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#131941 | |
Power Member
Sep 2012
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![]() She's not great but she has a certain IT factor and mystique about her. For the record, I feel the same about Marilyn Monroe--I 'get' why she is held in high esteem by many film fans but I'm not too taken with her performances, personally. That's not to say there aren't 'wooden' actors and actresses I really like watching no matter the movie. I like Jean Seberg, and she was VERY wooden. I like Keanu Reeves. |
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#131942 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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okay, but correct me if I'm wrong... the 'noir' part doesn't necessarily refer to black, like in black and white films... it only refers to the tone of the films.
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#131943 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I've seen all of the classic-era noir movies on that list, save for Journey into Fear, but there are a few entries from the 1990s and such that I have not yet seen. I still have not seen State of Grace, Hard Eight, Devil in a Blue Dress, Croupier, Brick, After Dark, My Sweet, Red Rock West, or a few other late entries. |
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Thanks given by: | bwdowiak (08-10-2015) |
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#131944 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Oh, and, in overall terms, I think that the Paste Magazine 100 Best Film Noirs list does a neat job of including films that capture the "This will not end well." spirit of film noir, even if there are a lot of neo-noir inclusions on the list.
I'm surprised that Sidney Lumet's Before the Devil Knows You're Dead (2007) did not make the list, in fact, since it's a better neo-noir than a lot of the later entries that were listed. David Lynch's Mulholland Dr. makes sense on a noir list in an offbeat way, and it would make an interesting double feature with Sunset Boulevard. |
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#131945 |
Senior Member
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The introductory paragraphs indicate an understanding of the difference between noir and neo-noir, and save for Chinatown and Blade Runner (#'s 4 and 29), the top thirty spots are period-appropriate.
However, I do agree that lumping noir and neo-noir together is a problematic way to assemble this kind of list. Consider the internet readership at large, though: despite being a film-related article (or listicle, or whatever) I'm not sure this is primarily intended for specialists--the neo-noir-is-noir convention may be a concession made to include films beyond a bunch of old, black-and-white ones. Doesn't make it right, conceptually or academically. This is why I miss the Dissolve (as well as a clue to why something like the Dissolve couldn't sustain itself). |
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#131947 |
Moderator
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Thanks given by: | pedromvu (08-10-2015), SammyJankis (08-10-2015) |
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#131948 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would also consider "The Killers", "The Third Man" and "Kiss Me Deadly" film noir. "The Killing" and "Odd Man Out" could be considered noir as well, though I always think of "The Killing" as more of just a pure crime film. "Classe Tous Risques" is another one I'd throw in there. There are probably more in the collection I can't think of off the top of my head.
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#131949 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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The Night of the Hunter is on the fence between noir and horror, as the Paste article suggests. I do not consider it to be 100% film noir by my definition, but I'm always happy to see it ranked highly on noir lists. Kiss Me Deadly works great as a classic-era noir, although it pushes the genre in a new direction. Pale Flower is probably best described as a neo-noir, but it captures the noir spirit through and through. Last edited by The Great Owl; 08-10-2015 at 06:11 PM. |
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#131950 | |
Expert Member
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Ace In the Hole (1951) The Killers (1946) The Killing (1956) Kiss Me Deadly (1955) Odd Man Out (1947) Night of the Hunter (1955) Riot In Cell Block 11 (1954) Rififi (1955) Sweet Smell of Success (1957) They may have more...those are just the Film Noir Blu-rays I have in my Criterion collection... |
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#131955 |
Special Member
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Here's the list from the English translation of "A Panorama of American Film Noir:"
Maltese Falcon; This Gun for Hire; Journey into Fear; Murder, My Sweet; Ministry of Fear; Phantom Lady; Mask of Dimitrios; Lady in the Lake; Notorious; Gilda; The Big Sleep; Somewhere in the Night; Dead Reckoning; Ride the Pink Horse; Out of the Past; Dark Passage; Lady from Shanghai; Sorry, Wrong Number; The Big Clock; Chicago Deadline; The Window. Double Indemnity is classified as a criminal psychology, The Killers as a gangster film, The Naked City as a police documentary. These and other types of crime films are classified at pages 161 through 163 of Border and Chaumeton's book. Those happen to be the two French critics who discovered film noir. ISBN 978 0 87286 412 2 |
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#131956 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Even so, Notorious has a Criterion dvd
![]() ![]() Anyway if you read the wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_noir The overall agreement is there are around 300 films of the genre, even if there are some discrepancies of opinion from the historians and critics. Last edited by pedromvu; 08-10-2015 at 07:17 PM. |
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#131957 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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The TCM Film Noir course that I took online over the past few weeks, though, goes to great lengths to convey that the act of defining film noir as a genre is not an exact science. I personally think of film noir movies as stories in which the viewer thinks, "This will not end well.", while watching the stories unfold. This is why I do not believe, for example, that Casablanca and On the Waterfront are film noir movies, although Blu-ray.com lists them as such. The recent Criterion Blu-ray release, Night and the City, is a perfect example of a movie that falls into my personal definition of film noir. Last edited by The Great Owl; 08-10-2015 at 07:19 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Edward J Grug III (08-11-2015) |
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#131958 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#131959 | |
Special Member
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I think what surprised me the most were some of the omissions, including such worthy contenders as Call Northside 777, The Dark Corner, Dark Passage, The File on Thelma Jordon, The House on 92nd Street, Leave Her to Heaven, My Name is Julia Ross, Phantom Lady, Ruthless, The Street With No Name, The Suspect, Where the Sidewalk Ends ... |
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Thanks given by: | darkness2918 (08-11-2015), The Great Owl (08-10-2015) |
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