Title: Lecture 5: The Many Forms of Noir
1Lecture 5The Many Forms of Noir
L.A. Confidential (1997)
Directed by Curtis Hanson
2This Lesson
- Towards a definition of Film Noir, History and
Influences - Examples of Film Noir
- L.A. Confidential, Noir and the LAPD
Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946) Directed
by Howard Hawks
3Towards a Definition of Film Noir
The Night of the Hunter (1955)
Directed by Charles
Laughton
4What is Film Noir?
- Film Noir is hard to define but relatively easy
to recognize. - It encompasses a wide range of film genres from
gothic horror to science fiction, detective,
thriller and comic book movies. - Naremore There is no completely satisfactory way
to organize noir despite scores of books and
essays on it, nobody is sure whether the films
constitute a period, a genre, a cycle, a style or
a phenomenon.
5The Film Noir and the French
- Film Noir as an idea evolved in Post WWII France
when French critics grouped together a handful of
Hollywood movies, including The Maltese Falcon,
Double Indemnity, Laura and Murder, My Sweet. - The French had a sophisticated film culture and
they treated movies like art rather than
commercial entertainment. - They also saw the reflection of shadowy French
melodramas from the 1930s.
6The Film Noir Paradox
- Film Noir as a genre/category was named by
critics not filmmakers, who didnt speak of film
noir until well after it was established as a
feature of academic writing. - Naremore argues that Film Noir belongs as much to
the history of ideas, as to the history of
cinema. - The paradox of Film Noir as he sees it is that it
is both an important cinematic legacy and an idea
we have projected onto the past.
7Standard History
- The standard histories say that Noir originated
in America out of the synthesis of hard-boiled
fiction and German Expressionism. - The term is also associated with certain visual
and narrative traits, including low-key
photography, images of wet city streets,
pop-Freudian characterizations, and romantic
fascination with femme fatales.
8Hard-boiled Fiction
- A tough, unsentimental style of American crime
writing that brought a new tone of realism or
naturalism to detective fiction. - Hard-boiled fiction used graphic sex and
violence, vivid but often sordid urban
backgrounds, and fast-paced, slangy dialogue.
Credit for the invention of the genre belongs to
Dashiell Hammett, who wrote The Maltese Falcon
and the Thin Man. - Raymond Chandler, who wrote The Big Sleep, was
another famous practitioner.
9German Expressionism
- A term for a mode of literary or visual art
which, in extreme reaction against realism or
naturalism, presents a world violently distorted
under the pressure of intense personal moods,
ideas, and emotions image and language express
feeling and imagination rather than represent
external reality. Although not an organized
movement, it influenced the painting, drama,
poetry, and cinema of German-speaking Europe
between 1910 and 1924. Literary Dictionary -
10Example
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)
Directed by Robert Wiene
11Narrative Aspects of Film Noir
- Often manifested as a crime story detective,
mystery or thriller. - Features anti-heroes and femme fatales
- Characters motivated by (sexual) desire
- Stories usually hinge on something tragic or
shameful from a characters past - Cynical, anti-establishment, anti-social
- Convoluted structure, flashbacks
- Moral ambiguity, Existential attitude
- (Weary) voice-over narration
12Other Formal Aspects
- Low key, chiaroscuro lighting interplay between
light and shadow - Darkness
- Gritty urban mise-en-scene
- Melancholy, sensual scores, often jazz-based
- Dutch angles, low-angle shots and wide-angle
shots emphasize Surreal nature
13Representation of Race and Ethnicity in Noir
- The heroes of film noirs especially in its
heyday, but even more recently are almost
exclusively white men. Though flawed, these
white, male anti-heroes are often presented as
being basically good men who have been corrupted
or lost their way. - When non-white characters and minorities are
represented in noir films, they are usually seen
as minor characters, villains, or supporters of
the white protagonists.
14Representation of Gender and Sexuality in Noir
- Gender conventions are very traditional in noir,
with men represented as active protagonists and
women falling into two basic categories - Helpless and in need of saving
- Sexually independent and therefore dangerous
- Noir, like most genre cinema, also represents
heterosexuality as the norm. Gays and lesbians
are rarely represented, and when they are, they
are often seen as deviant.
15Examples of Film Noir
The Dark Knight (2008)
Directed by Christopher Nolan
161940s
- The Maltese Falcon (1941) John Huston
- Shadow of a Doubt (1943) Alfred Hitchcock
- Laura (1944) Otto Preminger
- Double Indemnity (1944) Billy Wilder
- The Big Sleep (1946) Howard Hawks
- Notorious (1946) Alfred Hitchcock
- Out of the Past (1947) Jacques Tourneur
- Pause the lecture and watch the clip from Double
Indemnity.
