up the panting Christina, the radio announcer introduces then plays the Nat King Cole recording, Rather Have the Blues:

The night is mighty chilly, and conversation seems pretty silly
I feel so mean and wrought, I’d rather have the blues than what I’ve got.
The room is dark and gloomy, you don’t know what you’re doing to me
The way it has got me caught, I’d rather have the blues than what I’ve got.

All night, I walk the city, watching the people go by.
I try to sing a little ditty, but all that comes out is a sigh.
The street looks very frightening, the rain begins and then comes lightning.
It seems love’s gone to pot, I’d rather have the blues than what I’ve got…

> Articles,Films,Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 8:16 pm

December 25, 2009


Recess Noir

thechase1946

FilmsNoir.Net will be in recess for a couple of weeks.  Meantime here is a list of camp b-noirs to watch while I am away:

The Chase (1946) Insane hoods pursue shell-shocked vet. Totally surreal obscure noir melodrama (?) like no other movie you have ever seen.

I Love Trouble (1948) Hot-jive noir. Laughs and smooth-as-nylons repartee, while guys get slapped hard, drugged, and slugged from behind.

I Married a Communist (1949) Commies as hoods. Never flags. Erotic fission and violent noir pyrotechnics make for enthralling & wild ride.

Shock (1946) Perverse b-noir. Murder witness goes catatonic. Her shrink is the killer. A dark Lynn Bari smolders. Enticingly preposterous!

Strange Illusion (1945) Bizarre Hamlet remake. Edgar Ulmer turns PRC b into camp expressionist noir of foul villains with a knockout finale.

The Unsuspected (1947) Camp noir! Curtiz directs, Woody Bredell lenses, Waxman scores, Claude Rains over-acts, and Audrey Totter is a hoot!

Woman on the Run (1950) Intelligent b-thriller set on the streets, tenements, dives, and wharves of Frisco, with a roller-coaster climax.

> Lobby — Tony D'Ambra @ 10:42 pm

December 4, 2009


The dreams are theirs

Man With a Horn (1950)

The dreams are theirs. Those with the easy laughter and healthy complexions. They are comfortable in their  designer skins. Making the ‘hard’ decisions for us. You have your anger. You hold it tight lest they take that too.  Easy to nurture and never absent, it goes where you go – “uptown, downtown, all around”. You know anger, you know pain, like Jack knew time. Dead now, his sodden soul awash in the lees of a bottle of rye glistening in the gutter, the peeling label his epitaph. The night is cool and the streets of perdition are sweetly rank with rotting garbage and dead hopes.  You grew up in these streets by the light of day, and the street-lamp.  Streets alive with palpable energy and unbounded love.  The old man with his beer on the stoop on a balmy summer night.  Your mother old before her time holding your angelic little sister by the hand recalling faded dreams of a new start and a better life.  The cacophony of kids playing mad games on the pavement and the idle gossip of adults that had you enthralled.  Day by day it all slipped away into that dark place where time and happiness go, along with your dreams. Gone forever.

> Lobby,Noir Poetry & Fiction — Tony D'Ambra @ 10:18 am

November 26, 2009


Cinematic Cities: Brooklyn

Glengarry Glen Ross (1992)

Glengarry Glen Ross (1992)
Director  James Foley | DP  Juan Ruiz Anchia

Entrapment, futility, and malevolent fate in the dog day night of urban dreams. Savage sharks in suits, borderline psychotics selling real-estate, and weary losers.

> Lobby,Noir Cities — Tony D'Ambra @ 2:38 pm

November 25, 2009


film noir
film noir