Homer B. Pettey - R. Barton Palmer - International Noir-Edinburgh University Press (2014)
Homer B. Pettey - R. Barton Palmer - International Noir-Edinburgh University Press (2014)
Homer B. Pettey - R. Barton Palmer - International Noir-Edinburgh University Press (2014)
EDINBURGH
University Press
To Jennifer Jenkins, as always
© editorial matter and organisation Homer B. Pettey and R. Barton Palmer, 2014
© the chapters their several authors, 2014
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library
The right of the contributors to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted
in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 and the Copyright
and Related Rights Regulations 2003 (SI No. 2498).
CONTENTS
vi
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
viii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First thanks should always go to the contributors. James Leach undertook the
daunting task of conveying the breadth of British noir and produced an excep-
tional chapter that will long be cited by film scholars. With a joyful and adven-
turous spirit, Susan Hayward worked out the most thoughtful and substantial
conceptual approaches to French noir that certainly benefit all film scholars.
Moreover, Susan re-evaluated her initial assumptions and took a decidedly dif-
ferent approach, all the while explaining the complexity of her trenchant anal-
ysis, of which I am in awe. Moreover, her new categorisation for French noir
will serve as a model for film historians. Maureen Turim opened up new criti-
cal insights into the landscape of contemporary French noir and provided this
volume with a fascinating thought-piece on those films. Scholars of Japanese
noir will always be referring to David Desser’s insights on the transformation
of contemporary versions of the genre. He has a command of Japanese film
that rivals Earl Miner’s with Classical Japanese poetics, which constitutes my
highest praise. Few critics of international noir have possessed or do possess
Stephen Teo’s comprehensive overview of the essential elements and complexi-
ties of Asian noir. Professor Teo also kindly reviewed the list of Hong Kong
and Korean noirs and made significant suggestions and corrections, for which
a debt is now owed. Including Nordic noir in this volume was due to Andrew
Nestingen’s amazing critical work in this burgeoning field; a debt of gratitude
must be extended for his provocative discussion of that element of the genre.
Professor Nestingen’s fine list of Nordic noirs was included in its entirety in
the Selected Filmography section, for which gratitude is also given. Corey
ix
international noir
Homer B. Pettey
Tucson, Arizona
x
NOTES ON THE CONTRIBUTORS
Mark Bould is Reader in Film and Literature at the University of the West of
England, and co-editor of Science Fiction Film and Television. He is the author of
Film Noir: From Berlin to Sin City (2005), The Cinema of John Sayles: Lone Star
(2009) and Science Fiction (2012), co-author of The Routledge Concise History
of Science Fiction (2011), editor of Africa SF (2013) and co-editor of Parietal
Games (2005), The Routledge Companion to Science Fiction (2009), Fifty Key
Figures in Science Fiction (2009), Red Planets (2009) and Neo-Noir (2009).
Corey K. Creekmur is Associate Professor of English, Film Studies and
Gender, Women’s and Sexuality Studies at the University of Iowa. He has
co-edited three volumes, Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and Queer Essays on
Popular Culture (1995), Cinema, Law, and the State in Asia (2007) and The
International Film Musical (2012), and has published essays on American
cinema, Hindi cinema and comics. He is also General Editor of the Comics
Culture series for Rutgers University Press. His forthcoming work includes
a study of gender and sexuality in the Western genre, and a volume on the
contemporary Hindi historical film.
David Desser is Professor Emeritus of Cinema Studies at the University of
Illinois. He is the author of The Samurai Films of Akira Kurosawa and Eros
Plus Massacre: An Introduction to the Japanese New Wave Cinema, the editor
of Ozu’s Tokyo Story and co-editor of The Cinema of Hong Kong: History,
Arts, Identity; Reframing Japanese Cinema: Authorship, Genre, History; and
Cinematic Landscapes: Observations on the Visual Arts of China and Japan.
xi
international noir
He did DVD commentary for the Criterion Edition of Tokyo Story and Seven
Samurai. He is a former editor of Cinema Journal and of The Journal of
Japanese and Korean Cinema.
Susan Hayward is Emeritus Professor at the University of Exeter. She is the
author of several books on French cinema (French National Cinema; Luc
Besson; Simone Signoret: The Star as Cultural Sign; Les Diaboliques; French
Costume Drama of the 1950s: the Fashioning of Politics in Film) and is also
the author of Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts (now in its 4th edition). She
has written widely on French cinema and her work appears in various antholo-
gies and peer-reviewed journals. Currently she is writing a study of Daniel
Gélin and his reception in the French fanzine Cinémonde.
Jim Leach is Professor Emeritus at Brock University, Ontario, where he
taught in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film.
He is the author of books on filmmakers Alain Tanner and Claude Jutra, as
well as British Film (2004) and Film in Canada (2nd edition 2011). He has
also published a monograph on Doctor Who (2009), co-edited a volume on
Canadian documentary films (2003) and developed a Canadian edition of
Louis Giannetti’s Understanding Movies (5th edition 2011).
Andrew Nestingen is professor of Scandinavian Studies and adjunct in cinema
studies at the University of Washington, Seattle. His most recent book is
The Cinema of Aki Kaurismäki: Contrarian Stories (2013). Other books
include Crime and Fantasy in Scandinavia: Fiction, Film, and Social Change
(2008), Scandinavian Crime Fiction (2011), co-edited with Paula Arvas,
and Transnational Cinema in a Global North (2005), co-edited with Trevor
Elkington. He is working on a book titled Violent Fictions: Representations
and Rituals, which deals with Scandinavian and other Euro-American litera-
ture and film.
R. Barton Palmer is Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature at Clemson
University, South Carolina, where he also directs the film studies programme.
He is the author, editor or co-editor of more than fifty books and a hundred
book chapters and journal articles, including two volumes on film noir.
Homer B. Pettey, Associate Professor of Literature and Film, English
Department, University of Arizona, has soon-to-be published chapters on
Hitchcock’s American noirs (Cambridge University Press), Wyatt Earp biopics
(State University of New York Press) and violence in noir (Praeger). He has
also written essays on Melville and Faulkner, as well as working as a script
consultant for several television series.
Stephen Teo is presently Associate Professor in the Wee Kim Wee School
of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University,
xii
notes on the contributors
Singapore. Before joining NTU, he was a research fellow at the Asia Research
Institute, National University of Singapore from 2005 to 2008. He is also
an adjunct professor of RMIT University, Melbourne, and a senior research
fellow of the Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore. Teo
is the author of Hong Kong Cinema: The Extra Dimensions (1997), Wong
Kar-wai (2005), King Hu’s A Touch of Zen (2007), Director in Action:
Johnnie To and the Hong Kong Action Film (2007), Chinese Martial Arts
Cinema: The Wuxia Tradition (2009) and The Asian Cinema Experience:
Styles, Spaces, Theory (2013).
Maureen Turim is Professor of Film and Media Studies in the Department
of English at the University of Florida. She has published three books: The
Films of Oshima Nagisa. Images of a Japanese Iconoclast (1998); Flashbacks
in Film: Memory and History (1989); and Abstraction in Avant-Garde Films
(1985), as well as over ninety essays in journals on theoretical, historical and
aesthetic issues in cinema and video, art, cultural studies, feminist and psy-
choanalyst theory, and comparative literature. Desire and its Renewal in the
Cinema is the title of her current work.
xiii
TRADITIONS IN WORLD CINEMA
xiv
traditions in world cinema
xv
INTRODUCTION:
THE NOIR IMPULSE
Homer B. Pettey
International noir may well be a tautology, since film noir from its inception
has always been a culturally diverse genre, style, sensibility and movement.
Paul Cooke has argued that Hollywood’s global expansion can be explained
not only by its ‘providing the world with the most appealing film aesthetics and
narrative structures’, but also more recently by its being ‘fiercely protective of
its distribution dominance, lobbying for increasing global deregulation during
the GATT and subsequent World Trade Organisation talks’.1 Defining inter-
national noir poses similar problems for designation of any type of ‘world’,
‘international’ or ‘global’ cinema. As Rosalind Galt and Karl Schoonover
contend for ‘art cinema’, ‘world’ suggests ‘a fetishistic multiculturalism’, while,
for them, ‘international’ tends to be too Eurocentric and too associated with
Marxist film history; hence, they choose ‘global’ as a somewhat problematic
alternative.2 If ‘international’ noir incites the wrath of peevish theorists, so be
it, particularly since noir, in a world and global context, requires an analytic
sensitivity to aesthetic and narrative influences migrating across countries and
continents. Indigenous cinematic art needs to be acknowledged in its own
right, but, as with European and especially American noir, it developed as a
result of responses to and absorption and adaptation of other film cultures.
International noir invariably entails recategorisation of the history, develop-
ment and expansion of film noir, as well as investigation of the artistic impulse
to represent global modernity and its psycho-social anxieties, its political
dilemmas and violence, and its challenge to traditional views of gender by
means of this pervasive aesthetic.
1
international noir
The late 1950s to the early 1960s were expansive years for international
cinema, as can be observed by the example of Wang Tianlin’s The Wild, Wild
Rose (Yau mooi gwai ji luen, 1960). This Mandarin Chinese musical film noir
concerns a chanteuse seductress (Grace Chang) in Wan Chai, a notorious pleas-
ure district of Hong Kong. As a musical noir, the film already reveals the mixed
cultural influences that have created late-twentieth-century global cinema. This
admixture of styles, generic formula and cinematic aesthetics, especially in
the Cold War era, was certainly due in part to the dominance of Hollywood
worldwide. Still, the adaptation of musical styles takes on its own unique
Chinese sensibility, and represents a maturing of Hong Kong style from the
1950s. In 1957, Chang created a sensation in Mambo Girl (Man bo nu lang)
with her untamed, unrestrained, obviously liberated ‘crazy, crazy, crazy’ body
rhythms and song styling. Clad in harlequin-patterned cigarette slacks and a
tight sweater, Chang’s movements are captured in overhead and straight-on
shots, granting optimal vantage points for observing her swinging Chinese-style
Mambo. Mambo, in both its expressive song and dance, derives from the Bantu
for ‘incident, happening, action’, as well as ‘palaver’ and ‘story’.3 Here, Mambo
is the culmination of released tensions, the narrative of the body in between
cultures, as well as geographically in between traditions of mainland China and
the new freedom of Hong Kong. While eccentrically teenaged and Westernised,
especially in the lengthy concluding dance sequence, Mambo Girl still retains
themes of Confucian ethics (lunli), particularly filial piety, which the narrative
of the melodrama finds in the emotional expression of the dance.4 Significantly,
the film and its successor, The Wild, Wild Rose, display examples of the modern
Chinese woman caught between traditional codes of feminine behaviour and
her own desire to express a modern, powerfully unruly sexuality.
The credit sequence opens with Grace Chang in silhouette dancing with a
rose between her teeth on a black stage, illuminated by a enormous white rose
before a modernist, grey rhomboid backdrop. A spotlight captures her in a
strapless sheath as she hurls the rose to the floor, then churns her way down
the stage steps, with the title and names appearing in Chinese across each riser.
The film narrates the doomed life of the independent, alluring Deng Sijia, a
nightclub singer, whose performances mirror her own tempestuous love life.
She performs a extraordinary range of enticing musical arrangements, from
slow, sultry chanteuse numbers to 1950s jazz to updated, Hong Kong versions
of classical opera. Donning a man’s cape and hat, she sings ‘La donna è mobile’
(‘Woman is fickle’), reversing the gender roles from Verdi’s Rigoletto by taking
on the Duke of Mantua’s guise. In another number, she dances a spirited,
smouldering flamenco in high-contrast lighting; provocatively, the camera
captures her soleà escobillias tapping pattern in long shots to accentuate her
form in tight, high-waisted black matador pants. In a visually obverse number,
the camera follows the flouncing Deng Sijia about the chiaroscuro-lit bar as she
2
introduction: the noir impulse
belts out ‘Ja Jambo!’ wearing a tight, light-coloured cocktail dress and shaking
maracas with gleeful abandon. Later, smiling, lithely moving about the empty
bar in three-four tempo as she sings ‘The Merry Widow’, Deng Sijia seduc-
tively lures Liang Hanhua (Zhang Yang), a classically trained pianist now part
of her jazz band, for her own gratification. He wants her to follow a traditional
woman’s role, but in noir melodramatic fashion, her longing for independence
threatens their relationship. Despondent, Hanhua succumbs to alcoholism.
Returning to the nightclub scene, Grace Chang auditions dresses in a geisha
outfit as Cio-Cio for her Mandarin version of ‘Un bel di, vedremo’ (‘One beau-
tiful day, we will see’) from Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, sung above an oddly
compatible Latin jazz accompaniment. The film presents her final numbers as
a montage of noir-lit, short sequences of her previous songs and dances. She
barely completes her flamenco dance before Hanhua stabs her to death.
All of these scenes from The Wild, Wild Rose reveal the emotional, noir
impulse to portray sexuality and portending destruction. Still, one moment
fully captures the international noir sensibility in its cinematographic energy
and experimentation. Those film noir elements accentuate the melodramatic
reconfigurations of Bizet’s Carmen into a sleazy, smoke-filled nightclub, aptly
named the New Ritz. Deng Sijia provides a soulful, highly sexually suggestive
Chinese rendition of the ‘Habanera’ as she seduces all males with flirtatious,
sinuous movements. Backed by a jazz trio of upright bass, bongos and piano,
from out of the darkness Deng Sijia begins the number while she plays a metal
guitar, which is supported by her fully exposed, black-stockinged leg as she
rests her high heel upon a chair. As she strums, she chants the rhyming Chinese
phrases that set the tone for her own cynical, femme fatale view of romance:
‘Ai qing bu guo shi yi zhong pu tong de wan yi yi dian ye bu xi qi / Nan ren
bu guo shi yi jian xiao qian de dong xi, you shen mo liao bu qi’ (‘Love is just
an ordinary thing / that’s not special at all / Men are only for fun / Nothing
marvellous either’). She moans with obvious sexual anticipation in her refrain
before the words 爱 ai (‘love’) and 男人 nan ren (‘men’).
She dances with her legs exposed to the upper thighs, as she sings three
times in French ‘L’amour’. Then, in long shots, she moves away from the
stage, singing and twirling through the audience, occasionally teasing a male
customer. In a medium to close-up sequence, she repeats the opening rhyming
phrases, her accent on ‘love’ and ‘men’ now becoming a throaty, orgasmic ‘ah’
as her arms move erotically up her body until she throws them over her head,
as though she were sexually climaxing. The number shifts from quasi-operatic
to late 1950s style jazz mambo. The ‘cha-cha’ style of the era was considered
exceptionally sexualised and wild. As the camera focuses on her swaying but-
tocks in her tight dress, she moves in on her next conquest, the already engaged
Liang Hanhua. The ‘Habanera’ concludes with Chang’s erotic, powerful
feminine silhouette in pure noir lighting.
3
international noir
But there are four occasions in the sequence when she looks directly
into the camera: while she sings ‘That brought on the “Frisco quake”’
(five seconds), twice while rolling off her glove (three seconds and four
seconds) and while she moves towards the camera and back.6
Chang has four moments of seduction with the camera as well: when she first
moans ‘love’ and ‘men’; in her almost animalistic growl with the second moans
before ‘love’ and ‘men’, at both times eyeing the nightclub denizens and then
the camera; as she approaches Hanhua for her first moment of seduction; and
as she concludes with her warning to all ‘If I fall in love with you. . .’. Unlike
Hayworth’s transformation in Gilda from retaliatory bad-girl into Hollywood
musical good-girl, Chang’s Wild Rose does not find reconciliation, but rather
endures the deadly fate of love and affection that she warns against in her
‘Habanera’.7 Where Gilda’s dance attempts to bare all, Deng Sijia’s perfor-
mance indicates that she bears all.
Grace Chang even outpaces in energy and eroticism the frenetic Shizuko
Kasagi’s ‘Jungle Boogie’ enticement in the yakuza dance hall scene from
Kurosawa’s Drunken Angel (1948). Chang’s numbers also recall Raymond
Bernard’s Faubourg-Montmartre (1931), with Odette Barencey singing a song
about prostitutes along the street:
4
introduction: the noir impulse
Qui déambulent sur le trottoir, Who pace up and down the sidewalk
Au crépuscule, At twilight,
Cherchant chaqu’ soir Looking each evening for
Un idiot d’homme An idiot of a man
Offrant un’ somme pour s’entendr’ Offering a sum to hear some
dir’ des mots d’amour. Words of love.8
5
international noir
6
introduction: the noir impulse
which would garner the Palme d’Or in 1958. Nostalgia, war, death and rebel-
lion are themes in these films. While none of these films would find itself listed
under film noir, all three do reveal both an aesthetic and narrative impulse that
clearly resonates with noir sensibilities.
The Cranes are Flying is a nostalgic, patriotic film of the horrors faced in the
Soviet Union by the Nazi invasion in World War II. It concerns the cruel reali-
ties that accompany human frailty, betrayal and psyche dissociation during
war. Kalatozov’s first feature, Salt for Svanetia (Sol’ Svanetii, 1930), literally
the struggle of a mountain village waiting to obtain salt as the Bolsheviks
construct a road, provided an experimental, proto-noir aesthetic by varying
‘high- and low-angle shots, extreme long-shots and extreme close-ups’, and
exploiting lighting effects, all of which become intensified in The Cranes are
Flying.14 Evident noir elements occur when Mark (Alexander Shvorin), the
weak, morally corrupt pianist, in the smoke-filled, dimly lit room, plays for
a gathering of decadent lost souls. In the famous blackout scene, when Boris
(Alexei Batalov) and Veronika (Tatiana Samoilova) dream of the future, cin-
ematographer Sergei Urusevsky again ‘used all kinds of broken glass . . . to
achieve the lighting effects’ that convey the countless moods Veronika experi-
ences.15 For the close-up of Veronika’s face, after she has discovered that her
family’s apartment has been utterly destroyed, Kalatozo and Urusevsky rely
upon extreme underlighting to accentuate her ghostly sense of loss and aliena-
tion. During the night of the Nazi bombing of the city, shattering panes of
glass provide only momentary light, as blackness metaphorically envelops the
scene of Mark’s rape of Veronika. The noir impulse of Kalatozov’s style appro-
priately displays the intensity of psycho-emotional anxiety that the Russian
people have endured during the Nazi blitzkrieg.
Kanal concerns the nihilistic endeavours of the Home Army during the
Warsaw Uprising against Nazi occupation in World War II. The Nazi-
controlled city overwhelms the Polish forces, who are ordered to retreat into
the sewers in order to make their way to the city’s central district. Half of the
film is devoted to their slogging through the slime, filth and mire of human
waste, ultimately to perish without defeating the Nazis. It is a nostalgic tale
of human endurance and suffering, as well as a portrait of the real-world res-
ignation to death in war. Wajda chooses noir lighting effects for many of the
poignant, all-too-human moments of despair and helplessness in the sewers
beneath the city and its Nazi occupiers. Wounded and clinging to Stokrotka
(Teresa Izewska) for support and comfort, the ever-weakening Korab (Tadeusz
Janczar) desperately tries to negotiate the interminable blackness and endless
corridors of the labyrinthine sewer system. Stokrotka knows of a way out but
when they reach the outlet to the river, it proves to be another form of entrap-
ment, more desperate because the freedom of the river lies just beyond the
impassable ironwork grill:
7
international noir
After Stokrotka discovers that they are still trapped, she tries to maintain her
composure and comfort the dying Korab, although she cannot quite believe the
terrible condition fate has doomed them to:
All the while, Korab slumps down, near death. This scene reminds one of
the sewer chases in Anthony Mann’s He Walked By Night (1948) and Carol
Reed’s The Third Man (1949). All three films rely upon the allegory of the
sewer as the product and place for criminal effluence, but only Kanal presents
criminality as an imposed fascist politics that besmears cultural heroics with
the dark matter of war.
Bergman in the 1950s was certainly creating his own version of film noir,
in which the aesthetics reflect ambiguous moral and uncertain metaphysical
issues. In The Seventh Seal, Death playing chess with medieval Crusader is an
8
introduction: the noir impulse
overt noir allegory for the intellectual yet martial game of human existence.
The war theme is often overlooked in studies of The Seventh Seal, even though
the knight has returned from his Western conquest campaign, an enforcement
of political-moral authority which now seems almost devoid of meaning. The
opening sequence sets the noir tone and visual expression for the entire film,
as the knight experiences the bleak world before encountering Death, ‘a man
in black’:
The knight returns to the beach and falls on his knees. With his eyes
closed and brow furrowed, he says his morning prayers. His hands are
clenched together and his lips form the words silently. His face is sad and
bitter. He opens his eyes and stares directly into the morning sun which
wallows up from the misty sea like some bloated, dying fish. The sky is
gray and immobile, a dome of lead. A cloud hangs mute and dark over the
western horizon. High up, barely visible, a sea gull floats on motionless
wings. Its cry is weird and restless.17
The atmosphere of the natural world turned into a noir expression of disori-
entation and alienation also occurs at the conclusion of Robert Wise’s Odds
Against Tomorrow (1959), which serves as a ‘noir gris’, for its mixed palette
of almost-white and nearly-black shadings allegorises the racial tensions in
American culture. Similarly, The Seventh Seal’s contrasting depths for its noir
greyscape reflects Bergman’s existential, obsessive fear of ‘how precarious life
was in the wake of the Second World War and in the middle of the Cold War
arms race’.18
The preceding year, 1956, was relevant to the content of these films, since it
was a year of anxious political events. The Hungarian Revolution pitted rebel-
lious students and intellectuals in Budapest against pro-Soviet officials, but on
4 November 1956, Soviet troops invaded and attacked dissenters and civilians
alike, resulting in thousands dead or wounded and a mass exodus from the
country: nearly 200,000 people escaped Hungary, among whom 38,000 even-
tually reached the United States for asylum.19 The Suez Crisis, in late October,
combined British, French and Israeli forces in a plan to control the Suez
Canal, the Sinai Peninsula and Egypt. Britain’s position in the incident became
increasingly untenable in the eyes of the world. Pierson Dixon, Great Britain’s
Permanent Representative to the United Nations, warned the Foreign Office on
5 November 1956 that the Eden government was being perceived ‘in the same
low category as the Russians in their bombing of Budapest’.20 That was just
one day after Soviet forces entered Hungary. Not surprisingly, no Nobel Peace
Prize was awarded in either 1955 or 1956. The next year, the 1957 Nobel
Peace Prize was awarded to Lester Pearson for resolving the Suez Crisis by
drafting a United Nations resolution that created an emergency international
9
international noir
UN forces (UNEF), which then entered the region and soon brought the crisis
to an end.21
H-8. . ., a Yugoslavian film from 1958, opens with credits superimposed
over stark contrast lighting of a single window wiper, heavy rain on a wind-
screen and oncoming lights, nearly recreating the conditions of a horrific
highway accident of April 1957, and yet its newscast-like voiceover narrative
reminds the viewer ‘but any similarity with those involved is coincidental’. The
orchestra, although having a storming sound quality, also relies upon kettle-
drums for syncopated, militaristic rhythm. The film, as the voiceover explains,
is ‘dedicated to the unknown driver who would not stop after causing a crash.
All we know is that the number plate began with H-8’. The crash involves
the Zagreb 6.15 pm bus, with twenty-two passengers, including six women
and three children, and a truck that is hauling sheet metal heading to Zagreb.
These initial shot sequences are filmed in extreme high-contrast light, with
illumination primarily provided by the dim crepuscular sky and oncoming
vehicle headlights. Interior shots of the bus utilise rear-as-front projection for
the ever-elapsing highway before the bus’s headlights.
