Film Noir I INTRODUCTION Lynch's Blue Velvet The motion picture Blue Velvet (1986) brought wide acclaim to American director David Lynch.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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Double IndemnityBarbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray are featured in Double Indemnity (1944), a story of lust and greed in the film noirtradition, directed by Billy Wilder.
The film’s events are related in flashbacks by protagonist Walter Neff (MacMurray), whomakes a dying confession about a plot to kill a man for his insurance money.Bettmann/Corbis
Another common aspect of film noir is the femme fatale, a seductive woman who lures the protagonist into actions that ultimately lead to his downfall.
The emotionaltension generated between these characters (sexual attraction pitted against ethical or practical considerations) often lies at the core of film noir and drives the actionand plot.
Despite these specific characteristics, film noir also borrows heavily from other film genres, such as detective movies and thrillers.
Critics were initially divided overwhether to regard film noir as a genre, a style, or a movement.
This division has largely been erased over time, as the genre has become accepted both within theindustry and outside it.
Thus the purist view, that film noir essentially ended with Touch of Evil (directed by Orson Welles, 1958) is no longer widely held.
III HISTORY
Raymond ChandlerAmerican crime-fiction writer Raymond Chandler was one of the leading figures in the so-called hard-boiled school ofdetective writing during the 1920s and 1930s.
Chandler’s famous detective, Philip Marlowe, epitomized the tough,unsentimental point of view of this style.Bettmann/Corbis
Film noir has its roots in a fusion of the 1930s horror style and the detective and gangster subgenres, without the aspects of the supernatural or concerns about thesocial origins of crime.
Literary sources include the “hard-boiled” private-eye novels of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, the novels of James M.
Cain, and thestories of Cornell Woolrich.
The genre was also influenced by German expressionism of the early 20th century and the poetic realist movement in France in the 1930s . For example, the Hollywood film noir They Live By Night (Nicholas Ray, 1949) is a passionate reworking of the themes of the French film Quai des Brumes (Marcel Carné, 1938)..
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