Tuesday, 14 August 2012

History and Development of Film Noir



Film noir which actually means black films which is also a cinematic term used primarily to describe stylish Hollywood crime dramas particularly on those that emphasize cynical attitudes and sexual motivations. Hollywood's classic film noir period is generally extending from the early 1940s to the late 1950s who came about in the 1946 by the French critics (Nino Frank) who was unknown to most American film industry of the classic era. The themes of Hollywood dramas were very dark involving a lot of crimes films but was not widely known in the States until the 1970's but before it was adopted by the widely nations many of the classic film noirs were referred to as melodramas. The films are deeply influenced by German Expressionism which is an artistic movement in 1910's and 1920's that involved in theater, photography, painting, sculpture, architecture as well as cinema. It also has a lot of Germen expressionistic cinematography, as it was all black and white and had a sense of despite which reflected the time of war that the people were going thru just like the German Expressionistic film  The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.



This opportunity offered by the booming of Hollywood film industry and the reign of Nazi power led to the emigration of many great film artists to work in Germany who had directly involved in the Expressionist movement or studied with its practitioners. The Hollywood’s classic noir films of the 1940s and 1950s, a women’s role as femme fatale tied her closely to sexual, social and ideological unrest. .Pre-war femme fatale indicates wartime misgivings about sex roles, marriage and sexuality, and the post-war ‘return to normalcy’ never materialised.  Film noir marks down the post-modernism as it marks our inability to define ourselves in imagine what it could be. Film noir is the style of the films not the genre, which emphasizes low-key lighting and unbalanced compositions. Film Noir was developed during and after World War II, taking advantage of the post-war ambience of instability, despair, fear, and guardedness. Film Noir was only labeled after the classic period, the film-makers was not conscious that their films would be labeled noirs. One of the first few Noir films are from the Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity and Edward Dmytryk"s Murder,My Sweet in 1944.



Next came about neo noir starting in the early 60's bringing about a new style using characteristics from a noir film. A distinctive method was used, a more modern technique to send the same sort of a message. 

Referring to Body Heat (Lawrence Kasdan, 1981), Jameson notes the film's 'faintly archaic feel' and its small-town setting, which 'has a crucial strategic function: it allows the film to do without most of the signals and references which we might associate with the contemporary world, with consumer society - the appliances and artefacts, the high rises, the object world of late capitalism'. 

Leaving aside for the moment the matter of nostalgic pastiche, the most important question is whether self-consciously 'noir' contemporary narratives are to be seen as escaping from or as engaging with contemporary issues. There are good grounds for taking issue with Jameson’s arguments. Even when its settings are retro, both literary and cinematic neo-noir have been as concerned with exposing the nature of contemporary consumer society as earlier noir was with satirising, for example, the conformist ethos of small town America in the fifties.


Characteristics of Film Noir




The Characteristics of Film Noirs are very similar to the German Expressionistic style; the films were shot in low-key lighting, distortion, dark shadows and deep focus.
 Retrieved from Double Indemnity (Wilder, B. 1944)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder, B. 1950)

The primary moods of film noir are melancholy, alienation, bleakness, disillusionment, disenchantment, pessimism, ambiguity, moral corruption, evil, guilt, desperation and paranoia.

Most Noir films portray the protagonist state of mind, his desires, obsessions and anxieties. The shots usually are the viewpoint of the protagonist and his psychological state of mind. There is usually a twist in the narrative for example the victim might be the hunter or vice versa. There is no happy ending in most noir films. The protagonist of a film lacks the usual characteristics of a typical hero, but is someone whom the audience identifies. The character is often confused or conflicted with ambiguous morals, and lacks courage, honesty, or grace. . The protagonists in film noir were normally driven by their past or by human weakness to repeat former mistakes.The anti-hero can be tough yet sympathetic, or display vulnerable and weak traits.

The main noir element is the female fatal, who is seductive and dangerous; they are portrayed to weaken the male protagonist. During the war years the number of women that join the labour force was unsettling to many Americans, it showed that women are capable to have a powerful image, most noir films portrayed that in the beginning the women took on murderous roles. The films portrayed the predatory sexuality or psychological strength of the female but male dominance was always restored by the film's climax.

Film noir usually takes place in an urban setting, like New York or Los Angeles at bars, clubs or dim light alleys and the weather would usually be rainy. Flashback and flash-forward are also used a lot in Noir films to provide background on current scene, sometimes voice over narration is used. Film noir shows the dark and inhumane side of human nature and doomed love, it emphasizes the brutal, unhealthy, seamy, shadowy, dark and sadistic sides of the human experience. A harsh atmosphere of danger, doubt, anxiety, and suspicion that anything can go wrong, gray area of realism, hopelessness, and defeat are the characteristics of film noir.

Monday, 13 August 2012

Examples of Characteristics Found In Film(s) ...