As a minor point at first, the voiceover informs us that the truck driver’s
son, born in 1944, ‘passed the fifth grade after retaking history’. The remedial
history of the son underscores the film’s allegorical import. Of course, 1944
marked the failure of the Belgrade Offensive, during which the Nazis were
forced from the city and its environs.22 The film begins on 14 April 1957 which
marked, of course, the very month from which would continue for more than
a decade the long, independent struggle by Tito against the Soviet Union’s
head-on conflict with Yugoslavian socio-political mobility, and which would
produce the most profound rupture in Eastern European communist hegem-
ony. Within the first nine minutes, we learn the plot line of the entire film, at
least in terms of the bare-bones outline of the tragic accident, its aftermath,
and the anonymous car driving away hurriedly, although no one is chasing
it. Then, the film proper begins with a narrative of the various passengers on
the bus and those in the truck, all captured in exceptional noir camera angles,
chiaroscuro lighting and urban, alienating details. The film’s human comedy
represents the internal psychological problems afflicting modern culture, and
the external conflicts of disruption to unification of couples, marriage and
harmony among citizens. H-8 . . . is not a heavy-handed mimetic correspond-
ence to Yugoslavian society; it is a filmic expression of the necessity for a noir
impulse to convey the dissonance, dissatisfaction and dissociation of modernity
within a culture striving merely to exist as human beings, with all their foibles
and problems. The crash, which we know about from the outset, represents
an inevitable human tragi-comedy of a contemporary people faced with ideo-
logical burdens of individualism, a dilemma never fully comprehended until it
is too late. That scenario of living-in-anxiety can only be conveyed through a
10
introduction: the noir impulse
noir impulse, a collision of style, narrative, motif and aesthetics, all of which
mimic a world as real and as allegorised as modernity, but which modernity
never wishes to accept. In essence, that is the noir impulse: to present contem-
porary existential-political-social dilemmas in a manner that conveys their
entrapment, while simultaneously alluding to the self-confinement with which
modern culture’s people so willingly delude themselves.
Noir aesthetics, theme and content certainly attract international filmmak-
ers. Of course, there is an essential condition to black-and-white cinematogra-
phy that lends itself to film noir visual techniques. Not all films, however, are
noirs, even the slew of post New Hollywood, colour-saturated cinematogra-
phy crime-action films from the 1990s onwards. What now appears to be the
trend in noir is that impulse towards sustaining storyline, character, techniques
and aesthetics not based solely upon the 1940s–50s American noir, but rather
the mixed style of an International noir.
A case in point is Brian Helgeland’s Payback (1999). This self-conscious
noir recounts the relentlessly over-the-top story of a former driver, Porter
(Mel Gibson), for ‘the Outfit’, who steals, fights, and kills his way up the
corrupt crime ladder, with the help of a call-girl, Rosie (Maria Bello), in
order to obtain the $70,000 that was stolen from him. The film opens with
a voiceover narration from Porter, who punctuates the remainder of the film
with his commentary on plot points, such as ‘corrupt cops – are there any
other kind?’ That sum was part of the divided profits of $130,000 that Porter
and ousted Outfit member, the sadomaschist Val Resnick (Gregg Henry),
were to split after their daring head-on collision robbery of Chinese Tong
money. At the split, Resnick complains that his cut is not enough to buy his
way back into the Outfit. Porter’s wife, Lynn (Deborah Kara Unger), abruptly
shoots Porter, and Resnick and now supposed ex wife leave Porter for dead.
The remainder of the film is Porter’s systematic physical and psycho-social
retaliation against the Outfit for taking his money, which escalates from
one scene of malicious violence to the next. Payback’s significance remains
its international noir style, adopting elements of the classic criminal revenge
narrative from American film noir, but adapting the blue-tint, ultra-urban
saturation look that pervades so much of Hong Kong noir. The violence by
Chinese sex trade maîtresse (Lucy Liu) and her gang of anonymous, expen-
sively suited triad henchmen signals the inclusion of Chinese narrative and
aesthetic correspondence. This international noir aesthetic can be seen in neo-
noir remakes of Hong Kong features, most specifically Martin Scorsese’s The
Departed (2006), based on Andrew Lau’s and Alan Mak’s Infernal Affairs
(2002).
Payback, like Un Prophet (2009), The Most Terrible Time In My Life
(1993), Memories of Murder (2003), Män son hatar kvinnor (The Girl with
the Dragon Tattoo, 2009), recaptures, perhaps nostalgically, a world-weary
11
international noir
sentiment that accounted for pervasive corruption, and creates, perhaps anti-
sentimentally, a cynical re-evaluation of a contemporary world accountable
for allowing corruption to be so pervasive. In all, they rely without ques-
tion upon that global cinematic, technical and aesthetic Weltanschauung
that can only be called noir. This volume will explore that noir impulse that
underlies the narrative, thematic and visual mode that is so recognisable as
international noir. This volume, along with its companion volume Film Noir:
Classical Traditions in Edinburgh University Press’s Traditions in American
Cinema series, offers re-examinations, re-evaluations and re-appreciations of
this fundamental and omnipresent cinematic aesthetic. In so many ways, noir
defines the significant shifts, trends and movements that constitute the history
of world cinema.
Notes
1. Paul Cooke, ‘Introduction: World cinema’s “dialogues” with Hollywood’, in Paul
Cooke (ed.), World Cinema’s ‘Dialogues’ with Hollywood (New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2007), pp. 4, 5.
2. Rosalind Galt and Karl Schoonover, ‘Introduction: The impurity of art cinema’, in
Rosalind Galt and Karl Schoonover (eds), Global Art Cinema: New Theories and
Histories (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 11, 12.
3. Ned Sublette, Cuba and its Music: From the First Drums to the Mambo (Chicago,
IL: Chicago Review Press, 2004), pp. 53–4.
4. Yingchi Chu, Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self (London:
Routledge, 2003), p. 34.
5. Richard Dyer, ‘Resistance through charisma: Rita Hayworth and Gilda’, in E. Ann
Kaplan (ed.), Women in Film Noir (London: British Film Institute, 2000), pp. 120,
122.
6. Melvyn Stokes, Gilda (London: British Film Institute, 2010), p. 57.
7. Robert Miklitsch, Siren City: Sound and Source Music in Classic American Noir
(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2011), pp. 237–41.
8. Kelley Conway, The Chanteuse in the City: The Realist Singer in French Film
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2004), p. 135. This sequence relies
upon close-ups of ‘each woman’s tired, longing face, as she stares at the singer mes-
merized’ in a ‘dim and smoky’ hall for pimps and whores, not the bright, modern
lounge where Grace Chang performs her siren song (p. 136).
9. Dudley Andrew, Mists of Regret: Culture and Sensibility in Classic French Film
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995), pp. 208, 209.
10. Alastair Phillips, City of Darkness, City of Light: Émigré Filmmakers in Paris,
1929–1939 (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2004), p. 116.
11. Sheri Chinen Biesen, Blackout: World War II and the Origins of Film Noir
(Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), p. 150. As Biesen
relates, the publicity campaign and reviewers used an ‘A-bomb blast’ to promote
the explosive sexuality of Gilda (p. 151).
12. Merle Goldman, ‘The Party and the intellectuals’, in Roderick MacFarquhar and
John K. Fairbank (eds), The Cambridge History of China, Volume 14, The People’s
Republic, Part I: The Emergence of Revolutionary China, 1949–1965 (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1987), p. 257. Goldman places the number of dis-
placed intellectuals sent to rural labour reform camps from ‘400,000 to 700,000’,
12
introduction: the noir impulse
which meant that roughly a ‘quota of 5 percent of the people in a unit were to be
designated as rightists’ (p. 257).
13. Chi-Kwan Mark, Hong Kong and the Cold War: Anglo-American Relations,
1949–1957 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004), p. 120.
14. Josephine Woll, The Cranes are Flying (London: I. B. Tauris/KINOfiles, 2003),
p. 42.
15. Ibid., p. 33.
16. Boleslaw Sulik, ‘Introduction’, in Andrzej Wajda, Kanal, in Three Films: Ashes
and Diamonds, A Generation, Kanal (New York: Lorrimer Publishing, 1984),
p. 152.
17. The Seventh Seal, in Four Screenplays of Ingmar Bergman, trans. Lar Malmstrom
and David Kushner (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960), pp. 99–100.
18. Geoffrey Macnab, Ingmar Bergman: The Life and Films of the Last Great
European Director (New York: I. B. Tauris, 2009), p. 97.
19. S. Alexander Weinstock, Acculturation and Occupation: Study of the 1956
Hungarian Refugees in the United States (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1969),
pp. 38–9. Much of Weinstock’s evidence comes from the Columbia University
Research Project on Hungary.
20. Pierson Dixon’s telegram (5 November 1956), as quoted in Edward Johnson,
‘The Suez crisis at the United Nations: The effects for the Foreign Office and
British foreign policy’, in Reassessing Suez 1956: New Perspectives on the Crisis
and its Aftermath, ed. Simon C. Smith (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2008),
p. 172.
21. Ann T. Keene, Peacemakers: Winners of the Nobel Peace Prize (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1998), p. 158.
22. Leslie Benson, Yugoslavia: A Concise History (New York: Palgrave, 2001), p. 84.
13
1. BRITISH NOIR
Jim Leach
Anyone writing on British film noir has to confront not only the much-debated
question of whether noir is a genre, a cycle or a sensibility but also that of
whether, however it is defined, it is a uniquely American phenomenon (in
which case, there may be no such thing as British film noir). There is no need to
rehearse the arguments associated with the first question here, but it does have
implications for identifying which (if any) British films should count as films
noirs. Put simply, two basic elements figure in most definitions of film noir: 1)
a corrupt and threatening urban setting in which crime is endemic, and 2) a
visual style emphasising low-key lighting, deep shadows and unusual camera
angles. The problem is that many films include one but not both of these ele-
ments, and most lists of films noirs accept many such films as bona fide exam-
ples. As Paul Schrader put it in 1972, in one of the first significant attempts
to account for the phenomenon as it emerged in Hollywood during and after
World War II, ‘How many noir elements does it take to make film noir noir?’.1
In the case of British noir, an additional question would be: How far can a
British film deviate from the Hollywood model, however that is defined, and
still be considered noir? Most accounts of US film noir distinguish between the
‘classical period’, usually defined as running roughly from John Huston’s The
Maltese Falcon in 1941 to Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil in 1958, presenting
a dark vision of American society in marked contrast to the positive outlook
14
british noir
usually found in mainstream Hollywood cinema. These films are usually seen as
symptomatic of the social upheavals caused by World War II and its aftermath,
while a revival, generally referred to as ‘neo-noir’, beginning in the 1970s, is
associated with the questioning of established values by the social movements
of the late 1960s. During these same time periods, similarly dark films emerged
from British cinema, but, while some of these films are quite close thematically
and iconographically to the Hollywood films, others develop a recognisably
‘noir’ outlook in quite different forms. Much then depends on what constitutes
a film noir.
In Britain, as in the US, the term ‘film noir’ was unknown during the period
when the films later designated as classic noir were produced. Although it orig-
inated in the 1940s in France, American filmmakers and critics did not take it
up until the 1970s, and it was only during the 1980s that critics began to con-
sider whether it might usefully be applied to British films, although it should
be noted that Raymond Borde and Étienne Chaumeton did acknowledge the
existence of ‘an authentic British noir series’ as early as 1955.2 As in the US,
the concept of film noir quickly caught on, and critics have retroactively identi-
fied hundreds of films as British films noirs, although there is still considerable
disagreement about exactly which films should count as noir. In his useful and
fairly comprehensive British Film Noir guide, Michael F. Keaney (2008) lists
369 titles, although in his accounts of the films, he admits that some are only
‘marginal noirs’, and many that he accepts without reservation push the defini-
tion of noir into areas quite remote from the classical Hollywood films.3
It must be acknowledged that critics have disagreed about the parameters of
even the core films of Hollywood noir. Although some, such as Janey Place and
Lowell Peterson, have regarded the visual style as the most important factor in
defining American film noir, R. Barton Palmer has pointed out that ‘the pres-
ence of noir visual motifs varies considerably from one film to another and
. . . hardly characterizes many films as a whole’, and similarly only a handful
of British films make extensive use of chiaroscuro lighting and canted camera
angles, although there are a great many shadows and shots of rain-covered
city streets at night.4 A definition that seems more useful, especially in relation
to British noir, is J. P. Telotte’s succinct claim that film noir ‘generally focuses
on urban crimes and corruption, and on sudden upwellings of violence in a
culture whose fabric seems to be unraveling’.5 Unlike in the United States,
British cities had suffered widespread damage during World War II, and the
postwar years were characterised by economic hardship and a growing aware-
ness that Britain was no longer a major world power. For many, the national
culture did seem to be ‘unravelling’, and there was a widespread perception
that violent crime was on the rise.6
As with so many later discussions of the phenomenon, Telotte’s definition
accords with that found in the first book on film noir, published in 1955, in
15
international noir
which French critics Raymond Borde and Étienne Chaumeton argued that
films noirs set out ‘to disorient the spectators, who no longer encounter their
customary frames of reference’.7 Central to the noir sensibility, from this
perspective, is the experience of a nightmare world that envelops the central
characters and is vicariously experienced by the spectator. Accordingly, film
noir has frequently been discussed in terms of the Freudian ‘dream-work’ or
as a vision of ‘a nightmare society, or condition of man’.8 The noir visual style
may contribute to this effect, but it can also be attributed to other factors, such
as complex plots, in which flashbacks and coincidence are common features,
and unreliable narration.
Alongside their emphasis on the dream logic of these films, Borde and
Chaumeton insist, ‘It’s the presence of crime which gives film noir its most
distinctive stamp’. What distinguishes these films from other crime films,
however, is that crime is seen ‘from within’, from the point of view of the
criminals, although, as they later allow, the protagonist does not need to be a
criminal but can be someone, like a private detective, who is situated ‘midway
between order and crime’.9 As Telotte suggests, the key setting in which these
criminal entanglements are worked through is the city, although the influence
of the corrupt urban world can sometimes spread into other settings. In the
nightmare world of film noir, the modern city becomes a labyrinth in which the
characters are trapped and rendered vulnerable in the crowded streets by day
and the lonely streets by night.
As should be clear by now, critical discourses on British noir always start
from a comparison with the American films. To some extent, this is inevitable,
given the prestige and popularity of the Hollywood films noirs but also the
close relations between the Hollywood studios and the British film industry. As
in the US, most British films noirs were low-budget productions, many of them
‘B films’, intended as supporting features in the double-bills that were a promi-
nent feature of exhibition practices at the time. The relatively few that were
produced on more ample budgets required the involvement of Hollywood
studios, and the two most high-profile British films noirs, The Third Man
(Carol Reed, 1948) and Night and the City (Jules Dassin, 1950), had consid-
erable American involvement and were released in different versions in the
British and US markets. The Third Man was produced by Alexander Korda’s
London Films, but with the support of American producer David Selznick,
and starred Orson Welles and Joseph Cotten. The differences between the two
versions of this film involve the opening voiceover narration and the shorten-
ing of the extremely long take that ends the film, but more substantial changes
were made in the US version of Night and the City, produced by the British
subsidiary of Twentieth Century-Fox and starring Richard Widmark and Gene
Tierney, including a completely different musical score.
These films offer perfect illustrations of James Naremore’s observation that
16
british noir
‘film noir occupies a liminal space somewhere between Europe and America’.10
The Third Man is set in the divided city of Vienna, still suffering from the
ravages of the war, and the presence of Welles and Cotten led many critics
to compare its noir stylisation to Citizen Kane (1941), a film often regarded
as a major influence on the noir sensibility. In Night and the City, the city
is London, also showing many signs of wartime damage and deprivation,
but, in this case, the director was from Hollywood and the star was already
associated with Hollywood crime films, resulting in complaints that the film
was British only in name. Yet one sequence does provide an iconic image of
postwar London as a cosmopolitan city: when small-time crook Harry Fabian
(Widmark) enters the American Bar in Leicester Square, there is a cut to a
reverse shot showing the Café de l’Europe across the street.
Critics have debated the extent to which American noir was influenced by
European filmmakers who had come to Hollywood in the 1930s to escape
from fascist regimes, and a case can be made that British noir owed a similar
debt to American filmmakers escaping from the blacklist that resulted from the
investigations of the House Un-American Activities Committee into supposed
communist infiltration in Hollywood. Dassin was expecting to be blacklisted
while he was making Night and the City, and he was soon followed to Britain
by Edward Dmytryk, Cy Endfield and Joseph Losey, directors who would all
make significant contributions to British noir, often working under assumed
names. In addition, American actors abound in British films noirs, cast to
attract US audiences but often identified as Canadians in the films to make
them more acceptable to British audiences. Critics often saw this involvement
as a symptom of a more general Americanisation of the national culture, but,
before the war, many of them had been equally concerned by the influence of
émigré European filmmakers and actors who, along with a number of younger
actors from the continent, continued to play a significant role in postwar
British cinema.11
In the case of American film noir, the dark elements of the noir sensibility
created tensions within the classical narrative style that dominated Hollywood
production, whereas, in the context of British cinema, the postwar crime films
challenged the critical canon of ‘quality’ cinema that emerged during the war
and resulted in what became known as a ‘golden age’ of British cinema, based
on the fusion of fiction and documentary techniques. British critics regarded
the American crime films less as deviations from Hollywood norms than as
especially distasteful examples of them. They became even more concerned
when British filmmakers started to produce similar films.
As a result of this critical attitude, these crime films first came under attack
and then, more damagingly, were largely ignored in accounts of the national
cinema. The tide turned in the 1980s as a result of a more general re-evaluation
of British cinema that called into question the canons of the past. In particular,
17
international noir
in his 1986 essay on a ‘lost continent’ of British popular cinema, Julian Petley
confidently asserted that, ‘during the late 40s and early 50s Britain produced a
fine crop of “films noirs” . . . which match many of their Hollywood counter-
parts in terms of formal stylisation, sheer physical brutality, urban sleaze and
underlying existential pessimism’.12 While such formulations stress the simi-
larities between the British films and American noir, later writers attempted
to distinguish them by pointing to, usually vaguely defined, differences. Thus
Lawrence Miller suggested that ‘the British noirs . . . have a distinctly British
“personality” that distinguishes them from their American brethren’, while
Robert Murphy found them ‘tantalisingly similar but fundamentally different
from their American counterparts’.13
One notable difference derives from the importance of the past in British
culture, reinforced by the visual presence of that past in the landscape. It is
not surprising, then, that there has been a tendency to include historical films
that exhibit a similar focus on crime and the criminal mentality in accounts
of British film noir. Although Keaney rejects some of the titles that have been
suggested, his list still includes a number of historical films, and Raymond
Durgnat incorporates Gainsborough melodramas and other period films in
his wide-ranging survey of British crime films.14 However, while noir ele-
ments do spill over into some films set in the past, the core of British noir is
to be found in the proliferation of crime films set in the present and produced
during the postwar period. Even so, the past is inscribed in these films, in
often ironic and ambivalent ways. Night and the City, for example, opens
with shots of the city that evoke its past – even as they function in the present
as icons of tourist London – and that contrast with the seedy underworld
that Fabian inhabits and with the ruined buildings that bear witness to the
recent past.
Glenn Erickson has suggested that, ‘being a city that had taken real pun-
ishment from the war with its economic chaos and its rubble in the streets,
bombed-out London has an advantage over Los Angeles’.15 And while not all
British films noirs are set in London (just as Hollywood noirs are not confined
to Los Angeles), the visibility of the damage inflicted by the war is a major noir
motif in the British films right up to the early 1960s. Similarly, the presence
of Americans and icons of American popular culture in the postwar urban
landscape acts as a reminder of the toll that the war had taken on the British
economy and on traditional concepts of national identity. In order to identify
the specific characteristics of British noir, then, we need to follow Charlotte
Brunsdon’s lead by looking at ‘the way in which this British/American com-
parison is inscribed in the films themselves’.16 If, as Palmer suggests, ‘film noir
. . . offers the obverse of the American dream’, Steve Chibnall points out that
‘the American dream has never been confined to the USA’, and the nightmare
world depicted in British films noirs involves, as we shall see, a complex and
18
british noir
19
international noir
20
british noir
haunting him and driving him to murder. A guard at the waxworks refers to the
hangman as ‘a strangler with a licence’. Yield to the Night (J. Lee Thompson,
1956) opens with a highly fragmented sequence, full of noirish camera angles,
in which Mary (Diana Dors) shoots another woman at point blank range, but
then the rest of the film is set in prison where she is deglamourised as she waits
execution and narrates flashbacks to explain how she was driven to murder the
woman who had driven her lover to suicide.
The flashbacks in Yield to the Night show Mary working at the beauty
counter in an upscale department store – she meets Jim when he is looking for
perfume for the other woman – and the motives for murder are thus associated
with the emergence of the new consumer society that encourages the emulation
of the glamour and lifestyle found in Hollywood movies (and the filmmak-
ers were drawing on Dors’s star persona as a ‘blonde bombshell’ and rival to
Marilyn Monroe).21 Although the film could be taken as preaching an ‘undis-
guised anti-capital punishment message’, the contrast between the affluent
society outside the prison and the austerity inside creates an ambivalent view
of a culture that is split between modern materialist and traditional puritani-
cal values.22 For many critics, the changes in British culture, especially evident
among the younger generation, were linked to the widespread dissemination of
‘mass culture’ imported from the US, and the prevalence of British genre films
was seen as contributing to this process.
According to Chapman, ‘the critical hostility to the crime film . . . arose
from a combination of cultural opposition to Americanisation and a concern
over the unflattering and disturbing picture that it presented of postwar British
society’.23 As early as 1927, the Daily Express had complained, ‘the bulk of
our picture-goers are Americanised . . . They talk America, think America,
21
international noir
and dream America. We have several million people . . . who, to all intent and
purpose, are temporary American citizens’.24 In the 1940s, critics expressed
the hope that the emergence of a distinctly British ‘quality’ cinema would
slow this process down, and they were dismayed that other British filmmakers
turned to the popular genres associated with Hollywood. Their concerns were,
ironically, mirrored in many of the crime films that depicted British characters
behaving like Americans. One notable example is The Woman in Question
(Anthony Asquith, 1950), made at the same time Akira Kurosawa was making
Rashomon in Japan, in which five flashbacks represent very different versions
of the events leading up to a murder from the point of view of suspects inter-
viewed by the police. In the first of these, Bob (Dirk Bogarde) appears to be an
American, described as ‘the man in the cowboy hat’ but actually dressed more
like a Hollywood gangster, but in the second version he confesses that he was
born in Liverpool (in other words, he is a temporary American citizen).
Critics complained that British crime films were themselves guilty of similar
acts of impersonation. A few, such as Joe Macbeth (Ken Hughes, 1955) and
No Orchids for Miss Blandish (St John Legh Clowes, 1948), were actually
set in the US, with mainly British actors adopting more or less convincing
American accents. While the critics simply deplored Hughes’s rewriting of
Shakespeare’s tragedy as a gangster movie, the adaptation of James Hadley
Chase’s controversial 1939 novel created what amounted to ‘a moral panic’.25
In fact, the film toned down the lurid sex and violence of the novel consider-
ably and played on the disparity between its British origins and American
subject matter. The upper-class ‘English’ manners affected by the wealthy
Blandish household in the opening sequence, almost suggesting the film may
be set in Britain, contrast with the subsequent brutality of the underworld with
its American accents and hard-boiled dialogue. Later, the distinction between
traditional notions of ‘class’ and the vulgarity attributed to crime movies is
called into question: when one of the gangsters who have kidnapped Miss
Blandish comments, ‘She’s got class’, another replies, ‘They all got it now. It’s
the movies’. Far from being the drugged rape victim of the novel, she chooses
to stay with her gangster lover, telling him, ‘this is freedom compared to any-
thing I have ever known’.