16
171950s
- The Asphalt Jungle (1950) John Huston
- Gun Crazy (1950) Joseph H. Lewis
- Sunset Boulevard (1950) Billy Wilder
- In a Lonely Place (1950) Nicholas Ray
- Kiss me Deadly (1955) Robert Aldrich
- The Night of the Hunter (1955) Charles Laughton
- Touch of Evil (1958)
- Pause the lecture and watch the clip from Touch
of Evil
181960s and 1970s
- Cape Fear (1962) J. Lee Thompson
- The Manchurian Candidate (1962) John
Frankenheimer - Point Blank (1967) John Boorman
- The Long Goodbye (1973) Robert Altman
- Chinatown (1974) Roman Polanski
- Farewell, My Lovely (1975) Dick Richards
- The Drowning Pool (1975) Stuart Rosenberg
- Taxi Driver (1976) Martin Scorsese
18
191980s and 1990s
- Body Heat (1981) Lawrence Kasdan
- Blood Simple (1984) The Coen Brothers
- Batman (1989) Tim Burton
- Basic Instinct (1992) Paul Verhoeven
- Reservoir Dogs (1992) Quentin Tarantino
- The Last Seduction (1993) John Dahl
- Heat (1995) Michael Mann
- Out of Sight (1998) Steven Soderberg
- Pause the lecture and watch the clip from Batman
19
202000s
- Memento (2000), Insomnia (2002), Batman Begins
(2005) Christopher Nolan - Minority Report (2002) Steven Spielberg
- Road to Perdition (2002) Sam Mendes
- Collateral (2004), Miami Vice (2006) Michael
Mann - Sin City (2005) Robert Rodriquez
- Brick (2005) Rian Johnson
- Pause the lecture and watch the clip from
Minority Report
21L.A. Confidential, Noir and the LAPD
L.A. Confidential (1997)
Directed by Curtis Hanson
Lesson 5 Part III
22Noir and the LAPD
- Los Angeles policemen have been at the center of
many film noirs and Los Angles crime stories. - Though cops are sometimes the heroes, the LAPD is
often presented at extremes as either corrupt or
as ineffectually bureaucratic. - LA Confidential represents both these extremes in
the characters of White, Exley and Captain
Dudley.
22
23Bloody Christmas
- The riot at the beginning of the film, in which
the LAPD officers beat down defenseless Mexican
prisoners, was on based on a real incident that
forced the LAPD to make some changes in how it
did business. - However, problems between the LAPD and the public
and particularly between the LAPD and African
Americans and Mexican Americans, continued (and
continue). - The film was made only several years after Rodney
King and the early 90s L.A. riots.
24Noir and L.A. Confidential
- Crime/Detective/Cop film
- Features anti-heroes and femme fatales
- Characters motivated by (sexual) desire
- Stories usually hinge on something tragic or
shameful from a characters past - Cynical, anti-establishment, anti-social
- Convoluted structure, flashbacks
- Moral ambiguity, Existential attitude
- (Weary) voice-over narration
24
25Noir and L.A. Confidential
- Low key, chiaroscuro lighting interplay between
light and shadow - Darkness
- Gritty urban mise-en-scene
- Melancholy, sensual scores, often jazz-based
- Dutch angles, low-angle shots and wide-angle
shots emphasize Surreal nature - 1990s style of action, violence, language and
sexuality.
25
26Race and Ethnicity in the Movie
- Though the movie is critical of the LAPD tactics
in handling minorities and features whites as
criminals, it is far more complex in its
portrayal of white men then it is of any other
race, ethnicity or gender. - Even though the treatment of Mexican Americans
and African Americans in the movie is condemned
as brutal and racist, the movie still portrays
all its non-white characters as low class and
criminal.
27Race and Ethnicity in the Movie (Continued)
- Even the primary villain has an Irish brogue
while the three heroes Exley, White and
Vincennes are white male Anglo Saxons. Though
they are presented as flawed and corrupt in
certain ways, each is given a character arc that
allows them to change morally and to make
honorable choices. - Typical for noir, no minority character gets this
arc.
28Representation of Gender
- All the women in the film are represented in
typical ways for noir - as either helpless and in need of saving (Whites
character is a self-styled woman savior), - or as sexually independent and thus threatening
to men. - Lynn (Kim Basingers character) is seen as both.
- In the movie, women are only valued for their
beauty and sexuality.
28
29 End of Lecture 5