Sunset Boulevard (1950) by Billy Wilder


Wilder, B. (1950). Sunset Boulevard [Poster]. Retrieved 14 August, 2012 from http://www.impawards.com/1950/sunset_boulevard_xlg.html

Sunset Boulevard was directed by Billy Wilder in 1950's which the story focuses on Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson) who was a silent-movie goddess whose pathetically belief in her own  immortal fame has turned her into a demented recluse. The old crumbled mansion where she lives with her only butler, Max (Erich von Stroheim) who was once her director and husband has become her self constraint world. Norma dreams of comeback to pictures and she begins a relation with Joe Gillis (William Holden) a small script writer that will end with murder and total madness. 

Characteristic of Femme Fatale:


Norma Desmond, is an aging star who has been long forgotten by the Hollywood and her fans who was once a giant of the silver screen's silent era. 

Manipulative: 

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:19:46

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:23:25

 Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:24:25

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:27:39

These are some of the scenes that show Norma is a manipulative femme fatale as she asked Joe to read her script and offered him the job. When Joe says wanted to leave as it's already late and he will came early in the morning, Norma refused and asked him to stay in the room of the garage as the script can't leave her house and Joe's car is spoil too. The next day when Joe wake's up he saw all of his stuff was already in the room which cause him loses his freedom.

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:36:48

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:37:21

Norma brings Joe to the tailor and make him tuxedo, Joe refuses while she insisted that it was a must. The tailor show Joe the two fabrics which one is more expensive and one is cheaper. The tailor was upset as Joe chooses the cheaper fabric and he tempted him in why not choose the expensive fabric since Norma is 
paying for the clothes. Through this, Norma is using money to make him stay.

Selfish: 

 Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 1:32:16

 Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 1:42:44

 Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 1:43:31

When Norma discovered Joe is going out at night and he had another woman who is Betty(Nancy Olsen). Immediately, she called Betty (Nancy Olson) and tells her about Joe. When Joe saw her scheme, she cut herself and acting in pain. Joe decided to leave her and she shot him to death. 

Ambitious: 

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 1:48:12

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 1:48:42

She walks down the stairs like a new star as she assumes that, they are their fans and they are in a progress of movie shooting. Desmond was ambitious by her FAME and wanted it back that made her gone mad and insane.  

Characteristic of the film - Crime:

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B ,1950), Scene at 0:02:37

From the beginning of the film Sunset Boulevard, it can be seen that a dead body is floating on a swimming pool outside a luxury mansion. It has been explained at the end of the film how Joe is being killed by Norman. He tends to leave Norman because he cannot stand with Norman’s selfishness and her attitude. She went mad as she cannot accept the fact that Joe is leaving. At the end, Norman has shot from behind, 
when Joe was walking out towards the pool to leave from the mansion. 


Double Indemnity (1944) by Billy Wilder

The Femme Fatale:


Wilder, B. (1944). Double Indemnity. Retrieved on 14 August 2012 from http://stagevu.com/video/edtocyhvqidt

Picture above shows the wife of Mr. Dietrichson, Phyllis. Flirtation involved when Walter Neff, a very successful insurance salesman in the Pacific All-Risk, went to Phyllis's house to renew an automobile insurance policy for her husband. Walter was persuaded by Phyllis to kill her husband together with some tricks in order to make the crime looks like an accident, which Mr. Dietrichson was being thrown from a train after being killed.


The Low Key Lighting:

The scene above started from the beginning of Double Indemnity when a car drives through  downtown streets in a high speed at night. Walter walks unsteadily into his office, obviously in pain, sits down at his desk and started to record the incident into a Dictaphone. Low key lighting is used in this particular scenes.

The Dark Shadow:


Retrieved from Double Indemnity (Wilder.B ,1944), Scene at 0:03:32

The picture shown above is from the scene in the beginning of the film where Walter walks into his office. Before he reaches his office, dark shadow lies on the wall of the balcony when he was passing through it before he enters the office. 



Monday, 6 August 2012

Reference

Boozer, J. (1999). The Lethal Femme Fatale in the Noir Tradition. Retrieved on 18July 2012 from http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/20688218?uid=3738672&uid=2&uid=4&sid=21101124247157

Hirsch, F. (1981). The City at Night. The Dark Side of the Screen: Film Noir. (pp 1-22). United State of America: Da Capo Press.

Jeffery, M. (2010, July 28). Shadows of Film Noir: Sunset Boulevard. Retrieved from http://blog.moviefone.com/2010/07/28/shadows-of-film-noir-sunset-boulevard/

Manon, H. S. (2005). Some Like It Cold: Fetishism in Billy Wilder’s Double Indemnity. Retrieved on 9 July 2012 from http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/3661123?uid=3738672&uid=2&uid=4&sid=21101124362107


Wilder, B. (1944). Double Indemnity. Retrieved on 14 August 2012 from http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036775/

Wilder, B. (1950). Sunset Boulevard. Retrieved on 14 August 2012 from  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043014/

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