Joe Macbeth and No Orchids for Miss Blandish strive to eliminate local
space altogether, along with the tension between British settings and generic
plots that Brunsdon sees as a key feature of British crime films.26 But they do
not do so completely, since audiences could not miss the signs that ‘America’
in these films was created in British studios. More commonly, the films alter-
nate between location shots of the city and studio interiors, both of which
come to embody the nightmare space of film noir. Whether a film’s style is
predominantly realist or expressionist, there is a sense of entrapment that, to
varying degrees of intensity, evokes a sense of collective trauma that grows
22
british noir
out of the individual experiences of the characters. The source of the trau-
matic experience is often traced back to the war, but even when this is not
overtly the case, as in The October Man (Roy Ward Baker, 1947) and The
Sleeping Tiger (Joseph Losey, 1954), it is placed in the context of dislocations
of family life that relate the effects of the war to the Freudian psychoanalytic
paradigm. In these two films, psychological explanations come into conflict
with the law, but both prove equally inadequate in resolving the mental prob-
lems of the victim of a bus crash (John Mills) in the first or a young hoodlum
(Dirk Bogarde) in the second. As in British noir in general, these films depict
individual traumas bringing out the tensions and passions hidden beneath the
surface of ‘normal’ society.
It is the task of the police to protect the normal citizen against the abnor-
mal citizen, and not to pry too deeply into the various conditions of
sexual repression that either might be suffering.
Robert Fabian, London After Dark, 1954
23
international noir
24
british noir
25
international noir
26
british noir
seen as the dupe of her boyfriend who kills her when she tries to warn their
victim.
According to Murphy, ‘women in British films rarely exhibit the qualities
associated with femmes fatales’, but Keaney disagrees, insisting that he has
‘found the opposite to be the case’ in British films noirs.42 As Melanie Bell sug-
gests, this is partly a matter of definition since the ‘benchmark for dangerous
women remains predicated on a Hollywood model’.43 In the British films, the
distinctions between ‘decent’ and ‘transgressive’ women are often much less
clear than in American noir. In The Long Haul (Ken Hughes, 1957), Dors
plays a gangster’s moll who becomes involved with Harry (Victor Mature), an
American ex-serviceman working as a lorry driver because his wife refuses to
move to the US. When his angry wife tells him that his son is not really his, she
becomes the femme fatale who drives him into the criminal life he has so far
resisted. Similarly, Forbidden (George King, 1948) features a wife who is the
‘femme fatale’ whose infidelity drives her husband to plan her murder, while
Jeannie (Hazel Court) is both his mistress and the decent woman (despite
herself). Blind Corner (Lance Comfort, 1963) is closer to the Hollywood
model, but Anne (Barbara Shelley) is a very understated femme fatale who
manoeuvres her lover into a plan to murder her blind husband, and only after
he leaves to carry it out does the film reveal that she is really in love with
another man whom she has pretended to hate. At the end, despite his blind-
ness, the intended victim reveals he knows everything and refers to himself as
‘the mate of a black widow spider’.
The relations between the sexes are as fraught in British noir as they are in
the American films, but there is much more emphasis on the broken families
that result from the breakdown of traditional gender roles. Many of the central
characters are adolescents trying to play adult roles, like Pinkie in Brighton
Rock and Riley in The Blue Lamp, or young people drawn into crime through
their environment, like Gwen in Good-Time Girl and Roy in Cosh Boy (Lewis
Gilbert, 1952), or simply ‘child-like’, as Fabian’s girlfriend characterises him in
Night and the City. This concern with the impact of the postwar world on the
younger generation is found in a number of films that present the nightmare
noir vision through the eyes of children.
A group of such films that appeared in the early 1950s may owe something
to the American film The Window (Ted Tetzlaff, 1949), in which a young boy
witnesses a murder and is hunted down by the killers, but the British films
are less concerned with suspense and more with the strangeness of the adult
world seen from the child’s point of view. In the opening sequence of Hunted
(Charles Crichton, 1952) a young boy runs through city streets and into a
bombsite, where he stumbles on Chris (Dirk Bogarde), who has just murdered
his wife’s lover. Although the police believe the boy is in the clutches of a dan-
gerous criminal, it becomes clear that he has left home because he is afraid of
27
international noir
being beaten by his foster father.44 The affection that Chris begins to feel for
the boy contradicts the police version of the situation and negates the expected
bloody ending, when Chris gives himself up because the boy is ill. A bombsite
encounter also features in The Yellow Balloon (J. Lee Thompson, 1953) in
which a boy is traumatised by the death of a friend who falls during an argu-
ment over a balloon just before Len (William Sylvester), an American deserter,
appears out of the shadows. He exploits the boy in an effort to escape, and
the events that lead to Len’s death when he falls into the lift shaft of a disused
Underground station are seen as if from within the consciousness of the boy.
In Bang! You’re Dead (Lance Comfort, 1954), an abandoned US base and the
people living there in Nissen huts create an atmosphere of decay and instabil-
ity in which the boy lives out violent fantasies that he has picked up from
American westerns.
In Tiger Bay (J. Lee Thompson, 1959), a reworking of the situation in
Hunted, the child is a young girl (Hayley Mills), who witnesses a Polish sailor
(Horst Buchholtz) shoot his unfaithful girlfriend. They flee together, and he
eventually sacrifices his chance of freedom by diving into the sea to save her
when she falls overboard from the ship on which he is escaping. As in Bang!
You’re Dead, the ‘real’ violence is confused with that of children’s games but
is also associated with the socially sanctioned violence of a boxing match.
The main difference between the girl in this film and the boys in the earlier
ones is that she is much more in control of the situation. She weaves a web of
improvised lies to hide her disobedience to her aunt and then to put the police
off the trail. Her amoral resilience lessens the impact of the noir ‘nightmare’,
foreshadowing the ways in which the youth culture of the 1960s will change
the patterns of British cultural life.45
According to Andrew Spicer, the first British neo-noir film was The Strange
Affair (David Greene, 1968).47 If we define the noir vision as involving a sense
of nightmare linked with the city and crime, this film is certainly a film noir,
in its depiction of a naive young police constable (Michael York) whose affair
with a ‘permissive’ young woman makes him vulnerable to blackmail, first by
the criminals and then by a police officer who makes him plant evidence so
that he can get a conviction. Since Keaney, citing Murphy and Spicer, ends his
Guide to classical British film noir in 1964, it is clear that the time lag between
classical and neo-noir is much briefer than in the US.48 As The Strange Affair
amply demonstrates, the major differences are the replacement of black-and-
white with colour and a more explicit treatment of sexuality and violence
made possible by the relaxation of censorship. However, the term ‘film noir’
28
british noir
was not yet available to English-language filmmakers and critics in 1968, and
the film was neither made nor received with ‘the high degree of generic self-
consciousness characteristic of neo-noir’.49
Todd Erickson argues that by the 1980s neo-noir had become ‘a (new)
genre that emerged from the overall movement, utilizing the subject matter
that was at the very core of its existence: the presence, or portent, of crime’.50
However, trying to pin down the parameters of this genre (if it is one) has
proved as difficult as with the original films, and there is the additional com-
plication that, as Ginette Vincendeau suggests, neo-noir ‘can be understood
both as simply coming after classic noir and as a reconfiguration or critique
of it’.51 Crime films have continued to be a significant factor in British film
production, and received a major boost in the 1990s with a flood of gangster
films apparently inspired by the darkly comic and graphically violent films of
Quentin Tarantino. Some of these, notably Sexy Beast (Jonathan Glazer) and
Gangster No. 1 (Paul McGuigan), both released in 2000, are arguably films
noirs, but most divest crime and violence of any vestiges of the dark vision of
classical noir and are best categorised, in Chibnall’s useful term, as ‘gangster
light’.52 There is no room here to explore the full ramifications of British crime
films of the past fifty years, but two strands of neo-noir can be briefly outlined,
illustrating the distinction between those films that adapt noir plots and ico-
nography to present-day settings and those that recreate the period of classical
noir.53
The ‘nightmare’ experience of film noir could be used as an effective meta-
phor for the effects on British society of Thatcherism in the 1980s, setting
Margaret Thatcher’s law and order rhetoric and emphasis on entrepreneur-
ship in a criminal milieu. In The Long Good Friday (John Mackenzie, 1979),
Harold (Bob Hoskins) is a gangster who sees himself as a businessman with
grandiose plans to restore the nation’s former greatness but loses control of
the London underworld when one of his men antagonises the IRA. Stormy
29
international noir
Monday (Mike Figgis, 1987) is set in Newcastle where Brendan (Sean Bean)
becomes involved in a shady redevelopment scheme that brings together gang-
sters, politicians and businessmen. Both films also continue British film noir’s
ambivalent concern with American influence. Harold’s plans in The Long
Good Friday depend on investment by his ‘American friends’ from the Mafia,
while Stormy Monday takes place during the celebrations for ‘America Week’
at the opening of which the Lady Mayoress delivers a Thatcher-like address
welcoming the ruthless American entrepreneur in front of posters depicting
Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.
The element of critique in the recourse to film noir in these and other films
is less immediately apparent in those films set during the postwar period.
Thatcherism, of course, appealed to past values in its ‘heritage’ mode, and
nostalgia is a recurrent mood in postmodernist culture and recent British
cinema. A continuity with earlier British film noir is found in the concern with
the death penalty in Dance with a Stranger (Mike Newell, 1984) and ‘Let Him
Have It’ (Peter Medak, 1991). The former is based on the case of Ruth Ellis
(Natasha Richardson), who was the last woman hanged in Britain in 1955,
an event that coincided, perhaps fortuitously, with the production of Yield to
the Night.54 Unlike in the earlier film, the murder occurs at the end, and the
issue of capital punishment is raised only as a final example of the deathly
stifling culture of the 1950s that the film implicitly links to the condition of
Britain under Thatcher. Medak’s film deals with another notorious case in
which Derek Bentley (Christopher Eccleston), a youth suffering from mental
problems, was hanged in 1953 for his part in a robbery during which a police
officer was shot by an accomplice who was too young to be sentenced to death.
The opening sequence takes place during the Blitz when Derek is injured in
a collapsed building, and a caption sets the action in ‘London 1941’, creat-
ing a distance in sharp contrast with the immediacy of the postwar films, as
asserted in the opening caption to The Sleeping Tiger, which reads ‘London
this evening’.
The wartime experience is still a potent memory, however distanced, in
British culture, and Medak’s previous film, The Krays (1990), about the noto-
rious twins who dominated the London underworld in the 1950s and 1960s,
traces their villainy back to the impact of the war on the family and depicts
a postwar culture immersed in nostalgic media representations of the war
years. The title of a more recent crime film, Spivs (Colin Teague, 2003), also
evokes the war but feels the need to provide a dictionary definition of a spiv
as a ‘man, especially a flashily dressed one, living from shady dealings’. There
is no explicit reference to the war, and the modern-day spivs use electronic
technology to carry out their con games. The earlier films’ ambiguous relations
to American culture is evoked when one of the gang buys a copy of Raymond
Chandler’s Farewell My Lovely, alluding to the American hard-boiled writing
30
british noir
that was a major influence on film noir, but the allusion is double-edged, since
it is also a reminder of a famous shot in a key British neo-noir, Get Carter
(Mike Hodges, 1971), in which the title character reads the same novel. This
shot of Carter (Michael Caine) reading Chandler next to a boy reading a comic
has been described as evoking ‘the postwar dismay at the Americanisation of
British culture and moral panics about literacy, crime fiction and comics’.55 In
the later film, British spivery comes up against the might of the East European
Mafia smuggling refugees into Britain to supply a prostitution ring, ironically
suggesting that the coordinates of noir are changing now that Britain is a
part of the European community as well as globalised networks of crime and
violence.
Bibliography
Bell, Melanie (2010), ‘Fatal femininity in postwar British film: Investigating the British
femme’, in Helen Hanson and Catherine O’Rowe (eds), The Femme Fatale: Images,
Histories, Contexts, Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 98–112.
Borde, Raymond and Étienne Chaumeton (2002), A Panorama of Film Noir 1941–
1953, trans. Paul Hammond, San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books [1955].
Bould, Mark, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (2009), ‘Parallax views: An introduction’,
in Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir, London: Wallflower,
pp. 1–10.
Brunsdon, Charlotte (1999), ‘Space in the British crime film’, in Steve Chibnall and
Robert Murphy (eds), British Crime Cinema, London: Routledge, pp. 148–59.
Chadder, Viv (1999), ‘The higher heel: Women and the postwar British crime film’, in
Steve Chibnall and Robert Murphy (eds), British Crime Cinema, London: Routledge,
pp. 66–80.
Chapman, James (2008), ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and violence almost unrelieved”:
Critics, censors and the postwar British crime film’, Contemporary British History
22(2), 181–201.
Chase, James Hadley (2010), Flesh of the Orchid, Eugene, OR: Bruin Books [1948].
Chibnall, Steve (1996), ‘Counterfeit Yanks: War, austerity and Britain’s American
dream’, in Philip John Davies (ed.), Representing and Imagining America, Keele:
Keele University Press, pp. 150–9.
——. (2000), J. Lee Thompson, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
——. (2009), ‘Travels in Ladland: The British gangster film cycle, 1998–2001’, in
Robert Murphy (ed.), The British Cinema Book (3rd edition), London: British Film
Institute, pp. 375–86.
Clay, Andrew (1999), ‘Men, women and money: Masculinity in crisis in the British pro-
fessional crime film 1946–1965’, in Steve Chibnall and Robert Murphy (eds), British
Crime Cinema, London: Routledge, pp. 51–65.
Cook, Pam (2001), ‘The trouble with sex: Diana Dors and the blonde bombshell phe-
nomenon’, in Bruce Babington (ed.), British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to
Sean Connery, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 167–78.
Durgnat, Raymond (1970), A Mirror for England: British Movies from Austerity to
Affluence, London: Faber and Faber.
——. (1996), ‘Paint it black: The family tree of the film noir’, in Alain Silver and
James Ursini (eds), Film Noir Reader, New York: Limelight Editions, pp. 37–51
[1970].
31
international noir
Erickson, Glenn (1996), ‘Expressionist doom in Night and the City’, in Silver and Ursini
(eds), Film Noir Reader, pp. 203–7.
Erickson, Todd (1996), ‘Kiss me again: Movement becomes genre’, in Silver and Ursini
(eds), Film Noir Reader, pp. 307–29.
Fabian, Robert (1954), London After Dark, Toronto: Harlequin Books.
——. (1956), Fabian of the Yard, Kingswood: The World’s Work [1950].
Greene, Graham (1980), The Pleasure Dome: The Collected Film Criticism 1935–40,
ed. John Russell Taylor, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Keaney, Michael F. (2008), British Film Noir Guide, Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co.
Miller, Lawrence (1994), ‘Evidence for a British film noir cycle’, in Wheeler Winston
Dixon (ed.), Re-viewing British Cinema, 1900–1992, Albany, NY: State University
of New York Press, pp. 155–64.
Murphy, Robert (1986), ‘Riff-raff: British cinema and the underworld’, in Charles Barr
(ed.), All Our Yesterdays: 90 Years of British Cinema, London: British Film Institute,
pp. 286–305.
——. (1989), Realism and Tinsel: Cinema and Society in Britain 1939–49, London:
Routledge.
——. (2007), ‘British film noir’, in Andrew Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir, Manchester:
Manchester University Press, pp. 84–111.
Naremore, James (1998), More Than Night: Film Noir and Its Contexts, Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press.
Oliver, Kelly and Benigno Trigo (2003), Noir Anxiety, Minneapolis, MN: University
of Minnesota Press.
Palmer, R. Barton (1994), Hollywood’s Dark Cinema: The American Film Noir, New
York: Twayne.
Petley, Julian (1986), ‘The lost continent’, in Charles Barr (ed.), All Our Yesterdays: 90
Years of British Cinema, London: British Film Institute, pp. 98–119.
Richards, Jeffrey (1997), Films and British National Identity: From Dickens to Dad’s
Army, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Robbins, Keith (1998), Great Britain: Identities, Institutions and the Idea of Britishness,
London: Longman.
Schrader, Paul (1996), ‘Notes on film noir’, in Silver and Ursini (eds), Film Noir Reader,
pp. 53–63.
Spicer, Andrew (2007), ‘British neo-noir’, in Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir, pp.
112–37.
Telotte, J. P. (1989), Voices in the Dark: The Narrative Patterns of Film Noir, Urbana,
IL: University of Illinois Press.
Vincendeau, Ginette (2009), ‘The new lower depths: Paris in French neo-noir cinema’,
in Bould, Glitre and Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir, London: Wallflower, pp. 103–17.
Weight, Richard (2002), Patriots: National Identity in Britain 1940–2000, London:
Macmillan.
Wollen, Peter (2002), Paris Hollywood: Writings on Film, London: Verso.
Notes
1. Paul Schrader, ‘Notes on film noir’, in Alain Silver and James Ursini (eds), Film
Noir Reader (New York: Limelight Editions, 1996), p. 54.
2. Raymond Borde and Étienne Chaumeton, A Panorama of Film Noir 1941–1953,
trans. Paul Hammond (San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books, 2002), p. 126.
3. Michael F. Keaney, British Film Noir Guide (Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co.,
2008).
32
british noir
4. R. Barton Palmer, Hollywood’s Dark Cinema: The American Film Noir (New
York: Twayne, 1994), p. 39.
5. J. P. Telotte, Voices in the Dark: The Narrative Patterns of Film Noir (Urbana, IL:
University of Illinois Press, 1989), p. 2.
6. According to Raymond Durgnat, in A Mirror for England: British Movies from
Austerity to Affluence (London: Faber and Faber, 1970), ‘the idea that the war
explains an increase in violence, whereas the evidence, on balance, suggests that
there was more violence before the war . . . probably registers an increased sensitiv-
ity, and disapproval of, violence’, p. 145.
7. Borde and Chaumeton, Panorama of Film Noir, p. 12.
8. Kelly Oliver and Benigno Trigo, Noir Anxiety (Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota Press, 2003), p. xvii; Raymond Durgnat, ‘Paint it black: The family tree
of the film noir’, in Silver and Ursini (eds), Film Noir Reader, p. 38.
9. Borde and Chaumeton, Panorama of Film Noir, pp. 5, 6–7.
10. James Naremore, More Than Night: Film Noir and Its Contexts (Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press, 1998), p. 220.
11. In 1936, for example, Graham Greene wrote that the quota system, introduced to
protect the British film industry from American domination, had only managed ‘to
surrender it to a far more alien control’ (The Pleasure Dome: The Collected Film
Criticism 1935–40, ed. John Russell Taylor (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1980), p. 79).
12. Julian Petley, ‘The lost continent’, in Charles Barr (ed.), All Our Yesterdays: 90
Years of British Cinema (London: British Film Institute, 1986), p. 111.
13. Lawrence Miller, ‘Evidence for a British film noir cycle’, in Wheeler Winston Dixon
(ed.), Re-viewing British Cinema, 1900–1992, (Albany, NY: State University of
New York Press, 1994), p. 161. Robert Murphy, ‘British film noir’, in Andrew
Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007),
p. 103.
14. There are certainly similar energies unleashed in the period melodramas produced
by Gainsborough Studios, aimed mainly at female audiences, and the postwar
crime films, aimed mainly at men. Both were equally reviled by critics at the time.
15. Glen Erickson, ‘Expressionist doom in Night and the City’, in Silver and Ursini
(eds), Film Noir Reader, p. 203.
16. Charlotte Brunsdon, ‘Space in the British crime film’, in Steve Chibnall and Robert
Murphy (eds), British Crime Cinema (London: Routledge, 1999), p. 148.
17. Palmer, Hollywood’s Dark Cinema, p. 6. Steve Chibnall, ‘Counterfeit Yanks: War,
austerity and Britain’s American dream’, in Philip John Davies (ed.), Representing
and Imagining America (Keele: Keele University Press, 1996), p. 150.
18. Durgnat, ‘Paint it black’, p. 49.
19. Palmer, Hollywood’s Dark Cinema, p. 33.
20. Borde and Chaumeton, Panorama of Film Noir, p. 5.
21. Pam Cook, ‘The trouble with sex: Diana Dors and the blonde bombshell phenom-
enon’, in Bruce Babington (ed.), British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to
Sean Connery (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 167–8.
22. Keaney, British Film Noir Guide, p. 226.
23. James Chapman, ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and violence almost unrelieved”:
Critics, censors and the postwar British crime film’, Contemporary British History
22(2), 186.
24. As quoted in Keith Robbins, Great Britain: Identities, Institutions and the Idea of
Britishness (London: Longman, 1998), p. 310.
25. Chapman, ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and violence” ’, 194.
26. Brunsdon (1999), ‘Space in the British crime film’, p. 148.
33
international noir
27. Robert Fabian, Fabian of the Yard (Kingswood: The World’s Work, 1956), p. 11.
28. Robert Fabian, London After Dark (Toronto: Harlequin Books, 1954), p. 6
29. Fabian, Fabian of the Yard, p. 46.
30. Andrew Clay, ‘Men, women and money: Masculinity in crisis in the British pro-
fessional crime film 1946–1965’, in Chibnall and Murphy (eds), British Crime
Cinema, p. 52.
31. Robert Murphy, Realism and Tinsel: Cinema and Society in Britain 1939–49
(London: Routledge, 1989), pp. 149–50.
32. Peter Wollen, Paris Hollywood: Writings on Film (London: Verso, 2002), p. 189.
33. Robert Murphy, ‘Riff-raff: British cinema and the underworld’, in Charles Barr
(ed.), All Our Yesterdays: 90 Years of British Cinema (London: British Film
Institute, 1986), p. 304.
34. William Whitebait, as quoted in Chapman, ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and vio-
lence” ’, 153.
35. Murphy, Realism and Tinsel, p. 150; Wollen, Paris Hollywood, pp. 185–6.
36. Joan Lester, as quoted in Chapman, ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and violence” ’, 191.
37. Chapman, ‘ “Sordidness, corruption and violence” ’, 197.
38. Jeffrey Richards, Films and British National Identity: From Dickens to Dad’s Army
(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1997), pp. 144–5.
39. Murphy, ‘Riff-raff’, p. 299.
40. Ibid., p. 299. Viv Chadder, ‘The higher heel: Women and the postwar British crime
film’, in Chibnall and Murphy (eds), British Crime Cinema, p. 70.
41. Richard Weight, Patriots: National Identity in Britain 1940–2000 (London:
Macmillan, 2002), p. 371.
42. Murphy, ‘British film noir’, in Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir, p. 85. Keaney,
British Film Noir Guide, p. 2.
43. Melanie Bell, ‘Fatal femininity in postwar British film: Investigating the British
femme’, in Helen Hanson and Catherine O’Rowe (eds), The Femme Fatale: Images,
Histories, Contexts (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), p. 100.
44. In this respect, the film reverses the message of Cosh Boy, which suggests that the
delinquent’s behaviour is the result of the lack of a firm hand in his upbringing (his
father died in the war) and ends with his new Canadian stepfather beating him, to
the evident approval of the policemen who are waiting to arrest him.
45. In Whistle Down the Wind (Bryan Forbes, 1961), also starring Mills, the noir
vision recedes even further, as the plot centres on a group of children who mistake
a murderer on the run from the police for Jesus come back to save the world.
