Film Noir - Varieur Film Studies
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Transcript Film Noir - Varieur Film Studies
French
phrase meaning “black
film”
Film Noir was identified in 1946
following World War II and the
German occupation of France
France
received all the films
America had made during the
war
The influence of Film Noir
emerged out of the two preexisting film movements: German
Expressionism and Italian NeoRealism
Film noir became known because it
started a non-linear movie trend starting
with its flashbacks
Because of the Hays Code, nudity,
homosexuality, suggestive acting, and
profanity were prohibited in film noir
Typically
the 1920’s
Old-fashioned city
Colors: commonly black and
white
The dark set design is used to
express psychological state of
characters
Protagonist:
usually an average
man who is framed
Men are usually tricked
Women are especially important
-femme fatales- mysterious,
double-crossing, gorgeous,
unloving, manipulative, desperate
The
women featured in Noir films
threatened the image of the
traditional role of women
because they often worked in
offices and wished to bring harm
to other characters.
Usually
conflict between
protagonist and society
Murder or crime is involved
Detectives
Typically ends unhappily; there is
no winner
Dark
Fixed
character types
Predictable narrative patterns
Serious or dramatic facial
expressions
Twitching
lips
Shifting eyes
Camera closeups
Verbal wit
Dark
Mysterious
Corruption
and suspicion
Low-key
lighting
Low angle
Wide
angle
Unbalanced
compositions
High-contrast photography
Deep focus cinematography
Camera angle and low-key lighting also
help express the psychological state of
the characters
The
meaninglessness of life
Futility of individual action: for
example, a murder that does not
result with the intended
conclusion
Romance
film noir
-femme fatales
Ex.: Double Indemnity (1944), Detour
(1945)
Documentary-style
film noir
-docu-noir
Ex.: T-men (1948), 711 Ocean Drive
(1950)
Prison
Noir
-set in prison or jail cells
Ex.: Fury (1936), Brute Force (1947)
Menaced-women
noir
-homme fatales
(women are manipulated instead)
Ex.: Gaslight (1944),
Laura (1944)
Neo-noir
-updated film noir
Ex.: Chinatown (1974), Sin City
(2005)
The
Maltese Falcon (1941)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRSCV
2qc2IY
Flashback
(5:50)
Hays Code (16:30) – a lot of
symbolism
Facial expressions (1:39)
Verbal wit http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Gz-5wKegyOw
Crime
Murder
Black
and
white
Voice over
Symbolism
http://www.youtub
e.com/watch?v=v
D6wNNKreug
http://www.youtub
e.com/watch?v=O
5zgg3WCiWk
Flash-forward
(0:00-1:00)
Low-key lighting with occasional
bright light
Brendan is isolated
Verbal wit
(6:55, 55:00)
Manipulative women such as Mia
Wallace (Uma Thurman) and Esmeralda
Villalobos (Angela Jones)
World
War II
Film industry was weak
War films
Office of War Information
Thirty
Seconds Over Tokyo (1944)
-starring Spencer Tracy about
Lieutenant Doolittle who carried
out the raid on Japan
The
Story of GI Joe (1945)
-about the invasion of Italy
during World War II
Modern
Times (1936)
The Great Dictator (1940)
-directed by and starring
Charlie Chaplin
Casablanca
(1942)
To Be or Not to Be (1942)
Lifeboat (1944)
Towards
the end of World War II
Dark and cynical
“black film”
Double
Indemnity (1944)
The
Killers (1946)
Kiss
of Death (1947)
Revived
High Sierra (1941)
To Have and Have Not (1944)
Key Largo (1948)
White Heat (1949)
High Sierra (1941)
To
Have and Have Not (1944)
Key
Largo (1948)
White
Heat (1949)
John
Huston
(director)
-captured classics
-adapted to
modern
Known
cartoon characters are
born such as…
Bugs
Bunny
Tom
and Jerry
Woody
Woodpecker
Mighty
Mouse
Casper
Walt
Disney began to produce
classic animated movies that
have been very well-known
since their releases…
Pinocchio
(1940)
Fantasia
(1940)
Dumbo
(1941)
Bambi
(1942)
Native
Americans
Women, disregarding the Hays
Code
They
Died With
Their Boots On
(1942)
-Crazy Horse
The
Outlaw (1943)
-almost canceled
due to Jane Russell’s attire
-released for a week in 1943
-rereleased in 1946, again in
1947
Duel
in the Sun (1946)
- “Gone with the Wind”
-eight million dollars in the box office
Escape
the horrors of the war
Upbeat and jolly music
End of World War II in 1945
Successful in the box office
Thrill
of a Romance (1945)
Anchors
Aweigh
(1945)
-Frank Sinatra
-Gene Kelly
The
Harvey Girls
(1945)
-Angela Lansbury
-Judy Garland
State
Fair (1945)
The
Dolly Sisters (1945)
Up
in Arms (1945)
Economy
strengthened in 1946
Broadway to the big screen
Television, blacklisting,
McCarthyism, unions, inflation,
anti-trust rulings
http://www.filmsite.org/filmnoir.html
http://www.filmsite.org/40sintro.html
http://www.crimeculture.com/Contents/
Film%20Noir.html
http://www.filmnoirstudies.com/glossary/
index.asp
http://tviewlalabplus.blogspot.com/2007
/10/visual-styles-of-film-noiriconography.html
http://www.filmsite.org/filmnoir2.html
American Cinema American Culture –
Third Edition by John Belton