46. Todd Erickson, ‘Kiss me again: Movement becomes genre’, in Silver and Ursini
(eds), Film Noir Reader, p. 321.
47. Andrew Spicer, ‘British neo-noir’, in Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir, p. 114.
48. Keaney, British Film Noir Guide, p. 4.
49. Spicer, ‘British neo-noir’, p. 112.
50. Erickson, ‘Kiss me again’, p. 308.
51. Ginette Vincendeau, ‘The new lower depths: Paris in French neo-noir cinema’, in
Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir (London: Wallflower,
2009), p. 105.
52. Steve Chibnall, ‘Travels in Ladland: The British gangster film cycle, 1998–2001’, in
Robert Murphy (ed.), The British Cinema Book (3rd edition) (London: British Film
Institute, 2009), p. 377.
53. This distinction is also apparent in American neo-noir, with films such as Body
Heat (Lawrence Kasdan, 1981) telling a self-consciously noir story in a contempo-
rary setting and others, like Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974), setting the action
in the period of classical noir.
34
british noir
54. The filmmakers claimed that the screenplay had been completed before the Ruth
Ellis case renewed the campaign against the death penalty (Steve Chibnall, J. Lee
Thompson, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000, pp. 72–3).
55. Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck, ‘Parallax views: An introduction’, in
Bould, Glitre and Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir, pp. 6–7.
35
2. FRENCH NOIR 1947–79:
FROM GRUNGE-NOIR TO NOIR-HILISM
Susan Hayward
Introduction
When I was first asked to contribute to this collection of essays on film noir,
my original response was ‘surely there is enough out there already?’ Indeed, in
the last decade, some hundred books on film noir have been published in the
English language alone. The request, however, was to focus on French Film
Noir (from 1930 to the new millennium). I felt there might be something new
to say, even if (as with Borde and Chaumeton, 1955) I was not necessarily
over-convinced that there is such a thing as French Film Noir; a noir aesthetic,
yes – but a specific genre (or subgenre) within French cinema? But, having
agreed to write a piece, I pressed forward.
My first move was to let the editors know that I did not consider I could
write about French Noir from the 1930s until the present day. My view was
that, if a noir period exists in its purest/purist sense, then it begins in 1947 and
ends in 1979. First, with regard to the ‘start date’: whilst the term ‘film noir’
has had currency since the 1930s,1 referring to certain ‘dark/noir’ movies of
that period which we now more readily label poetic realist films, the concept
of ‘film noir’ as a genre is nonetheless a postwar phenomenon. This generic
label was coined in 1946 by French film critics to designate a particular type of
American thriller-genre that suddenly made its appearance in French cinemas
after the end of World War II.2 As to the end date, there is an argument to be
made (which I shall go on to do below) that the arc of French Noir coincides
with what has been termed, in French economic history, les trente glorieuses, a
36
french noir 1947–79
37
international noir
Alistair Rolls and Deborah Walker (2009), I discovered that an entire chapter
had been devoted to this subject (kindly crediting my work, it must be said)
– so I encountered yet another impasse! Indeed, Rolls’ and Walker’s book
provides a useful overview of the cross-fertilisation process between American
and French noir traditions (taking on board such issues as the literary tradi-
tion of noir films and the importance of jazz and its significance as a marker of
counter-cultural defiance).
Finally, I turned to Phil Powrie’s study of the post-1970 French Noirs,
‘French neo-noir to hyper-noir’.8 My own feeling in relation to this particular
noir labelling is that it casts the net too wide and empties the ‘noir’ of any
helpful meaning. Powrie readily admits that few of the films included in his
corpus have what could be considered a ‘typical noir sensibility’.9 Indeed, most
of the films included in his list are polars (albeit with noir elements); and it is
doubtless for that reason that Powrie categorises his selection of films under
two headings: the Political Thriller (mostly of the 1970s) and the Postmodern
Thriller (1980s onwards, Beineix and Besson being the more renowned direc-
tors in this domain with their techno-neo-noirs).
For all the above reasons, I decided to focus on what can be considered
French Film Noir in its purist form, limiting the number of films in terms of
timescale and their adherence to the definitions that, to my mind, embody the
spirit of this generic typology. Film noir is associated with a particular moment
in twentieth-century history: World War II and the postwar Cold War period
up until the late 1950s. Film noir emerged, then, from a period of political
instability. The dominant mood in noir narratives, unsurprisingly, is one of
anxiety and paranoia, pessimism and social malaise. Noir creates an environ-
ment in which the male protagonist seeks to assert his identity, often through
violent means – thus pointing to an overriding sense of masculinity in crisis
which can, in turn, be associated with the political culture of the moment in
which national identity comes seriously under question. Let us not forget that
men, having fought in a major world war, upon returning home found that
the old societal patterns had changed (women occupied workplaces that had
previously been the province of the menfolk; economic security, in the form of
decent jobs, was far from assured). Nor were nations secure. Almost immedi-
ately, the capitalist West and the Eastern communist bloc were at loggerheads.
This time, however, in a post-nuclear world, the stakes were even higher
(where the arms race and espionage were the key elements of the Cold War).
But we need to recall that for France this war experience was singularly differ-
ent: France was an occupied nation – men were not fighting; they were either
taken into forced labour to Germany or were at home having to cope with
the occupying enemy (at worst collaborating, at best joining the Resistance,
or keeping a very low profile). Thus, masculine identity was crucially aligned
with the nation and, in this instance, it was not an easy one to confront – a
38
french noir 1947–79
39
international noir
consistently been heralded as part of the noir canon, but which arguably do
not belong. Should I keep them in? The first is Becker’s Touchez pas au grisbi
(1954). Strictly speaking this is not a noir, since the central protagonist, Max
(played by Jean Gabin), an ageing gangster, does not perish at the end of the
story. In fact, he is obliged to ‘carry on as normal’. Condemned to live on
in a future without his best friend Riton (René Dary), an existential empti-
ness looms large. Furthermore, as the narrative unravels it is clear that noir
40
french noir 1947–79
dynamics propel the story forward, most especially in the form of Riton who
‘betrays’ (albeit inadvertently) his friend and thus constitutes an homme fatal.
This film stays in my corpus. In the second instance, Melville’s Bob le flambeur
(1956), the case for exclusion is clearer. It is the director himself who states
that his film is not a noir film but a ‘comedy of manners’.10 Indeed, the central
protagonist, Bob, fails to accomplish his heist because he has been too busy
gambling. As the film closes, his arresting officer jokingly remarks that he will
only get a five-year sentence, after which he can enjoy the fruits of his win-
nings! Thus, this second film is not included in my corpus.
The above seventeen films trace an interesting arc when examined against
the evolving economic climate of this thirty-year period. Thus, the first three
films, Quai des Orfèvres, Impasse des deux-anges and Les Diaboliques, with
their grunge-noir look, coincide with the period of economic hardship and
moral rehabilitation post war; the second swathe of noirs, Touchez pas au
grisbi, Du rififi chez les hommes and Razzia sur la chnouff, all refer in a very
distinct fashion to the reconstruction and modernisation of France. These two
cycles of noir also demonstrate, in a number of ways, the transition from a
parochial, localised, grubby and penny-pinching petit-noir environment to
one with a more sophisticated, international feel. Luxury objects, so predomi-
nantly absent from the first cycle, make their appearance in numerous forms
in this second cycle: flash cars, expensive nightclubs, nice apartments, well-cut
suits. So, too, do elements from an unsavoury criminal underworld such as
drugs and all types of ballistic technology (from revolvers to machine guns).
The third cycle (1958–60) is made up of three films from directors associated
with the Nouvelle Vague (New Wave) (Malle, L’Ascenseur pour l’échafaud;
Godard, À bout de souffle and Truffaut, Tirez sur le pianiste). This period of
the late 1950s to early 1960s was marked by the return of General de Gaulle
to power, and with him a new Fifth Republic. De Gaulle’s return as the elder
statesman, patriarch-saviour of a France on the brink of civil war (due primar-
ily to the Algerian conflict) was at odds, however, with the demographic reality
of a rejuvenated nation. In the postwar period and throughout the 1950s,
France’s birth rate reached its highest in 150 years (at 20 per cent). The youth
class therefore became a significant presence and, although it could not yet
vote, it showed considerable irreverence to the status quo – through its look,
its music and, where our New Wave directors are concerned, through a playful
engagement with American noir codes and conventions.
The final cycle (1963–79) represents the very darkest collection of noirs.
Here revenge narratives dominate. Over these sixteen years, starting under de
Gaulle, presidential power became increasingly autocratic (censorship, cen-
tralised power, tough policing), all but disenfranchising the citizen. Moreover,
in this post-industrial age, technology replaced masculine labour and eco-
nomic crises compounded unemployment, which brought in its wake renewed
41
international noir
42
french noir 1947–79
the unreliability of the spoken word and the ultimate meaninglessness of exist-
ence (Ionesco and Beckett).
Moral preoccupations ran deep in the nation’s psyche; this was, after all,
a country that had capitulated to the enemy (in the Occupation, 1940–4)
and denounced itself to itself – during the Occupation some 3–5 million
anonymous letters of denunciation were sent to the Vichy government alone.12
Suspicion and paranoia were rife, as too was jealousy (often the root cause of
letters of denunciation); the very essence of noir was a lived reality during this
painful period of France’s history. Thus, it is hardly surprising that betrayal is
a major trope of the French film noir – a betrayal that can be read (allegorically
at least) as pertaining to the nation.
Although none of the three films in this cycle makes a single mention of the
war, the Occupation period or the Resistance, that recent past is nonetheless
there as a structuring absence. Quai des Orfèvres is a film that speaks directly
to the postwar mood of jealousy and despair, Impasse des deux-anges to the
need to rebuild a broken France and Les Diaboliques to the cold cynicism of
material advancement regardless of the cost to others. In Quai des Orfèvres
the murder of a salacious promoter-entrepreneur, Brignon (Charles Dullin),
becomes the focus of investigation for world-weary, ageing Detective Antoine
(Louis Jouvet). Brignon, an elderly, hunchbacked individual, enjoys collecting
photographs of nude women whom he has procured for that purpose (with
possible spin-offs for financial gain too). Three major suspects come under
Antoine’s purview: the aspiring music-hall artiste Jenny (Suzy Delair), who
hopes to impress Brignon with her singing talents and get into film, although
he is more interested in her physical attributes; her husband-accompanist
Maurice (Bernard Blier) whose jealousy drives him to hunt down Brignon
and kill him, only to arrive too late (he is already dead); finally, Dora (Simone
Renant), a professional photographer who, because of economic necessity,
supplies Brignon with his photographs (she tries to protect both Jenny and
Maurice from suspicion, the former because she is secretly in love with her, the
latter because he is an old friend).
The film plays skilfully with its audience, asking the question: who is the
noirest of them all? For during the first half of the film, the central noir char-
acter is undoubtedly Maurice. Once he gets wind of Jenny’s deception (she
claims she is going to see her sick grandmother when in fact she is going to
Brignon’s private mansion), the whole tone of the film turns to noir. Lighting
in Maurice’s apartment becomes chiaroscuro, casting shadows as he looks at
his despairing reflection in the mirror, takes his gun, plans the murder, con-
structs an alibi and chases off in the night to Brignon’s house. But then, once
Detective Antoine comes into the story, it is he who becomes more obviously
the central noir protagonist. We first encounter him in his miserable lodgings,
which he shares with his son (a mixed-race boy). The cheerless, freezing rooms
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french noir 1947–79
With both these films (made some seven years apart) guilt is what drives the
narrative, even if the tonalities are distinct. The shadows of the past, the legacy
of the Occupation, are cast long; no one, it seems, is immune – even Antoine
admits his job is a dirty one. In Quai des Orfèvres, the guilt experienced is
mostly an outcome of irresponsible actions, often due to the compromises
that have to be made in this time of postwar penury (Dora and Jenny in par-
ticular, but also Maurice in his jealousy and cowardice). So bad faith plays
its part until, in the end, all three take responsibility for their actions. In Les
Diaboliques, the drab décor matches the sordid motives of the central couple
whose penny-pinching avarice will be their final undoing. As for guilt, with the
exception of Christina, whilst it is pervasive, it remains ungraspable, much like
Michel’s ghostly body.
Confrontation with the past is ultimately the only way forward, as Tourneur’s
Impasse des deux-anges makes clear. Indeed, the penultimate lines of the film,
spoken by Marianne (the name is symbolically Republican to the core) are: ‘I
had a past. I no longer have one. Now I am free.’ Yet what is intriguing here
is that the confrontation is mediated through the female body – Marianne
(Signoret) confronts her past, something her male counterparts are seemingly
incapable of doing. In this film, a former lover, Jean (Meurisse) resurfaces into
Marianne’s life after a seven-year absence. Briefly, she is tempted to forego
her marriage to a rich marquis, Antoine (Marcel Herrand) and leave with
Jean. She joins him on a nocturnal walk that takes them to their old working-
class haunts in the Impasse des Deux-Anges (in the sixth arrondissement of
Paris, just a few streets behind her posh apartment in Saint-Germain). They
catch up on their past, through a series of flashbacks. She learns that when he
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disappeared from her life seven years ago, unbeknownst to her he was under
arrest for theft and sent to jail. He is now a top safe-cracker and jewel thief
and back in Paris (his nom-de-plume is ‘Le Spécialiste’), brought in by some
mobsters to steal her necklace (although he had no way of knowing it was hers
since she had changed her name). She, meantime, has built herself a success-
ful career on the stage, which she is about to relinquish in order to marry the
marquis. Jean accuses her of betraying her class; she retorts she has nothing to
reproach herself for, yet her renaming (from Anne-Marie to Marianne) belies
this – she clearly did want to leave her past behind. The two angels in the film
title are hyphenated, suggesting an inextricable link between Jean and Anne-
Marie/Marianne. Yet which is the good angel and which the bad: the man with
a criminal past or the woman in denial of hers? The flashback trajectory clari-
fies this impasse. Jean is incapable of change; Marianne sees through his bad
faith when he blames her for his inability to go straight and it is that, plus his
violence and cruelty towards those who get in his way, which clarifies her own
past (she acknowledges how her passion for Jean blinded her to the truth) and
leads her to leave him. Bereft, he elects to die: he returns the stolen necklace,
thereby defying the mobsters’ orders, knowing full well they will come and gun
him down – an honourable Samurai-type of suicide which Melville’s hero, Jef
Costello, reprises twenty years later (Le Samuraï). At last he takes responsibil-
ity for his actions – it is therefore an existential death. But it is also an absurd
one, for, as he lies dying in the street, he manages to utter the very last words
of the film, ‘c’est pas la peine’ (‘it isn’t worth it’). (Michel’s dying words in À
bout de souffle, ‘c’est vraiment dégueulasse’ (‘it’s really disgusting’) echo this
absurdist view.)
I want to close this section with a few words about noir iconography and
sexuality. The first point concerns set design. Typically it should act as a foil to
the narrative and, in Quai des Orfèvres and Les Diaboliques, Max Douy and
Léon Barsacq’s restrained style does just that. Douy’s sets match the tempera-
ment and economic reality of the Quai des Orfèvres characters: the cramped
effervescence of the music-hall and backstage environs; the art-nouveau cafés
of Jenny’s world (all rather artificial); the straight lines and functional art déco
of Dora’s apartment, which tell us a great deal about her professional precision
and empty love life; Maurice and Jenny’s apartment, aspiring to be bourgeois
yet dingy and unkempt (especially in the kitchen); Antoine moving from one
drab, spartan environment (his freezing cold rooms) to another (the equally
freezing police headquarters). Similarly, Barsacq’s décor for Les Diaboliques
is entirely consonant with the different characters’ personas (Michel’s stark
wood-panelled office, Christine’s overly Catholic bedroom, Nicole’s stingy
flat in Niort where the rattling of old pipes in the bathroom ultimately gives
the murderous plan away). Only Jean D’Eaubonne stands out with his exces-
sive décors for Impasse des deux-anges, with the rich, overstuffed interiors of
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french noir 1947–79
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48
french noir 1947–79
of terrorist and torture tactics on both sides. Conflict lasted until 1962 when,
finally, France gave up the fight, and independence for Algeria was granted by
referendum of the French electorate (by 99.72 per cent).
The image of France to prevail, therefore, is of modernisation, economic
growth and cleanliness at home, but difficult and dirty decolonisation abroad.
Of the six noir films we are considering here, only one, from the third cycle,
Malle’s L’Ascenseur pour l’échafaud (1958), speaks to this image of a nation
in conflict (a brave step given censorship laws of the time, especially in this
peak year of the troubles). The central male character is a former paratrooper
who fought in both Indochina and Algeria; his boss (whom he murders) is a
magnate in the oil business (laying pipelines) and has made his fortune exploit-
ing Algeria; the secondary character, a troubled youth, has a barbed exchange
with a German tourist (whom he murders) over the effects on French morale
of both the Occupation and the colonial wars.
The focus in the second cycle is on a modernising France, where the concept
of honour amongst thieves (Grisbi), the importance of family (Rififi) and
keeping France clean (Razzia) prevail. However, there is an undercurrent of
nostalgia for a pre-war consciousness when France was an honourable nation,
in that these three films are all constructed around a similar premise: the old
order versus the new, wherein the new order is not necessarily always seen as
the best. In Rififi and Grisbi the new order is the rival gang that doesn’t want to
work for its money. The leader of the rival gang is a foreigner and is involved
in selling drugs (in nightclubs) and thinks nothing of stealing the loot from the
likes of Tony-Le-Stéphanois (Jean Servais) in Rififi, and Max in Grisbi, two
old-style gangsters who have worked very hard to pull off what they hoped
was their last heist. Indeed, in Rififi we are witness to the labour involved (in
a twenty-five-minute central section of the film). In Razzia, the new order is
epitomised by a get-rich-quick culture of drug manufacturing (la chnouff) and
sleazy jazz clubs where marijuana is freely smoked. This ‘stoned’ generation
(literally, several personages are complete zombies) and those who supply their
habits must be eradicated – and they are, thanks to the hard endeavours and
clever work of undercover cop Henri Ferré, aka ‘Le Nantais’ (Jean Gabin), a
man of strength and long service to law and order.
The new order in these three films is also the greater materialism of the age,
evidence of which is to be found in the domestic interiors, clothes and the very
fancy cars. But, again, this is revealed in a contrastive manner, casting a shadow
on its intrinsic worth. To this effect, domestic interiority has a significant role
to play. In Rififi the contrast between the modern luxury of Jo’s apartment and
Tony’s dingy bedsit immediately signals the price Tony has paid (including
his poor health) in taking the rap and going to jail for Jo. The cleanliness and
elegant modern design of the furniture in Jo’s apartment, and the value placed
upon it, is mirrored by the attention his wife, Louise, pays to it (we first see her
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50
french noir 1947–79
These bourgeois noir characters, with their bourgeois values, their sleek
bathrooms and electronic household goods standing as a symbol of having
arrived, seek to settle down to a quiet life. However, it is not external forces
that will give their secrets away (as in Diaboliques). What will is a masculinity
that is unable to be strong. Tony Le Stéphanois’ (Rififi) wracked body is an
excellent metaphor for this concept of a weak and ailing masculinity. He could
have saved Jo from death if he had managed to make that one last phone call
instead of being bent on revenge and going after his rival. His specialist safe-
breaker, Césare (Jules Dassin),17 also shows weakness by breaking the code of
trust when he steals an extra ring for his girlfriend (it is this gift that gives the
secret away); similarly Riton in Grisbi. Only the undercover cop, Le Nantais
in Razzia, has any mettle and is unafraid to confront the drug underworld,
and, of the gangsters, only Max in Grisbi lives on (difficult, perhaps, to kill off
Gabin, the monstre sacré of French cinema).
Bourgeois values are a far cry from two of the three iconoclastic New Wave
noirs, À bout de souffle and Tirez sur le pianiste – less so in L’Ascenseur pour
l’échafaud, for Florence (Jeanne Moreau) may well want to leave the stifling
nature of bourgeois life, in the form of her rich husband, but not necessarily its
trappings. Fortunately, her lover, former paratrooper Julien (Maurice Ronin),
is well-equipped, physically, to carry out the perfect crime (by abseiling up
and down the building to murder her husband) and, if his expensive sports
car is anything to go by, wealthy enough to maintain her lifestyle. Crucially,
however, he leaves the rope behind and has to trace back his steps, this time
in the lift. It gets shut down overnight – and he is stuck. Meantime, the youth,
Louis (Georges Poujoly), has stolen Julien’s car to impress his girlfriend,
Véronique (Yori Bertin). In an absurdist gesture of fury he shoots dead two
German tourists with Julien’s gun (left in the car’s glove compartment). The
twist of fate could not be more cruel – a catch 22 in which either way, Julien
will be found guilty of murder – and, of all ironies, it is new technology that
is the undoing of both murderers (Julien’s miniature spy camera reveals the
truth).
This cold, slowly seething noir is spectacularly shot in the night hours of
Paris (Decaë at his documentary best) as Florence trails around the city looking
for her lover, her trajectory coolly underscored by the improvised jazz of Miles
Davis’s trumpet, discreetly backed by the rest of the quartet. It is a ‘no exit’
noir, sad and tragic; wasteful where Julien’s and Louis’ lives are concerned
(Julien to a long prison sentence; Louis to the guillotine); a desperate dashing
of Florence’s and Véronique’s hopes for fulfilment in love. What L’Ascenseur
introduces to the French noir is the sense of futility not just of the gestures of
crime (compared with the great craftsmanship of the heist in Rififi), but of
aspirations, of hopes for a better life. Instructively, it is the youth (the new
demographic class), Louis, who most readily embodies this despair and who
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encapsulates this morose mood of the nation when he speaks of France ‘having
a lot on its mind’ (he is referring to the Occupation and the Indochina and
Algerian crises).
Truffaut said of Le Pianiste that he wanted to make a film sans sujet
(without a subject).18 And that ‘lack’ is precisely what tips the scales – the
central protagonist’s timidity makes him ineffectual, a rather cowardly crea-
ture (un salaud in existential terms). Similarly, in À bout de souffle, although
Michel (Jean-Paul Belmondo) accuses all around him of cowardice, especially
Patricia (Jean Seberg), his American girlfriend, it is his own arrogant bravura
that makes him the coward he is (stealing from the weak and unsuspecting;
taking what is not his without a thought; full of empty gestures and maxims).
His ineffectual pose as a gangster is marked sartorially. First, he loses his
tweed jacket and trilby hat. Second, he mixes sartorial metaphors, wearing
silk socks with a tweed jacket; later, he is seen sporting a tweed cap. Third, he
completely undermines his hard-man act when, in the long, central sequence
in which he and Patricia talk about life, we repeatedly see them wearing each
other’s clothes (for example, he, her dressing gown; she, his shirt). Noir sarto-
rial iconography is at its most unstable here. Finally, in the closing sequence,
his signature sunglasses have lost a lens, as if indicating that he is no more than
the sum of his contradictions. No wonder he says ‘je choisis le néant’ (‘I choose
nothingness’) – in Sartrean terms the salaud’s bad faith escape – and elects to
run down the street knowing he will be shot in the back by the police.
Truffaut called Le Pianiste ‘un pastiche respectueux’ (‘a respectful pastiche’)
of American cinema. Coming on the back of his very successful Les 400 coups,
he wanted to avoid being pigeonholed and so made this film with the intention
of disconcerting the audience. It is a mélange of generic tones, mixing the bur-
lesque with the surreal, the lyrical with the noir.19 But, despite the noir iconog-
raphy being in place, nothing makes a great deal of sense (the lack of subject
again). Even though Charlie (Charles Aznavour), the timid pianist, unwillingly
gets enmeshed in his gangster brother’s problems (the criminal element of the
film); the only part of the narrative that is ‘follow-able’ is his own personal
story. We learn how he gave up classical playing when his wife committed
suicide. Then, as now, he is obsessed with failure and his trajectory is a solitary
one – ‘even when he is with someone he is alone’, his girlfriend Lena (Marie
Dubois) remarks. It is his failure to connect fully to another that makes him
the homme fatal and causes the death of the two women who love him (his
wife and Lena). With À bout de souffle and Le Pianiste, the protagonists are
counter-noir in their lack of heroism. Indeed, both characters are straining to
get either into or out of noir narratives. Michel starts off in Detour, ends up in
Dillinger. He yearns to be a French Bogey, but remains a sorry pastiche. In the
end, both Godard (in a cameo role) and Patricia denounce him. In this parodic
doubling-up of the femme fatale, first the director turns homme fatal – he’s
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french noir 1947–79
seen enough – then Patricia, for she too is tired of Michel’s gangster narratives
(Godard is clearly ironising the ubiquitous femme fatale of the American noir
here). As for Charlie, he simply wants to disappear: one shot of him in the bar
at his piano has him squeezed up in the right-hand corner of the frame, almost
pushed out of sight, therefore exactly where he’d like to be, the embodiment
of the lack of subject.
A striking feature of all three New Wave noirs is their slowness, a seeming
oxymoron where noir aesthetics are concerned. Time is given to follow
Florence as she trails through the streets of Paris; to observe Julien trying to
escape from the lift; for Louis’ fury to mount. In À bout de souffle, the only
quick moment is the killing of the cop at the beginning (all done in a series of
jump cuts); the rest is a series of meanderings through Paris on foot or in stolen
cars, and much discussion, especially in cramped hotel bedrooms. In Tirez sur
le pianiste, apart from the opening sequence (of a man running through the
streets), the camera is never in a rush to move on – we will hear the intermi-
nable song about breasts (‘Framboise’), and the pianist repeatedly tinkling out
his tune. This cinema of slowness owes a great deal in terms of its look to cin-
ematographers Decaë and Coutard, both of whom trained as photojournalists
and served in France’s wars (World War II and Indochina, respectively). Their
documentarist’s style is much in evidence in these three films, with a raw grainy
realism being created by hand-held cameras and shooting on location and in
natural lighting. It is a style that offers an anatomy of noir, in the sense that it
allows for the exposure of the randomness of a gesture or a set of conditions,
the split second, the seemingly insignificant detail or nothingness (néant) that
can bring about terrible consequences. That nothingness exposed here will be
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the starting point of the last cycle of noirs, in which cowardice and weakness,
so much a marker of the first three cycles of noir, are replaced by a sublime
impotence – sublime because the gestures of crime are in excess; sublime
because death is the noir protagonist’s desired goal.
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french noir 1947–79
57
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by sheltering them). Despite his moustache, however, Corey gives out an aura
of ambiguous sexuality, which his demilitarised trenchcoat only serves to rein-
force. Vincendeau, in her study of this film, suggests that heterosexual sexual-
ity is renounced (women are banished) and describes the relationship between
Corey and Vogel as homophilic (where an attraction between the two men is
explicitly present).24 Indeed, they share Corey’s apartment, Corey is tender in
his gestures when he helps Vogel down the rope ladder during the heist and so
on. As the film draws to its conclusion, Vogel attempts to step in and rescue
Corey from the trap Mattei has set him (he disguises himself as a fence for the
stolen jewels), but ends up dying for him. Corey runs up to his body and gently
caresses him before dashing off and being shot himself.
A similar homophilia colours Melville’s last film, Un Flic. There are numerous
matching eyeline shots of the two men, Inspector Coleman (Delon) and Simon
(Richard Crenna), glancing at each other in close-up. But perhaps the most
intense exchange occurs when the two of them are seated at the bar (in Simon’s
nightclub) with, in the middle, Cathy (Catherine Deneuve) – the woman who
is sexually shared by both men. The exchange of looks between the two men
makes it clear that they both know they are phallically linked through her. We
are not even sure they haven’t been in the know about each other (criminal and
pursuant) all along. This queerness is compounded by the presence of a trans-
vestite who is one of Coleman’s chief grasses – whose over-invested femininity
pastiches Cathy’s ethereal beauty – and who puts Coleman onto Simon’s extrav-
agantly planned heist (stealing contraband heroin off an overnight express
train). The exchange of looks between Coleman and the transvestite unambigu-
ously expresses desire (unfulfilled or otherwise); and when Coleman beats her
up and orders her to become a man, one suspects again that homophilia may be
at work here. The icing on this queering comes in the final showdown between
Coleman and Simon. Coleman plays along with Simon’s last mise-en-scène of
himself: dressed in his ever-present trenchcoat (his badge of professionalism), he
pretends to reach for a gun but is shot down by Coleman. Aided and abetted by
Coleman, Simon’s death becomes a heroic suicide (rather than a sordid one in
prison, as Coleman explains to his Detective Sergeant).
These noirs are beyond the realm of the real, with Melville leading the
way. These suicidal gangsters, hiding in the light in a hysterical reaction to
the erasure of identity, are driven by an ineluctable desire to be seen and
thereby killed – a form of visible anonymity. The repeated use of urban
wastelands – where city renewal has been halted; of bleak rural non-spaces;
of modern architecture that is brutish in its angular meaninglessness (all of
which is underscored by enhanced natural sounds: fierce winds, incessant car
tyres on wet tarmac and so on) – contributes to the construction of a national
dystopia that reaches its climax in Série noire where everything is in freefall
and in which Frank Poupart, a travelling salesman, dances and dices his way
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french noir 1947–79
to a total annihilation of his being. The homme hystérique erases the homme
fatal.25 Poupart’s manic behaviour readily embodies the ‘energy of despair’
that typifies the post-industrial world he inhabits.26 For all that his trenchcoat
remains pristinely clean throughout; for all that his dingy apartment (once his
wife leaves) is returned to order and cleanliness; for all that, from his distorted
vision of things, he rescues a young woman from her abusive aunt (and in so
doing kills the aunt and steals her money) – thus fulfilling his imaginary gang-
ster narrative which we see him enacting at the very beginning of the film (on
a wasteland, to which he returns whenever stressed) – nonetheless, the noir
protagonist is at an end.
Bibliography
Birchall, Bridget (2007), ‘Patrick Dewaere and gender identity in Giscardian France
(1974–1981)’, unpublished dissertation, University of Exeter.
Borde, Raymond and Étienne Chaumeton, (1955), Panorama du Film Noir Américain,
Paris: Éditions de Minuit.
Hayward, Susan (2004), Simone Signoret: The Star as Cultural Sign, New York and
London: Continuum.
——. (2005), French National Cinema (2nd edition), London and New York: Routledge.
——. (2005), Les Diaboliques, London: I. B. Tauris.
Insdorf, Annette (1995), François Truffaut, New York and Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Lyotard, Jean-François (1979), La Condition postmoderne, Paris: Éditions de Minuit.
McArthur, Colin (2000), ‘Mise-en-scène Degree Zero: Jean-Pierre Melville’s Le
Samuraï (1967)’, in Susan Hayward and Ginette Vincendeau (eds), French Film:
Texts and Contexts (2nd edition), London and New York: Routledge, pp. 189–201.
McMillan, James F. (1985), Dreyfus to De Gaulle: Politics and Society in France
1898–1969, London: Edward Arnold.
Phillips, Alastair (2009), Rififi, London: I. B. Tauris.
Powrie, Phil (2007), ‘French neo-noir to hyper-noir’, in Andrew Spicer (ed.), European
Noir, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 55–83.
Rolls, Alistair and Deborah Walker (2009), French and American Noir: Dark Crossings,
London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Vincendeau, Ginette (1992), ‘Noir is also a French word: The French antecedents of film
noir’, in Ian Cameron (ed.), The Movie Book of Film Noir, London: Studio Vista,
pp. 49–58.
——. (2003), Jean-Pierre Melville: An American in Paris, London: British Film Institute
Publishing.
——. (2007), ‘French film noir’, in Spicer (ed.), European Noir, pp. 23–54.
Virilio, Paul (1997), Pure War, New York: Semiotext(e).
——. (2004), ‘The information bomb’, in Steve Redhead (ed.), The Paul Virilio Reader,
Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 198–208.
Notes
1. See Ginette Vincendeau, ‘Noir is also a French word: The French antecedents of
film noir’, in Ian Cameron (ed.), The Movie Book of Film Noir (London: Studio
Vista, 1992), p. 31.
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international noir
2. Upon the Liberation of France (in 1944) the ban on the importation of American
films (imposed by the German Occupier) was lifted.
3. It is worth making the point here that this film title refers to the marketing label
série noire used by Marcel Duhamel to launch, in 1945, the successful publica-
tion of hard-boiled American detective fiction (in translation) and, a little later, of
French detective novels.
4. Vincendeau, ‘Noir is also a French word’, pp. 49–58.
5. Ibid., p. 51.
6. Ginette Vincendeau, ‘French film noir’, in Andrew Spicer (ed.), European Noir
(Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2007), pp. 23–54.
7. Susan Hayward, Simone Signoret: The Star as Cultural Sign (New York and
London, Continuum, 2004).
8. Phil Powrie, ‘French neo-noir to hyper-noir’, in Spicer (ed.), European Noir, pp.
55–83.
9. Ibid., p. 55.
10. See reprinted (1966) Melville interview in L’Avant-Scène Cinéma 525 (October
2003), 3–9, at 4. ‘For me Bob is not a noir, but a comedy of manners . . . Le
Deuxième souffle is a noir’.
11. For much more detail see the special issue on this period, ‘Culture and the
Liberation’, French Cultural Studies 5(15).
12. James F. McMillan, Dreyfus to De Gaulle: Politics and Society in France 1898–
1969 (London: Edward Arnold, 1985), p. 133.
13. For details of Clouzot’s suspension, see Susan Hayward, Les Diaboliques (London:
I. B. Tauris, 2005), pp. 4–5.
14. For a detailed analysis of Les Diaboliques see Hayward, Les Diaboliques.
15. For a detailed analysis of their relationship, see Hayward, Les Diaboliques, pp.
47–55.
16. See Truffaut interview supplement, Tirez sur le pianiste DVD (MK2, 2006).
17. There is no space here to expand on Dassin’s blacklisting by HUAC in the USA. But
see Alastair Phillips, Rififi (London: I. B. Tauris, 2009), an excellent study of Rififi
which includes a full discussion of Dassin’s circumstances.
18. Annette Insdorf, François Truffaut (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1995), p. 27.
19. All on Truffaut interview supplement, Tirez sur le pianiste DVD, see note 16.
20. See Susan Hayward, French National Cinema (2nd edition) (London and New
York: Routledge), pp. 210–11, 239.
21. Jean-François Lyotard, La Condition postmoderne (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
1979).
22. Paul Virilio, Pure War (New York: Semiotext(e), 1997), pp. 50–6.
23. Colin McArthur, ‘Mise-en-scène Degree Zero: Jean-Pierre Melville’s Le Samuraï
(1967)’, in Susan Hayward and Ginette Vincendeau (eds), French Film: Texts and
Contexts (2nd edition) (London and New York: Routledge, 2000), p. 191.
24. Ginette Vincendeau, Jean-Pierre Melville: An American in Paris (London: British
Film Institute Publishing, 2003), pp. 197–8.
25. For an illuminating study of this film see Bridget Birchall, ‘Patrick Dewaere and
gender identity in Giscardian France (1974–1981)’, unpublished dissertation,
University of Exeter, 2007, pp. 280–313.
26. Paul Virilio, ‘The information bomb’, in Steve Redhead (ed.), The Paul Virilio
Reader (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004), p. 202.
60
3. FRENCH NEO-NOIR:
AN AESTHETIC FOR THE POLICIER
Maureen Turim
61
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subset), the spy film, the black comedy and the mystery story are other genres
with clear overlaps with what many call French film noir, classical or neo. I
prefer a more restrictive definition: if there is no noir stylisation, the film will
not be considered here as neo-noir.
Neo-noir defined temporally as later noir often synthesises diverse genres,
while foregrounding the scaffolding of film noir. In this chapter, I will embrace
the term ‘neo-noir’ as appropriate to group together a set of French films from
the 1960s to the present, when the ‘bones’ of film noir still hold together the
body of the film. However, I will not consider certain films that by their vio-
lence or cynicism others, such as Phil Powrie, have called French neo-noir or
hyper-noir, if they have few or no other qualities that merit inclusion in the
genre. The ‘new French extremity’, as some have termed the genre of these
violent films, features characters who may commit violent crimes, but without
the motivations and narrative patterns associated with film noir, and certainly
without noir style, despite some use of urban, night-time settings.
I trace the story of French neo-noir to the films of French director Jean-Pierre
Melville; one could argue that all of neo-noir as it branches diversely into a
global genre can make more sense by considering Melville’s films as intertexts
and, in some cases, exemplars. Neo-noir might be as linked to Melville as it
is to US films; as I shall discuss, the interconnections between developments
in the US and France are strong, with Martin Scorsese in the past forty years
setting a benchmark for the French in a manner similar to Melville for his US
admirers. The permutations enacted on film noir by Melville in five gangster
films made in the 1960s and 1970s demonstrated the potential of neo-noir: Le
Doulos (1962), Le Deuxième souffle (1966), Le Samouraï (1967), Le Cercle
rouge (1970) and Un Flic (Dirty Money, 1972). In fact, the precedent for neo-
noir may be established by Melville as early as 1956 in Bob le flambeur, and
I would place that quirky and wonderful film as so anomalous within French
film noir as to serve as transitional to neo-noir despite its very early date, at a
time when US film noir is still entirely active as a genre.
The historical forces behind Melville’s permutation include his grasp of the
philosophical and formal stakes of film noir in the way that other, even quite
excellent policiers from the time do not. For Melville makes a strong case for
defining neo-noir not merely by subject matter, nor by iconographical motifs,
but by a more comprehensive evaluation of form as well: a specific consistency
in narrative structure, style of lighting, style of dialogue and tone.
It has often been remarked that the naming of film noir by French critics
in 1946 in reference to American postwar detective film itself involved a bor-
rowing from the French name for the book series published by Gallimard,
Série noire, which published hard-boiled American detective fiction alongside
French crime, detective and gangster novels. In the mid- 1950s, the notion of
film noir was yet to be applied to French crime films. To mark the significant
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both specific reference and genre abstraction, that may be considered how neo-
noir updates a film noir characteristic by taking into account how cities have
changed since the age of classic noir.
We should also note that Montmartre and Pigalle were actual organised
crime encampments historically, and that this corresponds to Melville’s inter-
est in reworking actual organised crime history in France, something the
symbolic and philosophical bent of his films tends to obscure. Le Doulos, Le
Deuxième souffle and Le Cercle rouge were sourced from novels drawn from
actual gangster crimes.
The Montmartre-Pigalle representation finds its most startling inscription is
the depiction of Bob’s apartment as an artist’s studio with a large ceiling-to-
floor picture window framing Sacré Cœur cathedral. This bizarre detail serves
not realism, but rather Melville’s multilayered system of references, in that it
links Bob to the residences of French avant-garde artists in Montmartre in the
1910s–1920s that would give birth to cubism and other artistic innovations,
though none of the artists had such stunning apartments. This high cultural
reference may be read as an assertion of French cultural identity by the film,
a reflexive gesture claiming France’s rich visual arts traditions; Melville will
place small abstract paintings in the protagonist’s reclaimed apartment in Le
Cercle rouge to the same effect. In both cases, these references to art point
to the film’s mise-en-scène reflexively, requesting aesthetic appreciation of
abstract composition.
Anne, who will eventually become the film’s femme fatale, is introduced in
the opening scenes as a random passerby to whom Bob’s attention is drawn.
As a future femme fatale, she is literally picked out of the crowd. She will be
someone to be saved by Bob from the dangers of Montmartre, someone he
assumes to be too innocent to let the city, especially one of its harshest locali-
ties for women, spoil. Femme fatales in film noir are often women whom men
think they can save: Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur, 1947), for example,
introduces Cathy as someone to be saved from the gangster boss who controls
her. Yet the difference here is the paternal attitude of Bob towards both Anne
and his protégé, Paulo. Instead of taking Anne’s offer of sexual favours, he
tries to give her to Paulo, who becomes fatally attracted to her. This paternal
displacement of the sexuality of the femme fatale is one of the most intriguing
aspects of the film, as is Anne’s characterisation as a woman determined to
remain independent; she continues to sleep with others, flouting both Bob’s
and Paulo’s attempts to restrain her.
Upon first seeing Bob’s apartment’s interior and view, Anne remarks that
he must have inherited wealth. The irony of this remark is later underscored
by the car trip on which Bob takes Anne to see his origins, a run-down house,
presumably in the working-class north-eastern suburbs, as we see Montmartre
in the far distance behind their car. A suburb whose distance from Montmartre
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notable inscriptions: the sunburst mirror in which Silien sees himself reflected
towards the end of the film may suggest a promise of Apollonian ascendance
but also recalls the broken mirror in which Flaugel regards himself earlier. The
contrast in mirrors inscribes the master-slave dialectic that the pair cannot
escape, for the invincibility of ascendance to mastery occurs only as a brief
illusion, to be destroyed by the film’s end.
Already in Le Doulos, and repeatedly in Melville’s films, his police and gang-
ster interactions, and his inter-gang guerrilla warfare parallel both his experi-
ence of the French Resistance and his three films depicting the Resistance: his
characters are hunted, not knowing whom to trust. In fact, the personal liaison
between Melville and Jacques Becker underscores how both directors may
have channelled their Resistance activities into their depiction of gangsters,
displacing onto this other world the life-and-death pressures of Occupation
France. Melville’s series of films about the Resistance alternated with his gang-
ster films, yet the latter play out the tensions of the Resistance, displaced.
In his 1972 book of interviews with Rui Nogueira, Melville is aware of the
irony that the gangsters participated in the Gestapo. Melville calls the book
upon which Le Deuxième souffle (1966) is based, Un Règlement de comptes
by José Giovanni, ‘an absolutely authentic document on the Marseillais
milieu [underworld] which gave birth to the rue Villejust Gestapo’ (which,
he explains, ‘was the Parisian section of the Corsica/Marseilles Gestapo’).2
Author Giovanni, whose real name was Joseph Damiani, had been a convicted
gangster before turning to writing upon his prison release; his novel was later
republished under the title Melville gave the film. The novel is based on the
story of real-life gangster Gustave Méla, whose career began in the late 1930s
and lasted until his demise in the 60s. Melville’s film concentrates on the events
in the mid-1960s leading up to Méla’s death. False papers and clandestine
movements characterise both novel and film.
Melville says, in addition, ‘The seven Paris Gestapos were all formed in the
same way’.3 This remark is telling, for the connection of French organised
crime to the French collaborationist Gestapo was not something often directly
discussed in France. Giovanni as Série noire author had been rehabilitated and
his postwar conviction for murder commuted, when he was later found not
himself to have been the assassin. Only in 1993 would Giovanni’s ties to the
Gestapo during the war become known, though Melville seems to suspect it
even as he adapts the novel.
While drawn to Giovanni’s novel, Melville tries to inscribe what he knows
of Giovanni’s past in the film. He adds a mark, a mogen David (star of
David), to the interior of the boxcar in which Gu escapes in the opening
sequences of the film. This is both a pointed reminder of the fact that French
national railway company (SNCF) collaborated during World War II in the
deportation of Jews and other prisoners from France to concentration camps,
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and to the gangsters’ own collaborations with the Nazi regime in the Paris
Gestapos.
The prison escape which opens the film is entirely abstracted in parallel to
the opening sequence of Le Doulos, and in contrast to the prison escape in
Jacques Becker’s Le Trou, also adapted from a Giovanni novel. French critics
tend to call such sequences ‘pure cinema’, by which they mean to extol cinema
which, without compromise, celebrates formal qualities unique to the moving
image. Here this takes the form of an image that is filled with abstract geomet-
ric shapes, mysterious until the escapees’ heads emerge to define these shapes
as elements of prison architecture.
Despite this initial abstraction, as a narrative drawn from the biography of
a real gangster, there is much that connects this to Jean-François Richet’s two-
part Mesrine films, both from 2008, in which Vincent Cassel plays Jacques
Mesrine, a notorious gangster whose heists and prison escapes garnered much
press and popular attention from the 1960s to the 1980s; my consideration of
the neo-noir aspects of Mesrine will rest on what they have in common with
this film by Melville. In that light, it is intriguing to note that Giovanni’s story
of Méla was remade as Le Deuxième souffle in 2007, by Alain Corneau, with
considerable shifts in emphasis and stylistic differences from Melville’s film.
The gangster biography would seem to be the subset of the gangster genre
that has the least in common with the film noir genre, as its reference to a real,
known life (even if highly fictionalised) prides itself on a verisimilitude at odds
with noir stylisation. Melville’s film may be considered more neo-noir than the
more recent ones by Richet and Corneau, more interested in blending noir with
gangster biography.
The poor interiors with fading wallpaper of the hideouts in Le Deuxième
souffle contrast with the luxury to which the gangsters aspire. ‘Gitan’ is the
word used to racially characterise a young gangster, which also serves to
suggest the ethnic Manush and ethnic Yeniche factions of the Parisian under-
world. As we shall see, while French gangster films often included Italians as
part of the underworld, one of the characteristics of neo-noir is to include a
wide range of ethnicities and national origins beyond the French and Italian
contexts, responding perhaps to the evolution of organised crime in France
into clans of distinct ethnicities, as well as interactions between these diverse
groups within certain gangs.
The mistral winds of the corniches (cliffs) east of Marseilles provide the
setting for the final platinum heist of the film. Wipes left to right across the
image punctuate this segment, as they will in Melville’s next film, punctuation
devices that might suggest nostalgia for an earlier period of filmmaking, but
which also serve to emphasise the attention to spatial composition.
Le Samouraï (1967) marks a new stage in the growth of French neo-noir as
a reflexive rethinking of the US film This Gun for Hire (Frank Tuttle, 1942).
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A line from Melville’s film, ‘Why don’t you tell me what this is all about?’
receives a curt answer, ‘Talk takes time’, that becomes emblematic of the strip-
ping of dialogue from a film that would rather show, would rather give time
to actions meticulously executed. This film constructs a blue-grey tonality in
many scenes, while others emphasise a deep black and sharp white light con-
trasted to grey, as in the sculptures and modern lights that are so evocatively
displayed in the vertical stripes of the upscale club, Martey’s, where the first
killing takes place. Martey’s as a name might indicate a nod to the American
style, but the owner’s brief exchange with his assassin borrows its laconic
French from the understatement of Robert Bresson. The office, in shades of
blue with modern paintings on the wall, and the police headquarters character-
ised by its black and grey web of interlocking offices and long corridors, create
the sense of an extremely designed film in which colour and long corridors will
be motifs. This Gun for Hire’s rented bedroom in a San Francisco rooming
house and the kitten the hitman feeds, whose abuse by a maid incites his first
violence, a lashing out at that woman, are transformed in Melville’s film into
a single-room apartment, in tonalities of mottled grey, with a birdcage as its
centrepiece, prefiguring as a studied interior the loft spaces we will see in Diva.
Unusual for the gangster film is the perspective on a minor player, the hitman,
with this focus adding to the philosophically noir aspects of both the US film
and its French homage, as the hitman by definition is a pawn, hunted by police
and gangsters alike, once he has been used by his gangster employers, only to
be discarded, according to their convenience.
Alan Ladd and Alain Delon both have youthful, good-looking faces that
can hide emotions. Delon offers silent, stilled reactions, similar to the noir
characters played by Robert Mitchum. Melville takes this to new extremes in
directing Delon, self-consciously commenting on the genre, and also as invoca-
tion of an aesthetic he shares with Bresson. Lines are terse, spare. The payoff
betrayal scene on an elevated walkway over train tracks is a study in extreme
deep perspective, a no-exit corridor bordered by iron fencing.
Edward Dimendberg, in his Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity, analy-
ses how US film noir portrays two different sorts of urban environments: the
centripetal city of verticality, high density and public transport versus the
centrifugal city spread into suburban and ex-urban accretions. New York
City would be the model of the centripetal, Los Angeles, the centrifugal. He
also reflects on how the two different cityscapes can coalesce. The Paris of Le
Samouraï is first explored as centrifugal as Jef Costello steals cars, then drives
to an isolated mechanic to change their licence plates before performing a
hit, a vehicular mobility often taken as a token of Melville’s obsession with
American tropes, especially since the cars are often large US models. If this
seems contrary to a central Paris known for its intricate web of public trans-
port, its metro and buses, we should remember that Paris is not all that dense
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or vertical in its central arrondissements, and has spread continuously over the
twentieth century into ever enlarging bands, with specific suburbs noted for
high-rise housing developments and thus more density than the centre itself.
Though the film begins with murders performed by car, it moves towards a
subway subterfuge that will allow the tailed Jef Costello to lose the police
tracking him, and to wend his way under the city to the payoff site. Later, a
subway escape centres on the police detectives following the trajectory through
lights on an electronic map of the subway system (ironically, much like the
electric light subway maps used historically to help tourists and newcomers
in some subway stations). Here the game playing concentrates on the singular
loop of the subway serving Belleville, the only part of the métro in which the
train circles back on itself. Melville thus ends the earlier excursions through the
centrifugal Paris with a chase through its centripetal structures, culminating
in an endgame, a return to the car, a return to the isolated, suburban garage
of the dealer in licence plates for stolen cars and guns, one last time. Neo-noir
Parisian films to follow will return to centripetal Paris, to the motor scooter,
and to the subway in striking ways, as we shall see.
Elements of more classical French films noirs, Rififi (Jules Dassin, 1955)
and Touchez pas au grisbi (Jacques Becker, 1954), are reworked as neo-noir
in Le Cercle rouge. Melville takes the heist gangster film in a different direc-
tion, exploring contemporaneous surveillance technology and high-powered
weaponry against a police background as concerned with terrorism as it is with
organised crime or jewellery robbery. A newly released con, played by Alain
Delon, enlists the aid of a prison escapee whom he wordlessly helps to elude a
dragnet. They then seek the services of a former cop and top marksman (Yves
Montand), who jettisons his alcoholism to aid in the heist.
Three scenes at a nightclub, Santi’s, are not only pivotal to the narrative,
they introduce elements of neo-noir staging, in their self-conscious variations,
one to another. In the first of these scenes, the inspector visits the club, whose
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glass doors marking the entrance are a level lower than the street. The chorus
girls are bedecked in blonde curly wigs, first reflected in the glass. Their cos-
tumes are reminiscent of his former lover, whose photos from before his incar-
ceration, and whose disloyalty, have already figured in the film.
A latter meeting with the marksman depicts his identical entrance to Santi’s.
This time, flapper costumes on the dancing girls fill the frame behind the
meeting. Both men no longer have female lovers, and the chorus girls situate
self-consciously their distance from 20s and 30s gangsters of New York and
Chicago. The third time at Santi’s, conga drums and African beaded costumes
fill the frame between the hands of the Playboy-costumed flower seller, fol-
lowed by a cigarette lit by the ‘fence’, whose hand comes into the foreground.
The audience knows the fence to be the inspector in disguise; his remark that
‘Santi will vouch for me’ conceals the pinch he put on Santi to introduce him
into the post-robbery plans of this otherwise carefully planned heist.
The architecture as the gang drives through the city planning the heist is
all high-rise, probably meant to represent the new construction around La
Défense, the area of western Paris devoted to corporations and finance. In
sharp contrast to this is the Louveciennes mansion, in which the final rev-
elation occurs that the inspector was impersonating a fence as a police trap,
leading to a final shoot-out on the lush grounds of this wealthy estate. This is
the wealthy Parisian ex-urban enclave of a Claude Chabrol mystery thriller,
with the same attention to class and to surreal overtones, where the final shoot-
out will take place.
Finally, Un Flic opens on the rain and wind of the Normandy coast as a
prelude to a bank robbery in a branch bank on the ground floor of a contem-
porary high-rise office building, before the introduction of the double-gated
security entrances that would soon adorn all banks in France. The gang con-
ducting the robbery includes Simon (Richard Crenna), who is the unlikely
friend of a detective (Delon). As a filmic permutation on Delon’s two earlier
Melville films, this closeness between the cop and the suspect is accompa-
nied with the twist that the prostitute qua femme fatale, played by Catherine
Deneuve, is having an ongoing romance with the cop. The scene that intro-
duces this liaison deceives the audience into thinking they are witnessing a
brutal, sexualised interrogation; this strange scene turns out to be simulation,
amorous role-playing on the part of the longstanding lovers. It is such twists
that again move Melville’s films into the territory of neo-noir, in which self-
conscious staging and narrative structuring become embedded as filmic jokes.
This is perhaps the moment to consider remarks Jean-François Lyotard
made about the periodisation as regards the postmodernism: he held that it
was less a question of what followed modernism historically as a sequence
than a differentiation that theorists could make on the basis of how cultural
forms functioned, regardless of their moment of historical emergence. Still, if
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functions similarly to the prison escape, car theft and murder of a policeman
that will later appear in Melville’s Le Doulos, while other elements of intra-
gang debt collection correspond not only to that film, but also to Jacques
Becker’s earlier Touchez pas au grisbi and Claude Sautet’s nearly simultaneous
Classe tous risques. À bout de souffle’s motif of serial car theft will appear in
Melville in Le Samouraï.
Consider another film noir element that undergoes renewal in À bout de
souffle: the rendezvous between gangsters that takes place at night outside the
café-bar-restaurants on the boulevard du Montparnasse. The lounge scene of
film noir that Melville had already begun transforming in Bob le flambeur to
the Montmartre cafés here takes place from a passing convertible on Boulevard
Montmartre, as Michel speaks to those lining the pavements in front of the
bars. It extends Melville’s establishment of neo-noir Paris as a city in vehicu-
lar motion to create one of drive-by negotiation, a variation that prefigures
Melville’s own permutations on automobiles and bars in his films of the 1960s
and 70s. Finally, À bout de souffle’s shoot-out ending on the rue Campagne-
Première (a street known for its artists’ lofts) is a flamboyant addition to the
paradigm of film noir endings.
Bande à part extends the automobile mapping of the city to Joinville, a
northern banlieue, trading the mostly modernist settings of À bout de souffle
for the dreary suburbs that Melville visited two years earlier in Le Deuxième
souffle. Aspects of Bande à part also rework elements of Francois Truffaut’s
Tirez sur le pianiste (1960), which, along with Truffaut’s The Bride wore
Black (1968), Mississippi Mermaid (1969) and the much later Confidentially
Yours (1983), mark that director’s foray into his characteristic blending of two
‘black’ genres, the black comedy and film noir. Similarly to Truffaut’s neo-
noirs, it is a loose adaptation of an American crime novel, Dolores Hitchens’
Fools’ Gold from 1958, and similarly it pushes the novel towards tragi-
comedy, echoing the musical interludes in Tirez sur le pianiste with its own
insertion of a musical number, performed to reflexively remark upon genre
conventions and filmic style.
Cinematic elements boldly stage its humour, while a sympathetic portrayal
of characters is oddly infused into its dark comedic genre. My point is that the
Truffaut and Godard films are riffs on film noir that present for French neo-
noir to follow the extreme liberties with genre that may be taken and the meta-
cinematic consciousness that may be playfully explored in rethinking film noir.
This heritage of Godard, in particular, is part of what differentiates La
Balance (1982), by Bob Swaim, an American-born expatriate director, from
the more documentary police procedurals that surround it. La Balance is espe-
cially worthy of being considered a neo-noir not only for its inheritance of some
aspects of New Wave mise-en-scène, but what it has in common in tone and
style with US neo-noir such as Scorsese’s Mean Streets (1973) and Taxi Driver
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(1976). This policier with noir overtones moves to Belleville from Melville’s
Montmartre, another hill sector of Paris that at the time of the film’s shooting
had seen its transition from working-class slum (featured in Jacques Becker’s
1951 Casque d’or, set at the turn of the century) to an ethnically diverse neigh-
bourhood, home to many of Arab and of Jewish pied-noir backgrounds; it is
just beginning to move towards gentrification, with many construction sites in
evidence. This 80s Belleville environment features restaurants specialising in
Moroccan, Tunisian or Algerian cuisines used prominently in the film, includ-
ing one with a particularly garish interior featuring a statue of a black servant,
which may be seen as paradigmatic for the self-conscious but often troubling
representation of race throughout the film. The first scene chronicles a hit on
an informer by the gang led by Roger Massina (Maurice Ronet) to serve as
an introduction to the neighbourhood, as the informer exchanges salutations
with everyone he passes on the way to an all-night grocery to pick up what is
remarked upon by the storekeeper as ‘his usual’ bottle of vodka. This bottle
is soon to be shattered in the gutter when his body is peppered with bullets
in a drive-by assassination. That this informer, by appearance and dialogue
marked as of Arab ethnicity, buys alcohol succinctly marks the assimilated
mores of these streets in a manner characteristic of the neo-noir policier. The
genre will engage contemporary Paris, making ethnicity and racism both ele-
ments of its discourse.
Mathias Palouzi (Richard Berry) and his partner from the brigades territo-
riales, a special undercover police unit devoted to stopping organised crime,
appear at a crime scene already being studied by other policemen, as the victim
was one of their key informants. This introduces the need for the brigade
to replace this informant, drawing Palouzi and his compatriots to target a
low-level pimp, Dédé, and his prostitute girlfriend, Nicole, who were once in
Massina’s inner circle. Both a prison sentence that Dédé served in Massina’s
stead, and Massina’s seduction of Nicole have led the pair, now reconciled, to
sever all ties to the gang, surviving on their own through Nicole’s activities as
prostitute in the upscale district near the Madeleine church, far from Belleville.
Much of the film centres on the unusual romance and deep loyalty enjoyed by
this couple, playfully enacted in scenes such as one in Fauchon, the expensive
purveyor of prepared food by the Madeleine, in which a long take depicts their
flirtatious double-entendres.
The film stages a series of scenes in several of the prostitution districts of
Paris: venues as distinct as the rue St Dénis and the Bois de Boulogne become
sites that Palouzi’s brigade use to pressure prostitutes, and particularly Nicole’s
friend, Sabrina, into informing; the film makes use of the local colour of these
districts in a manner similar to Scorsese’s exploration of neighbourhoods in
New York. Much of the narrative rests on two particular aspects of French
prostitution in the second half of the twentieth century: that prostitution itself
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is legal, but pimping is against the law; and that, nonetheless, organised crime
exerts considerable control on prostitution. Another contemporaneous film,
Le Grand Pardon directed by Alexandre Arcady earlier in 1982, was a fiction-
alised treatment of the Zemour brothers’ crime family of Jewish pied-noirs
who in the 1970s controlled prostitution in the French capital before they were
assassinated in the early 1980s. La Balance revisits the connections between
organised crime and prostitution, but it does so to focus on how the under-
cover police units operate through coercive tactics seemingly learned from the
crime families themselves, while tracing the investigators’ interactions with the
prostitutes.
Yet this study of brutality owes other of its concerns to the New Wave’s
intervention in neo-noir, rarely remarked upon in the critical assessments
of this film that reached a broad popular audience, and was seen by many
critics as primarily an Americanisation of French film. One aspect is the self-
conscious treatment of cinema as experienced in Paris. A series of film posters
dot the film, primarily in the undercover police squad’s offices, but also in a
scene at the entrance to a cinema; they include posters of Steve McQueen in La
Chasseur (The Hunter, 1980), of Taxi Driver (1976) and of Star Wars (1977).
Granted, these US films are somewhat coterminous with La Balance’s produc-
tion, and films which cops and the gangsters they trail might be likely to see,
but this is also a nod to cinephilia.
More particular is the film’s scenography that owes much to both La
Chinoise and to the Bouvard and Pecuchet sequence in 2 ou 3 choses que je
sais d’elle (Godard, 1966), as conversations between the brigade members
show them seated behind tables, their brightly coloured clothing set off against
the white tables and walls hung with images. The traffic jam the squadron
orchestrates to catch Massina in a heist, which through their informant they
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have been observing from its inception, recalls Weekend’s elaborate traffic
jam, though there is some cutting between the tracking shots that capture cops
and gangsters moving, guns drawn between the automobiles immobilised in
which little vignettes of peoples’ reactions of curiosity or fear pose diorama-
like in front of or between the action. This mise-en-scène is crucial to the sense
of ironic extended failure of the plan hatched by the brigade. As they walk
through the wreckage, the wounded and dead civilians, the dialogue acknowl-
edges the failure as their fault.
Yet if the film presents a critique of the brigades, it inscribes as well the
racism and sexism rampant in French popular film of the period, even as this
racism and sexism is self-consciously noted by dialogue and mise-en-scène.
Consider an earlier chase scene, as gang members think they have eluded an
all-points police chase only to have squad cars break through a fence surround-
ing the construction site in Belleville to which they have escaped; it draws its
style from French comedies and their tendency to mock ethnic characters. The
bold and self-aware prostitute, Nicole, whom Palouzi admires for her brassy
responses to police interrogation, is chastised by him when she refuses a cus-
tomer of Arab descent: ‘Even prostitutes are racist!’ There is a running critique
of a right-wing member of the brigades whose nickname ‘Captain’ stems from
his French army service in Algeria. Yet this Captain is given a line whose irony
can be received by the film’s audience in opposite ways: ‘We lost Algeria, but
we won’t lose Belleville’. As is the case with Scorsese’s films of the 1970s, the
trenchant and dark view of crime and insanity in the city characteristically is
treated with an irony that comes to pervade neo-noir. That irony can entertain
social critique, but it just as often partakes of the biases it exposes; the dense
and contradictory street scenes these films offer, such as this film’s repeated
scenes of brutality against the old-fashioned outdoor toilets still operative
in the poor courtyards of Belleville’s oldest housing, speak to a disgust with
poverty itself and the desperation of the inhabitants of such places.
If Nicole, the prostitute, has climbed her way into the white raw-silk high-
fashion outfit with which she taunts the policeman – ‘You could never buy
this for your wife’ – by the film’s close she has turned informer, sending her
lover, Dédé, into police custody as the lesser of two evils, as she knows he will
be killed by the gang in retaliation for his murder of Massina. Here we have
a variation on the femme fatale who informs to offer her lover at least the
chance of survival, and a variation as well on the ends of so many films noirs,
a bleak fatality in which many have been killed, while the survivors become
compromised, as the lovers are separated from the glimmers of pleasure they
once enjoyed.
Diva, on the other hand, is a neo-noir as obsessed with interior decora-
tion as it is with stylish location shooting. In fact, the set design reaches
towards installation art as emblem of the eccentricities and taste of the two
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If one the challenges of neo-noir has been to substitute a colour palette for the
remarkable shadows of high-contrast black and white of classical film noir,
deep blue tones has been one solution, and it is the one adopted with great
flourish in the rendering of Gorodish’s loft, supplemented by an abstract neon
circle that substitutes for the street-neon of film noir. The preoccupation with
interiors may be compared to Melville’s, though in Diva excess and redun-
dancy is substituted for Melville’s minimalism.
Fredric Jameson, in his ‘Diva and French Socialism’ chapter of Signatures
of the Visible, proposes an allegorical reading of the film as supplanting both
Godard’s and the French nation’s evolution into revolutionary politics with a
stylised reconciliation of the French working-class everyman with the demands
of global capital and diversification of the French populace, consonant with
the election of Mitterrand and the Socialists in 1981. Clearly, French neo-noir
as a genre lends itself to such allegorical readings, forging as it does a series
of parallels between law enforcement and gangsters, while films as different
from one another as La Balance and Diva depict the working class as caught
between these forces, somewhat helplessly. Yet Diva seems also to want to be
an allegory for art and philosophy infusing everyday life, an ode to recognising
and preserving freedom of spirit and creativity, once everything is not only for
sale, but reduced to traces that serve as fetish, with the experience of perfor-
mance either lost or stolen. Yet the film operates within the contradiction of
collecting and reproducing its artistic set designs as a staging to be sold within
a genre; it pivots, as the rollerskater Alba does, between the horror of record-
ing and the value of recording, exploring the contingencies of appropriation.
Thus the chase scene in the metro here takes place on a motorbike that has
been customised to permit speeds the standard-issue postman’s bike would
not. If French films noirs often have protagonists abandoning their fancy cars
to escape into the anonymity of the metro, here the prowess of the driver glori-
fies an unlikely chase scene by moving the vehicle itself into the subway. Diva
represents a neo-noir appropriation and reference to style that will permit a
creative embellishment, rather than a more thorough détournement (political
undercutting) of the genre.
In Le Cousin (Alain Corneau, 1998), a combination of the thriller and pol-
icier, two actors known for comedy, Alain Chabat and Patrick Timsit, are cast
in the dramatic roles of a police detective and his informer. Corneau’s earlier
foray into neo-noir is his Série noire (1979), adapted from Jim Thompson’s
A Hell of a Woman by Georges Perec, a writer known for his experimental
approach to language and structure. In fact Perec’s dialogue, while pointedly
of the genre, is terse, yet manic, self-consciously repetitive and delivered with
great irony by Patrick Dewaere as Franck, a hapless door-to-door salesman
who is baited into a murder-for-profit by Mona, the strange granddaughter
of his victim, played disarmingly by a young Marie Trintingant. Often called
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a comedy, Série noire has little in common with the black comedy of Truffaut
heritage, and more in common with theatre of the absurd, as the pathos it
explores exceeds that of Truffaut’s films. It offers a desperate view of marginal
survival by intensely misanthropic characters.
Both novel and film seem like an even bleaker variation on James M. Cain’s
The Postman Always Rings Twice, a novel that was bleaker and more raw
than any of the film adaptations of it. In an opening scene whose setting
reappears later in the film, Franck pulls his station wagon into a desolate
space in the Parisian suburbs, a barren lot whose future is predicted by the
high-rise apartments that line the horizon in the distance, where he delivers
a monologue that schizophrenically traces his woes and ambitions. As prolix
as Franck is, his pauses provide telling gaps, while Mona will be nearly mute,
communicating only through her stare and impulsive actions. Franck will kill
the aunt whose stashed nest-egg and whose abuse of Mona as sexual commod-
ity in her system of barter motivates Franck’s attack, but the actual murder is
almost an accident, as the elderly woman’s head is bashed as she falls against
a stone staircase in the once elegant, but now dilapidated house in which she
and Mona live. Franck shoots his male companion in the would-be heist, then
places the gun in the old woman’s hands, somehow fooling the police as to the
nature of these murders.
However, Franck’s role in the crime begins to be clear to both his wife, who
has returned, and to his boss in the door-to-door pay-by-credit operation. She
is choked to death by Franck, but the boss claims to have deposited a letter
that will point to Franck’s guilt should he not return from Franck’s apartment,
thus allowing him to escape with all the money stolen from the aunt. In the
end Franck embraces Mona, who has been waiting outside, as the film ends
on their twirling delusions, the demise of which Mona is not yet fully aware,
as Franck promises her that there is ‘nothing left to fear any more’ (plus rien
à craindre). Série noire showcases the brilliance of its lead actors, in their con-
trasting verbosity and mutism. It also underlines the US–French connection of
film noir permutations, with its borrowing from Thompson, reinscribed with
French literary and cultural layering.
Le Cousin, on the other hand, continues the French neo-noir fascination
with the consequences of the demise of an informer that marked La Balance,
while much of the film takes place at night in Rungis, a northern suburb of
Paris transformed into a bizarre environment of shopping malls and fast-food
restaurants. In the opening scenes, Inspector Philippe Maurin stops to purchase
videos for his children in an hypermarché, an exaggeratedly huge grocery and
department store located on the outskirts of French cities. Returning home, he
tries to tell his wife of the legal trouble he finds himself in, but her indifference
towards his fate and her resentment over a cancelled holiday leads him to a
despairing, violent suicide. Chabat plays Gérard Delvaux, the policeman who
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must pick up the pieces and cover his dead buddy’s misdeeds with Nounours,
the nickname of an informer whose special arrangement with the police facili-
tated his own drug dealings, with police complicity. Marie Trintigant plays
Judge Lambert, who had charged Maurin and continues to investigate Gérard
and the narcotics squad to which he belongs, while Nounours offers Gérard an
enormous heroin trafficking bust run by Africans whose impeccably tailored
suits and expensive cars signal not only their drug operations, but their diplo-
matic passports and licence plates.
As is the case with many of the neo-noirs we have looked at, the Parisian
suburbs are the focus, combining here the night patrols through commercial
spaces with the apartment environments that display the kinds of interiors
one would purchase at these big box merchants. This interior design meant to
establish the bereft lives of the police inspectors contrasts with the stylisation
of Diva’s artistic lofts, offering a bleak view of a Paris without good taste.
Nounours’ apartment, in contrast, shows elements of a North African ethnic-
ity, an ethnicity not apparently that of his wife and daughters, and his family
remains loyal and loving, in contrast to those of the inspectors. The pointed
drawing of this ethnic background through décor, as well as that of the African
heroin traffickers, raises once again the same problems seen in La Balance of
a white law establishment coping with criminals of colour or distinguished by
ethnicity, though here the issue is not as directly addressed as in the earlier film;
clearly, making Nounours’ family sympathetic serves to counteract xenopho-
bic elements of the Africans. Once again police are tainted by the traffickers
they investigate, yet the female judge who aims to purge their operations of
corruption must uphold the corrupt international legal loophole that allows
the worst of the traffickers to break the law that would apply to French citizens
and non-diplomats.
If feminism seems in short supply in French neo-noir, Nicole Garcia’s Place
Vendôme (1997) can be seen as an attempt to restage a noir centred on a
female protagonist, Marianne Malivert (Catherine Denueve). With the suicide
of her husband, the alcoholic widow reforms, and reanimates her moribund
life, her motivation the resale of illegal diamonds that were her husband’s
legacy, with her rediscovery of her sexuality a by-product of her endeavour.
Set in the elegant streets and interiors of Paris’s most exclusive retail and
residential areas, the film contrasts deeply with films such as Le Cousin in its
display of the upper-class elegance enjoyed by its thieves and double-crossers.
In fact, the close-ups on shining jewels define the style of the film, recalling not
so much film noir as Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief (1955) or the surreal
play on this genre in Luis Buñuel’s Belle de Jour (1962), a comparison made
evident by the casting of the same actor who played Deneuve’s husband in that
film as her husband here (Bernard Fresson). An uncanny resemblance between
a young jewel expert working for the Malaverts, and Marianne, including the
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Bibliography
Austin, Guy (1996), Contemporary French Cinema: An Introduction, Manchester &
New York: Manchester University Press.
Barat, François and Jean-Pierre Melville (1999), L’Entretien avec Jean-Pierre Melville,
Biarritz: Atlantica.
Beugnet, Martine (2007), Cinema and Sensation: French Film and the Art of
Transgression, Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press,
Buss, Robin (1994), French Film Noir, New York: Marion Boyars.
Conard, Mark T. (2007), The Philosophy of Neo-Noir. The Philosophy of Popular
Culture, Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.
Dickos, Andrew (2002), Street with no Name: A History of the Classic American Film
Noir, Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.
Dimendberg, Edward (2004), Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Forbes, Jill (1992), The Cinema in France after the New Wave, London: British Film
Institute.
Gorrara, Claire (2003), The Roman Noir in Postwar French Culture: Dark Fictions,
Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press.
Goulet, Andrea and Susanna Lee (2005), Crime Fictions, New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press.
Greene, Naomi (1999), Landscapes of Loss: The National Past in Postwar French
Cinema, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Hughes, Alex and James S. Williams (eds) (2001), Gender and French Cinema, Oxford
& New York: Berg.
Jameson, Fredric (1990), ‘Diva and French Socialism’, in Fredric Jameson, Signatures of
the Visible, New York: Routledge.
Kline, T. J. (2010), Unraveling French Cinema: From L’Atalante to Caché, Chichester
& Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Konstantarakos, Myrto (2000), Spaces in European Cinema, Exeter & Portland, OR:
Intellect.
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Mazdon, Lucy (2001), France on Film: Reflections on Popular French Cinema, London:
Wallflower.
Melville, Jean-Pierre and Rui Nogueira (1972), Melville on Melville, New York: Viking
Press.
Menegaldo, Gilles (2006), Jacques Tourneur, une esthétique du trouble, Condé-sur-
Noireau: Corlet Éditions Diffusion.
Nogueira, Rui, Philippe Labro and Jean-Pierre Melville (1996), Le Cinéma selon
Melville: Entretiens avec Jean-Pierre Melville, Paris: Cahiers du cinéma/Gallimard.
Oscherwitz, Dayna (2010), Past Forward: French Cinema and the Post-Colonial
Heritage, Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.
Palmer, Tim (2011), Brutal Intimacy: Analyzing Contemporary French Cinema,
Middletown, CN: Wesleyan University Press.
Powrie, Phil (1999), French Cinema in the 1990s: Continuity and Difference, Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
——. (2001), Jean-Jacques Beineix, Manchester & New York: Manchester University
Press.
——. (2007), ‘French neo-noir to hyper-noir’, in Andrew Spicer (ed.), European Film
Noir, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 56–83.
Sellier, Geneviève (2008), Masculine Singular: French New Wave Cinema, Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
Sobchack, Vivian (1998), ‘Lounge time: Post-war crises and the chronotope of film
noir’, in Nick Browne (ed.), Refiguring American Film Genres, Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press, pp. 129–170.
Spicer, Andrew (ed.) (2007), European Film Noir, Manchester: Manchester University
Press.
Tassone, Aldo (2000), France Cinéma 2000: Retrospettiva Jacques Becker, Milan: Il
Castoro.
Vincendeau, Ginette (2003), Jean-Pierre Melville: An American in Paris, London:
British Film Institute.
Notes
1. Ginette Vincendeau, Jean-Pierre Melville: An American in Paris (London: British
Film Institute, 2003), pp. 104–5.
2. Jean-Pierre Melviile and Rui Nogueira, Melville on Melville (New York: Viking
Press, 1972), p. 113.
3. Ibid., p. 113.
84
4. EARLY JAPANESE NOIR
Homer B. Pettey
In the Japanese language, 黒 (kuro or koku) shares similar meanings with the
French word noir, such as the visual absence of colour, black, dark and shad-
owed, as well as the metaphorical associations with emptiness, mystery and
evil. The complex aesthetic history of Japanese filmmaking, however, reveals
not only its adaptation of proto-noir and noir techniques, but also the develop-
ment of its own noir sensibility. Shifting values of modernism, existential angst
and paranoia, crises of socio-economic identity, a sense of doom, pervading
neurasthenia and resignation to failure, sceptical views of progress as well as
ambivalent views of the past, the penchant for violent and sexual narratives,
and the creation of a chiaroscuro aesthetic that mirrored psychological and
ethical problems – these certain tendencies of film noir were already ingrained
within the Japanese literary and artistic consciousness. While early Japanese
filmmakers, very much like their American counterparts, relied upon modern-
ist technological, narrative and aesthetic experiments from Europe, they did
so by adapting and transforming them into a twentieth-century Japanese art
form. Both proto-noir and early Japanese noir reveal a cultural fascination for
modernity and its re-evaluation of social and gender roles for those struggling
at the margins of contemporary urban life.
The concept of blackness frames American aesthetic, cultural and political
influences on modern Japan. Two significant intrusions upon Japan have been
characterised in the Japanese language as blackness. In July 1853, the opening
of Japan occurred with the arrival in Kanagawa (now Yokohama) harbour
of Commodore Matthew Perry’s black ships (kuroi fune), four warships with
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sixty-one guns and nearly 1,000 men.1 In August 1945, the radioactive fallout
from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs produced black rain (kuroi
ame), the result of irradiated material combining with thermal currents to
create precipitation of dark, viscous and poisonous liquid. Perry’s opening of
Japan led to the introduction of Western culture and technology that even-
tuated in the supremacy of the new modernised Japanese navy dominating
the northern Pacific after its victory in the Russo-Japanese War. The Treaty
of Portsmouth of 1905, negotiated by President Theodore Roosevelt, ended
that conflict by ultimately dividing the Pacific, with Japan gaining control of
Korea and the United States maintaining dominance in the Philippines. From
that moment, Japan’s nationalist militarist politics would lead to its succes-
sive invasions throughout Manchuria, China, Southeast Asia and the south-
ern Pacific islands, resulting in World War II. Japan would adapt to its own
nationalistic needs models of United States technological might and economic
and military policies of imperialism. At the same time, Japanese political and
technological innovations would result in their own form of blackness and
destruction.
Japanese metaphorical use of black indicates a cultural ambiguity, even
polarisation, of its usage for both death and beauty. For the Japanese, death
is represented by blackness, which serves as the hue for traditional mourn-
ing clothes (kurofuku). As the black shade (kuroi kageri), it represents that
region divided from life, and since medieval times, this separation has been
maintained in order to protect the ‘living and the gods from death pollution’
or black pollution (kuro fujo).2 Kuro or koku also characterises Japanese
cultural aesthetics of physical beauty, such as the raven-black hair (kuro
kami) of women and their dark pupils (kuroi hitome), as well as artistic
beauty with traditional black lacquer (kokushitsu), calligraphy and black ink
drawings (sumi-e), kokuei (literally ‘black painting’) for silhouette and the
black outlines of ukiyo-e (floating world prints) of Hiroshige, Utamaro and
Hokusai.
Metaphorically, kuro or koku points to both winning and losing, as in
kuroboshi for both a success (the bull’s eye) and a failure (a black mark).
Absence, failure or being wrong is typified by blackness, as it also indicates the
Japanese cultural abhorrence for imperfections and defilement, as in dirt, filth,
smut and being charred. Socially, homogeneous Japanese society performed a
type of cultural cleansing through the auto-segregation of its own people, the
burakumin or ‘villagers’. In the Edo period, these marginalised people were
associated with unclean occupations, such as butchering animals or working
with leather goods, in accordance with Shinto and Buddhist abhorrence for
blood and death. Japanese castigated them as other and deprived them eco-
nomically and politically. Moreover, burakumin were culturally alienated as
diseased, leprous, contagious outcasts with ‘black blood’ (kuroi chi).3 Due to
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The obsession with mechanisms and their rhythms, the fetish for automobiles
and the fascination with speed – all reveal themselves in the swift, sometimes
chaotic editing of A Page of Madness. The anti-art elements of Dada, as well
as its political critique of post-World War I power structures of the military
and imperial power, find their way into the thematic content. The hallucina-
tory qualities of Dada, later Surrealism, are also evident, as they are in later
noirs of the late 1940s and 1950s. Of course, German Expressionist films were
screened in Japan almost as soon as they were produced; their influence, espe-
cially the camera movements of F. W. Murnau, can be observed in these early
proto-noirs.
The original story and script for A Page of Madness combined the talents of
the modernist author Kawabata Yasunari and the director Kinugasa Teinosuke.
A surrealistic film narrative concerns an old janitor (Inoue Masao) in an insane
asylum where his wife (Nakagawa Yoshie) is a patient and the arrival of their
daughter (Ijima Ayako) who informs them that she is to be married. Yet the
film has no clear narrative structure. Japanese critics hailed this lack of overt
narrative structure as original, innovative and thoroughly modern:
Since there are no intertitles, Kinugasa relies upon visual repetitions and signa-
ture use of lighting to provide a semblance of coherence to a tale of madness.
The film indulges in experiments with montage, shifting camera angles and
particularly variant lighting. A Page of Madness uses a number of innovative
techniques that anticipate film noir, especially ‘two barred windows in chiaro-
scuro interior’.14 The Expressionist use of shadows, particularly the long shots
of alternative spaces of darkness and light for the asylum’s interior, articulates
shifts in time, but these shadows also represent the existential crisis of con-
finement, entrapment and alienation so prevalent in noir. The opening shot
is a nightmarish movement from sensuality to confinement. Harsh lightning
shifts to stage-lighting to reveal the transition from hallucination to reality: a
dancing female figure sways before a rotating ball of black-and-white stripes,
then, as the camera pulls back, the view is from vertical cell-like bars; a black
fade transitional frame then reveals the dancer in silhouette, seen through
vertical lattices of the cell; finally, a cross-dissolve reveals a female mental
patient dancing before the vertical shadows of cell bars on the wall. Vertical
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lines superimpose over cell numbers as individual mental patients are viewed in
oblique angles as a cut occurs of a nurse walking down a long, dark corridor,
partially illuminated by the vertical shadows of cell bars. These vertical lines
are the central visual motif of the film and they punctuate the Expressionist
transitions in the narrative.
Visually, A Page of Madness owes much to German Expressionist subjectiv-
ity, but its experiments with lighting, oblique angles and inventive camerawork
point the way to Japanese noir. The film narrative portrays a family’s disturb-
ing psychological relationships: the father figure is the old janitor trapped in
this bizarre mental institution; his psychologically disturbed wife resides as a
patient, having gone insane due to her drowning their baby; and their daughter
harbours an Electra-like resentment for her father. When the daughter arrives
to announce her proposed marriage, tormenting guilty revisits upon the janitor
disturbing memories and dark visions that also portend a chaotic future. A
Page of Madness employs flashback sequences and hallucinatory moments
that reveal the maniacal atmosphere of the asylum and the progressive anxiety
of the old janitor. The climax of the film occurs when the janitor envisages his
daughter driving away with one of the perverted inmates, a moment that calls
into question the janitor’s own sanity, visually portrayed with patients donning
Noh masks. The conclusion of the film returns the viewer back to the mundane
reality of the institution, with the dancing female patient and a parade of other
inmates, while the janitor mops the floor. This page of madness has turned, but
only to recur endlessly.
While continuing, although to a less radical extent, Expressionist and
proto-noir experimentation, Kinugasa Teinosuke’s Crossroads relies upon the
Japanese penchant for emotional subjectivity to convey psychological realism.
Set in Edo’s Yoshiwara, the pleasure quarters for courtesans and geisha, the
film employs feudal-era costumes and rituals as backdrops for a modernist tale
of fetishistic fixation and its disastrous outcome. This narrative of lust and
obsession concerns Rikiya (Junosuke Bando) and his sister Okiku (Chihaya
Akiko). Rikiya pines for O-Ume (Ogawa Yukiko), a haughty, highly desirable
geisha who takes delight in humiliating her victims. During a public festival,
Rikiya is blinded with white ash (white dots upon the screen) by a rival for
O-Ume’s affections, whom Rikiya then attacks with a sword in a literal blind
rage. Daisuke Miyao views this blindness as representative of the material con-
ditions of cinema: ‘The sudden appearance of white dots not only reveals the
existence of the camera, but also draws the viewers’ attention to the very fact
that cinema is a visual medium and a spectacle of light’.15 Rikiya’s blindness
also points to a common noir visual expression of the division between sensual
appearances and ethical insight, of the inability to distinguish between virtue
and depravity, between illusion and reality. Okiku tries to care for her afflicted
brother, who now believes that he has killed his rival. Using that misperception
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01. A pitch-dark street. There is a row of houses with slanting roofs along
the street. Besides, there is a long stretch of winding road. The road is
completely deserted. A man with a large shadow behind him suddenly
emerges from the street corner . . . The scene fades away with the dark
street which at first was seen as though in a painting.16
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of the first shot sequence. The vertical bars foreshadow jail cells. Tokiko tries
to dissuade Jyoji from continuing a life of crime and his gangster ways. He
responds by slapping her and taking off. Held in centre frame, Tokiko’s face,
which had just been fully lit, now becomes half in shadow as she points a
revolver and shoots Jyoji in the leg.
He falls, then gets up and hobbles off. Tokiko runs to him, as Ozu frames her
directly opposite from the shooting moment, her face now becoming more illu-
minated. She convinces Jyoji to surrender. She bandages his leg with her scarf
and, as police officers arrive, the couple embrace, are handcuffed together and
are led away into the urban darkness, illuminated only by a single lamp post.
Ozu, however, does not conclude with that scene. Instead, a young policeman
finds Tokiko’s knitted bootees, suggesting her pregnancy. The film’s final shot
is of the window of their apartment that frames a potted plant. Backlighting
increases upon the enframed plant, suggesting a natural movement of time as
opposed to the artificial, mechanised time that began Dragnet Girl. Ozu’s sen-
timental conclusion does offer a visual ray of hope, but it is also a commentary
on what has been lost in modernising Japan, that sense of connection with the
natural, not urban, world and its order.
Dragnet Girl serves as a transitional film between the avant-garde aesthetics
of modernist film experiments and the proto-noir imitations of American gang-
ster films. Ozu’s film stands out for its focus upon the woman’s predicament
and perspective. Certainly, Dragnet Girl sets the stage for women’s films of
the 1930s. Mizoguchi Kenji’s mid-1930s films on women’s life during imperial
Japan – Osaka Elegy, Sisters of Gion – represent the first stage of feminine film
noir, while his postwar films, Women of the Night and Street of Shame, are the
feminine counterpart to the underworld depictions of masculine displacement
in postwar Japan. The suppression of leftist films by police, censors and gov-
ernmental policies, and the lack of adequate funding did not afford any oppor-
tunity for ProKino (proletarian cinema) to produce narrative and dramatic
films. That censorship, however, did not impede films with social commentary
and political critiques. In the same way that filmmakers went around the Breen
Office and the Production Code, Japanese directors, especially Mizoguchi in
his films of the 1930s, slyly incorporated social analysis into the narrative and
thematic structure. Both Osaka Elegy and Sister of Gion are social commen-
taries on the plight of modern women stuck between restricted traditional roles
and contemporary freedom.
In Osaka Elegy (Naniwa Erejii, 1936), Ayako (Yamada Isuzu), a switch-
board attendant for Osaka’s Asai pharmaceutical company, is torn between
the affections of her beloved Nishimura (Hara Kensaku) and the lecherous
propositions of her boss, Asai (Shiganoya Benkei). Even though Ayako wants
to marry Nishimura, she is faced with the dilemma of her father’s embezzle-
ment and an obligation for her brother’s college expenses, as well as the daily
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subsistence for her younger sister, that radically alter her plans and her life.
Their impecunious future forces Ayako, a modern girl, to resign herself to
being mistress to her libidinous boss. Once Asai’s wife nearly discovers the
illicit affair, due to Ayako adopting the hairstyle of a married woman, a new
sexual economic dilemma imposes itself. Ayako must, due to her family’s
financial constraints, comply with the propositions of her boss’s friend, Fujino
(Shindo Eitaro), to now become his mistress. Ayako, however, realises that she
is falling deeper into infamy.
Ayako plans to use Nishimura to pose as a vicious underworld tough in
order to intimidate the persistent Fujino. Initially, the apartment scene is shot
through sheers in order to reinforce visually her predicament. On the ceiling,
the lighting forms a combination of modernist and traditional floral patterns,
suggesting again her dual feminine identity. Using Nishimura to intimidate
Fujino backfires and lands them in a prefectural police station under charges
of solicitation. There, Nishimura claims to have been taken in by Ayako and
repudiates her. Returning home, Ayako discovers that even though she has
successfully alleviated her family’s financial burdens, they disown her. Ayako’s
plight is emblematic of women in a hypocritical modern world. Mizoguchi
employs harsh contrasting lighting to convey not only Ayako’s predicament,
but also the strict binary oppositions of Japanese cultural views of women.
The police resolutely refuse to grant any leeway to Ayako. Mizoguchi chooses
to shoot her interrogation with the detective’s back to the camera and his face
obscured in shadow, thereby accentuating Ayako’s humiliation. Released to
her father with a police warning for him to keep an eye on her, Ayako then
suffers indignities from her ungrateful, hypocritical father, brother and sister.
With family members dominating the foreground in shadows and Ayako’s face
illuminated, the scene nearly repeats her humiliation at the police precinct, as
Kirihara points out about this chiaroscuro effect in the scene: ‘figures that may
have deeply shadowed features in one shot lapse into complete silhouettes in
another’.23 Osaka Elegy ends at night with Ayako upon the new Ebisu Bridge,
symbolising her choices between two worlds, the traditional and the modern.
She tosses away an empty cigarette packet into the polluted, garbage-ridden
waters, emblematic of her being tossed out into a tainted world. The family
doctor approaches her and inquires about her health, implying that respectable
women would not be out at that time. In kansai ben, the dialect of the Osaka
region, Ayako claims to be nora inu (‘a stray dog’) who now suffers from the
incurable sickness of delinquency. The word delinquency (furyo) extends to
meanings of ‘useless’, ‘inferior’, ‘damaged’, all of which apply to Ayako’s now
outcast status. Her ‘illness’ sardonically sums up her new-found hard-boiled
attitude. She walks away into the night, the final shot being her resolute face
filling the screen. With her final cynical and determined resolution, she accepts
that she is a ‘stray dog’.
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Along with strengthening regulations against novels about sex and stories
that could erode the morals of ‘virginal girls,’ authorities called for
increasing controls of pictures published in popular magazines. Risqué
article titles such as ‘Anxious Over Not Achieving Satisfaction’, ‘The
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not the newly envisaged world of virtue and freedom of the House of Light.
Again, Mizoguchi uses a long dolly shot to reveal the grim world and bestial
conditions for contemporary women. Fusako intercedes and discovers Kumiko
to be the intruding prostitute, but Kumiko, dishevelled and filthy, rejects her
help, adopting the tough attitude of a streetwise whore. Then, in an overly
emotional, melodramatic shift, Fusako attacks Kumiko, raining blows down
on her as she shouts out the inevitable outcomes of syphilis as she ruins ‘all
the men in Japan and all the women’. Resolved to leave the world of prostitu-
tion, now Fusako must face the vicious onslaught of fists and flogging from
the whores.
All of this abuse takes place within the bombed-out shell of a former
Catholic church. The Madonna and child in stained glass is an ironic conclu-
sion, since the women are left with yet another impossible choice. Formerly,
they could not survive in the traditional male world demanding virginity nor
could they survive the diseased life of prostitution. Now, under American
Occupation, the transcendent role of Virgin Mother only reinforces the abject-
ness and despair of their plight. While Women of the Night concludes with
Fusako and Kumiko departing, the discordant sounds of jazz horns and drums
as the camera dollies back comments ironically upon the ruined church and
ruined women. No refuge exists in this bleak world of male occupation for
modern women of the night.
Street of Shame (Akasen chitai, 1956), Mizoguchi’s final film, follows the
interactions of five prostitutes of Dreamland, a brothel in Tokyo’s Yoshiwara
district, the same setting as Crossroads. The film begins and ends with the
house manager of the prostitutes extolling the social virtues of the profession
in the face of the Diet enacting laws against it. The political commentary of
whoredom and financial corruption pervade this film. While often discussed
as socially relevant for the passage in the Japanese Diet of the Prostitute
Prevention Act of 1957, this film provides insight into the relationship of
women to money in reconstruction Japan. Each of the prostitutes represents an
economic condition facing modern Japanese women: Mickey (Kyo Machiko)
is a frivolous modern girl, whose relationship with money is escapism; Hanae
(Kogure Michiyo) works to support her unemployed husband and child; Yorie
(Machida Hiroko) has become the object of a man’s affection and marital
plans; Yumeko, the only widow, devotes her life to the welfare of her son; and
Yasumi (Wakao Ayako) successfully saves her earnings in order to pay off her
debts and become independent. Yasumi is the most fascinating figure, since
she treats economic conditions without emotion; she is a usurer to her fellow
prostitutes and a user of her clients, whose money only pays for a transaction,
nothing more. The selling of the body, the transaction, the contractual obliga-
tion of the female body – all are discussed in this film in terms of prostitution,
obligation to family and marriage.
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inclination)’, with the typical hero as an itinerant outsider who combats a ruth-
less feudal magistrate as ‘a kind of Robin Hood among yakuza bosses’, such
as Chuji’s Travel Diary (Chuji tabi nikki, 1927).34 By the 1950s, the shift from
feudal to modern versions of the yakuza correspond to the economic transfor-
mations of postwar Japan.
Of course, other films also have representative yakuza figures or sub-plots.
These films, especially Kurosawa Akira’s early postwar films, indicate a dif-
ferent response to the encroaching world of the modern yakuza. Kurosawa’s
crime figure is not celebrated, but is seen as a both unsavoury product of and
malicious predator upon unstable socio-economic conditions. These films,
then, take on a realistic noir world-view and differ drastically from the 1950s
films celebrating a formidable, charismatic boss who comes to the aid of
oppressed people. One element, then, of Japanese noir remains its counter-
stance to and opposing commentary on contemporary film narratives as they
seek to depict modernity and its various ills.
In Drunken Angel (Yoidore tenshi, 1948), set in a postwar slum in Tokyo,
an alcoholic physician, Sanda (Shimura Takashi), battles against the hypo-
critical code of the yakuza for the conscience of a young, tuberculosis-infected
gangster, Matsunaga (Mifune Toshiro). Kurosawa’s varies light and shadow
for both worlds in order to mirror their inconsistent views of modern urban
existence. Shifting patterns of darkness indicate that both physician and
yakuza suffer from misplaced codes of honour. Sanda’s physical and social
cure, based upon willpower, is hypocritically applied only to his patients
and not himself, and yet Sanda rightly condemns Matsunaga for the absurd
feudal code of yakuza misplaced loyalty. In addition to underworld patients,
Sanda also tends to a young female high school patient (Kuga Yoshiko) who is
steadily being cured of TB by following his abstemious orders. She symbolises
the potential future for a stricken postwar Japan of corruption. Matsunaga,
however, refuses to give up any of the deviant profligate excesses of alcohol
and women. Disease permeates the film as it does post-surrender Tokyo. Most
of the characters suffer from social illnesses of fear, greed and unreasoned
conformity.
Kurosawa’s first noir critiques both US Occupation and the burgeoning
yakuza rapacious attempts to control urban commerce. SCAP viewed Drunken
Angel as a success because it misread ‘reorientation’ of death of the yakuza
hoodlum.35 Satirical commentary on American cultural decadence is evident in
the men’s gangster-style clothes, American jazz music, particularly the rendi-
tion of ‘Jungle Boogie’, and the prostitutes and taxi dancers in modern dress.
Still, much of Kurosawa’s social commentary is reserved for the rapacity of
Japanese culture. The return from prison of the former head of the yakuza
gang, Okada (Yamamoto Reizaburo), displaces Matsunaga in the organisa-
tion’s hierarchy, sexually symbolised by Okada’s taking of Matsunaga’s
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dance hall moll, Nanae (Kogure Michiyo). Okada represents insatiate avarice
and consumption. Sanda’s assistant, Miyo (Nakakita Chieko), was once the
abused mistress of the sadistic Okada, who now desires to have Miyo under
his control once again. In order to save Miyo, and by extension the Sanda,
Matsunaga attempts to assassinate Okada. Their death match plays out as an
exhausting and thoroughly dishonourable battle first inside Nanae’s bedroom,
then outside in the corridor where the combatants slide, almost comically,
through spilled cans of white paint. It concludes with Okada viciously stabbing
to death Matsunaga, who is covered head-to-toe in white paint.
The central figure of this early postwar noir is neither the drunken angel
physician nor the drunken reformed yakuza angel, but rather the polluted
pond that serves as the boundary between their two worlds. The credit
sequence is superimposed over the methane bubbling sump. As the film
begins, around this foetid pool, bar hostesses in American-style clothes head
back to work, while a lone guitar player picks a melancholy tune underneath
a single incandescent streetlight. The camera pans from the guitar player
across the polluted pool filled with the discarded debris of traditional and
modern Japanese culture: a broken-down bicycle, old tatami, unravelled hemp
rope, broken porcelain jars and forgotten tins, paper and vegetable matter.
Throughout this pan, the ramshackle houses are darkly reflected in the pool.
As a recurrent image that punctuates segments of the film’s narrative, this
typhus-infested cesspool not only reflects ‘the inner psychological states of the
principal characters’, but also the social milieu of Occupation Japan.36 This
bog of contagion retains discarded objects of modernity as a mirror of its
devastating waste of human life.
Kurosawa’s noir vision culminates in a relationship of mirroring images: the
initial mirroring of social conditions in the polluted swamp and the tripartite
reflection of Matsunaga about to kill his yakuza boss. Still, Kurosawa incorpo-
rates a thematic mirroring of the blackened pool with the white paint spatter-
ing the killing scene. That scene commences in Nanae’s bedroom with Okada
playing on the guitar the same tune that opens the film, an eerie echoing. The
fight between the yakuza rivals moves out into an empty white hallway with
noir lattice shadows on the walls. This white emptiness is the obverse reflec-
tion of black sump; and yet both images comment upon the void of a postsur-
render life of materiality. Moreover, Kurosawa’s mirroring of black and white
self-reflectively comments upon his own noir sensibility. The excessive deline-
ation of space, light and form reflect a new cinematic realism, one expressing
psycho-social conflicts through the medium of noir commentary.
With Stray Dog (Nora inu, 1949), Kurosawa takes a new noir direction
in this police procedural set during a sweltering summer among the ruins of
postwar Tokyo. The film pairs an old veteran robbery detective, Sato (Shimura
Takashi), with an up-and-coming homicide rookie, Murakami (Mifune
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early japanese noir
Toshiro). It begins with the theft of Murakami’s Colt pistol, a symbolic rep-
resentation of American cultural occupation, by a pickpocket. Of course, few
guns are more iconically American than a Colt pistol. Still, Kurosawa trains
his eye upon Japanese postwar corruption. Much of the film relies upon noir
narrative and visual conventions, such as the use of striated shadows upon the
walls to indicate psychological entrapment as well as prophetic imagery for the
postwar world.
Donning his undercover disguise as former soldier, Murakami, in a
montage sequence of urban neo-realism, moves through back alleys and black
markets in search of the leads to the illicit gun trade. His soldier’s uniform in
the markets comments ironically on the rise of the yakuza, many of whom
were displaced former soldiers in postwar Occupation Japan. This montage
sequence is a mini-epic of postwar Tokyo culture, effectively relying upon noir
techniques, as Stephen Prince points out:
The silence dominating this tour of the Tokyo underworld recalls several pho-
torealist, street-level scenes of New York’s Lower East Side in Dassin’s The
Naked City of the previous year.
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international noir
Of course, such a restriction misses the point, since the Japanese were develop-
ing their own cultural brand of film noir.
Throughout the 1950s, Kurosawa continued to employ innovative noir tech-
niques. For Scandal (Shubun, 1950), Kurosawa focused upon confined space,
urban decay and disease to reveal postwar hypocrisy in Japanese popular media
and the legal system. In Rashomon (1950), he relied upon expressive lighting,
plays of shadows, and multiple oblique angles, such as the self-referential shifts
of camera angles for the woodcutter’s discovery of the crime, to convey the
narrative’s multiple perspectives and interpretations. In The Lower Depths
(Donzoko, 1957), an adaptation of Maxim Gorky’s play, Kurosawa combined
the stark setting, the filth and squalor of deprivation and oblique angles to
transform theatrical conventions by means of contemporary noir sensibilities.
Of course, Yojimbo (1961) began a new approach to both samurai and period
films (jidaigeki), but also to Japanese noir, as well as influencing American and
European filmmaking. Based loosely upon Dashiell Hammett’s Red Harvest
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early japanese noir
(1929), Yojimbo parodies the lone, itinerant yakuza films of the late 1920s
and 1930s, while simultaneously establishing the ronin figure as a kind of lone
gunslinger à la American westerns. Yojimbo would influence directly spaghetti
westerns and much of the narratives that form Clint Eastwood’s film por-
trayals. Such mixed genre elements were already apparent in the transitional
period from the Occupation to the New Wave in Japan. With underworld and
yakuza films by Imamura Shoehei, Suzuki Seijun and Nikkatsu Studio, the late
1950s to the 1960s would usher in new directors and new versions of noir.
The post-Occupational period of the late 1950s, however, does end with a
representative noir that bridges the postwar experiments and the new gang-
land films of the 1960s. Masaki Kobayashi’s Black River (Kuroi kawa, 1957)
focuses upon the kinds of social diseases afflicting Japan in the postwar period.
The narrative’s action occurs between an American airbase and a squalid,
yakuza-controlled pleasure district and surrounding slum. Occupation policies
did not prevent American abuses against the Japanese, especially women. For
example, Black Spring (Kuroi Haru), published in 1953, included ‘a number of
first-hand testimonies of victims of sexual violence’ committed by Occupation
American soldiers.39 Kobayashi critiques the crisis confronting the post-
Occupation Japanese Self by pointing his gaze, as Kurosawa had done, at the
Japanese themselves. The narrative develops through the interrelated stories of
a group of lower-class tenants of a dilapidated, bleakly lit warehouse and the
black world of yakuza-run bars and brothels servicing the US Naval airbase.
Their conniving landlady plans to evict the residents so that she can build,
with the help of yakuza muscle, a bathhouse on the site. All of the tenants
suffer from economic deprivation that leads them to ethical depravity, such
as drunkenness, sexually licentious behaviour and a general lack of empathy.
So debased financially are the tenants that they quarrel over the removal, use
and ownership of their excrement. Economics, therefore, besmirches ethical
conduct. The base, amoral yakuza world represents Japan’s new economy,
a limited, corrupt market of extortion, abuses, and rapine and destructive
self-interest.
Connecting the two social divisions is the love interest between a naive
student, Nishida (Watanabe Fumio), who moves into the tenement and
Shizuko (Arima Ineko), a young woman whose white parasol is a traditional
emblem of virginal purity. In this bleak noir world, both are destined to be
forcibly corrupted. In a rigged psycho-drama of rape, ‘Killer’ Jo (Nakadai
Tatsuya) saves the helpless Shizuko from his own thugs, but then rapes her
himself. This scene of sexual aggression, assaulted feminine virtue and preda-
tory male behaviour is played out at night along the symbolic black river. After
the rape, Jo relates his conquest to his drunken yakuza henchmen, all the while
playing with Shizuko’s stolen parasol, now the symbol of her loss of face and
her continual shame. Jo turns Shizuko from a café waitress into his yakuza
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international noir
mistress, a pattern of moral descent similar to that predicted for the moga
(modern girl) of twenty years prior.
Neither Nishida nor Jo can give up Shizuko: one from a misplaced sense of
devotion; the other from monomaniacal need for possession. Their inevitable
conflict occurs during a night of yakuza revelry, a hedonistic celebration of
Jo’s birthday, during which both Nishida and, later, the compromised Shizuko
seek revenge. Initially, Nishida confronts Jo with the fraudulent removal of
the tenants, but that changes when Shizuko arrives and engages in a forced
embrace and kiss with Jo. In order to spare Nishida from Jo’s thugs, his former
moll (Awaji Keiko) takes him as her lover for the night. To Nishida’s mounting
anger, Shizuko effects flagrant sexual desires for Jo, all the more feigned when
she discovers her missing parasol in the yakuza den. As Shizuko secretly plies
Jo with more and more saké, Nishida’s jealousy increases until he explodes. In
their phallic bar duel, Nishida draws Jo’s knife while Jo slashes with Shizuko’s
parasol. The women stop the fight as the men head outside to the newly rain-
soaked, blackened, dimly illuminated street, lined with signs of commerce and
the continual traffic of military vehicles. As Shizuko leads the besotted Jo along
the bridge over the black river, Nishida follows with Jo’s inebriated moll, who
calls out insulting epithets against Shizuko’s supposed innocence.
In a series of low-angle long shots on the bridge, Kobayashi frames Shizuko
and the stumbling Jo, who still holds the white parasol, in front of oncoming
roaring military trucks, whose headlights reflect off the wet pavement. As a
cacophonous jazz score plays, the film cuts between the two couples, now
representative of Japanese culture’s precarious situational ethics. As Shizuko
turns her head as distant headlights appear, Nishida too notices them and
runs towards her, in full knowledge of her murderous intent. As the military
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early japanese noir
truck passes him, the film cuts to Jo trying to kiss Shizuko, who pushes him
out of frame as the truck, seeming to be within the same shot, roars by over
his body. Black River concludes with a shot of Shizuko’s parasol open and
upturned upon the black pavement as she runs off, her ever-receding white
figure engulfed by the night. With Black River, the elements that forged early
Japanese noir – moga and yakuza – craft a hopeless allegory of Japanese
modernity as bleak as any American noir ending.
The milieu and mindset of Black River and subsequent noirs reflect the
postwar period’s amorality. Imposing a purely American conceit about early
Japanese noir misses the social and philosophical fascination with crime
in postwar Japan. As Douglas N. Slaymaker has admirably pointed out,
Sakaguchi Ango’s essay ‘Darakuron’ (‘On decadence’) of 1946 endorses it
as the purest form of existence, since it does not rely upon state-imposed or
modern doctrinaire ideals of progress and striving to move culture forward.
Instead, Ango asserts that such conformist authoritarian concepts impose
a negation upon the basic, foundational humanity, which is decadence, ‘a
falling’, ‘a defection from reigning morals and societal strictures’:
To such an end, Ango views the illegal activities of the early postwar era, espe-
cially black marketeering, as a vision of the new world to come. Obviously,
black marketeering and yakuza are in the backdrop of daraku, with its view
of criminals acting out of a survival mode of necessity. Ango’s reduction to
nothingness, to a non-future, reveals a world not dependent on the bankrupt
ideology and social structure of the past and a world not seeking progress as
the outcome of modernity, but rather a world of a constant restructuring and
re-evaluating of the meaning of values, ethics and morality. Such re-evaluative
critiques are evident in Dragnet Girl, Drunken Angel and Stray Dog.
In so many ways, Ango’s description of the new woman’s body represents
the predicament of women in Japanese noir, who find ‘no pleasure in sex.
Living as an entertainer, a prostitute, she survives by providing physical
pleasure with her body . . . She lives by treating her body as a commodity, a
mechanical toy’.41 The moga and modern Japanese noir woman often display
a lack of emotion in love and forced sexual relationships, remaining alienated
as though she were an object, a mannequin. Here is the essence of the Japanese
noir modern woman: a liminal figure outside the conventions and traditions
of marriage and the family, on the margins of society and its mores, and
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international noir
Notes
1. Marius R. Jansen, The Making of Modern Japan (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 2000), p. 277. See also note 28, p. 812, which explains that
the ‘black ships’ were designated to distinguish them from the ‘white ships’ from
China.
2. Karen M. Gerhart, The Material Culture of Death in Medieval Japan (Honolulu,
HI: University of Hawai’i Press, 2009), p. 84.
3. Sharalyn Orbaugh, Japanese Fictions of the Allied Occupation: Vision, Embodiment,
Identity (Leiden: Brill, 2007), p. 403.
4. Peter B. E. Hill, The Japanese Mafia: Yakuza, Law, and the State (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2003), pp. 42–5.
5. David E. Kaplan and Alec Dubro, Yakuza: Japan’s Criminal Underworld (Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 2003), p. 84.
6. Aaron Gerow, Visions of Japanese Modernity: Articulations of Cinema, Nation,
and Spectatorship, 1895–1925 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press,
2010), p. 63.
7. Joanne Bernardi, Writing in Light: The Silent Scenario and the Japanese Pure Film
Movement (Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 2001), p. 29. This is an
essential work for any scholar pursuing the history, culture and influences upon
early Japanese filmmaking.
8. Joseph L. Anderson and Donald Richie, The Japanese Film: Art and Industry
(expanded edition) (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1982), p. 37.
9. Bernardi, pp. 303–4.
10. Daisuke Miyao, The Aesthetics of Shadow: Lighting and Japanese Cinema
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2013), p. 204.
11. Yuko Itatsu, ‘Japan’s Hollywood boycott movement of 1924’, Historical Journal
of Film, Radio and Television 28(3) (August 2008), 363.
12. William O. Gardner, ‘New perceptions: Kinugasa Teinosuke’s films and Japanese
modernism’, Cinema Journal 43(3) (spring 2004), 63.
13. Andrew Gerow, ‘The word before the image: Criticism, the screenplay, and the
regulation of meaning in prewar Japanese film culture’, in Dennis Washburn
and Carole Cavanaugh (eds), Word and Image in Japanese Cinema (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2001), p. 23.
14. Noël Burch, To the Distant Observer: Form and Meaning in the Japanese Cinema
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1979), p. 128.
15. Miyao, The Aesthetics of Shadow, p. 132.
16. R. A. Rajakaruna (trans.), Kinugasa Teinosuke’s A Crazy Page and Crossroads
(Colombo: Godage International Publishers, 2010), p. 63.
17. Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano, Nippon Modern: Japanese Cinema of the 1920s and
1930s (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press, 2008), p. 33.
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early japanese noir
18. Kawabata Yasunari, The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa, trans. Alisa Freedman (Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 2005), p. 30.
19. Seiji M. Lippit, Topographies of Japanese Modernism (New York: Columbia
University Press, 2002), p. 130.
20. Ibid., p. 126.
21. Modern Photography in Japan, 1915–1940 (San Francisco, CA: The Friends of
Photography, 2001) (no page numbers for plates).
22. David Bordwell, Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1988), p. 245.
23. Donald Kirihara, Patterns of Time: Mizoguchi and the 1930s (Madison, WI:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1992), p. 114.
24. Barbara Sato, The New Japanese Women: Modernity, Media, and Women in
Interwar Japan (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003), p. 65.
25. Andrew Gordon, A Modern History of Japan from Tokugawa Times to the Present
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003), p. 185.
26. Christine L. Marran, Poison Woman: Figuring Female Transgression in Modern
Japanese Culture (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2007), pp.
109–10.
27. Mori Toshie, ‘All for money: Mizoguchi Kenji’s Osaka Elegy (1936)’, in Alastair
Phillips and Julian Stringer (eds), Japanese Cinema: Texts and Contexts (London:
Routledge, 2007), p. 41.
28. Alan Tansman, The Aesthetics of Japanese Fascism (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press, 2009), p. 193.
29. Barak Kushner, The Thought War: Japanese Imperial Propaganda (Honolulu, HI:
University of Hawai’i Press, 2006), p. 62.
30. Sarah Frederick, ‘ “Novels to see/movies to read”: Photographic fiction in Japanese
women’s magazines’, positions 18(3) (2010), 765.
31. Mark Driscoll, Absolute Erotic, Absolute Grotesque: The Living, Dead, and
Undead in Japan’s Imperialism, 1895–1945 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
2010), p. 98.
32. Michael Baskett, The Attractive Empire: Transnational Film Culture in Imperial
Japan (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press, 2008), p. 108.
33. Anderson and Ritchie, The Japanese Film, p. 160.
34. Keiko Iwai McDonald, ‘The Yakuza film: An introduction’, in Arthur Nolletti, Jr
and David Desser (eds), Reframing Japanese Cinema: Authorship, Genre, History
(Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1992), p. 167.
35. Hiroshi Kitamura, Screening Enlightenment: Hollywood and the Cultural
Reconstruction of Defeated Japan (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2010),
p. 53.
36. Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto, Kurosawa: Film Studies and Japanese Cinema (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2000), p. 138.
37. Stephen Prince, The Warrior’s Cinema: The Cinema of Akira Kurosawa (Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991), p. 91.
38. Peter A. Yacavone, ‘Shinoda’s Pale Flower as a Japanese film noir’, Journal of
Japanese and Korean Cinema 3(1) (2011), 24.
39. Yuki Tanaka, Japan’s Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery and Prostitution during
World War II and the US Occupation (London: Routledge, 2002), p. 127.
40. Douglas N. Slaymaker, The Body in Postwar Japanese Fiction (London: Routledge,
2004), p. 104.
41. Ibid., p. 113.
111
5. THE GUNMAN AND THE GUN:
JAPANESE FILM NOIR SINCE
THE LATE 1950s
David Desser
‘Nikkatsu Noir’ – there is something very provocative about this: the allitera-
tion, the double consonants in ‘Nikkatsu’ and the invocation of ‘noir’, certainly
the most evocative of all genre names. In packaging its Eclipse Series 17, for the
first time Criterion – the estimable company that has revolutionised the field
of DVD–Blu-ray distribution with its combination of scholarly subtance and
first-rate transfers of usually non-mainstream movies – did not group the films
by director. From Japan, Criterion had previously released ‘Late Ozu’, ‘Postwar
Kurosawa’, ‘Silent Ozu’, ‘Kenji Mizoguchi’s Fallen Women’ and ‘Travels with
Hiroshi Shimizu’. But ‘Nikkatsu Noir’ was something different: not just the
release of a group of little-known films, but a kind of invention of a genre. It
would be churlish to claim that the films – I am Waiting (Ore wa matteiru ze,
Kurahara Kureyoshi, 1957); Rusty Knife (Sabita knife, Masuda Toshio, 1958);
Take Aim at the Police Van (Sono gosôsha wo nerae: ‘Jûsangô taihisen’ yori,
Suzuki Seijun, 1960); Cruel Gun Story (Kenju zankoku monogatari, Furukawa
Takumi, 1964); and A Colt is My Passport (Colt wa ore no passport, Nomura
Takashi, 1967) – are not noir. That the films were not originally imagined as
noir would not, of course, disqualify them from being noir. There was no imagi-
nation of ‘noir’ as such in classic Hollywood in the postwar era and no discourse
of noir. There was a cycle of films with enough similarities to strike critics, first
in France in 1955, as a kind of genre, movement or mode. Only when named
and when this name entered more popular discourse did ‘noir’ take on the kind
of generic cachet it has today. While noir had little cachet in the late 1950s for
the Japanese, by the turn of the new century it certainly would.
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japanese film noir since the late 1950s
After listing many of his influences, Joe Shishido (Shishido Jo) is asked if film
noir is one of his influences on Rusty Knife and films of that era. He answers
with a brief, ‘Yes, that was an influence, on everyone from the director to the
actors. I was the one who knew that genre best’.1 Maybe so, but what did he
know and when did he know it? Noir classics like Out of the Past, The Lady
from Shanghai and In a Lonely Place had not played in Japan. The 1946
version of The Postman Always Rings Twice did not show until 1979. Other
films played some years after their US release though Kubrick’s The Killing
and Orson Welles’ late-classic noir Touch of Evil played around the time of
their American distribution. Virtually none of these noirs made the prestigious
Kinema Junpo ‘Best’ list, often consisting of as many as twenty or thirty films
per year. This does not mean that these noirs did not have decent distribution,
but it does mean that noir was not yet the prestige genre it would later come to
be. (Welles’ Touch of Evil was only twenty-third in 1958.) The questioners do
not pursue the issue with Joe – what films had he seen and where had he seen
them? And what is the significance of Joe having known the genre best? What
influence did he have on the films: their script, direction, style and themes?
Joe made over thirty films between 1958 and 1968, which reveals the speed
with which Nikkatsu made these films and therefore the unlikelihood that he
would have had much influence upon them, save for his performances. Clearly,
however, noir had penetrated Japan. As Daisuke Miyao reminds us, in a café
scene in Ozu’s 1957 Tokyo Twilight (Tokyo boshoku; his last black-and-white
film) we see a poster of Robert Mitchum, iconic actor of film noir, on the wall.2
Of course, Ozu had a penchant for intertexual references to Hollywood via
dialogue, music or, in this case, a poster, but the choice of Mitchum does seem
telling. Similarly, Miyao insists that the art film Conflagration (Enjo, Ichikawa
Kon, 1958) is often considered a film noir, a crime film that relies on flashbacks
and high-contrast black-and-white cinematography.3 Whether or not we con-
sider either Tokyo Twilight or Conflagration to fit within or nearby the canon
of noir, it is clear that it had made its way into the consciousness of filmmakers
as diverse as Ozu and Ichikawa. Alternatively, however, Foster Hirsch main-
tains that in America, at least, the label ‘noir’ ‘did not gain a foothold . . . until
the late 1960s and early 1970s’.4 The filmmakers may have known the films,
but not their collective name. Meanwhile, in the late 1950s, Nikkatsu hit upon
a generalised formula to make ‘borderless’ (mukokuseki) action films. They
thus scrupulously avoided the kinds of images and sounds associated with
classical Japanese cinema, such as picturesque ryokan (Japanese-style inn),
izakaya (Japanese pub), Zen gardens, Tokyo’s broad and leafy postwar streets,
Kyoto’s unspoiled temples and the like. Instead, in situating their films in the
back alleys of Tokyo (as Ozu did in Tokyo Twilight), the docks of Yokohama
and the wide-open spaces of Hokkaido, they imagined they would attract
American and European audiences, especially with influences from both classic
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international noir
and younger arty, edgy non-Japanese directors. This strategy did not work;
instead Euro-American audiences continued to appreciate the ‘films for export’
model established earlier in the decade by Daiei, films that participated in the
postwar movement of ‘art’ cinema in ways that the genre-oriented action films
did not – and did not intend to. But whereas these borderless action films
found little play overseas at the time, they turned out to be huge hits in Japan.
The biggest star of these films was Ishihara Yujiro, who had made his mark
in the exciting and influential Crazed Fruit (Kurutta kajitsu, Nakahira Ko,
1956). As successful as it was, the ‘sun tribe’ (taiyo-zoku) films were short
lived, mostly because of public outrage, so Ishihara and the studio moved to
the mukokuseki action genre, including, in 1957, I Am Waiting and The Guy
Who Started a Storm (Arashi o yobu otoko, Inoue Umetsugu).5 The latter
film, a huge hit, utilised modern, Westernised locations and imagery such as
the Ginza at night and its nightclubs, pop music and a violent ex-con seeking
to go straight as a drummer.6 These invocations of noir would combine with
the conscious attempts at borderlessness in Red Quay (Akai hatoba, Masuda
Toshio, 1958). Despite its title, the film was in black and white (Nikkatsu was
split between colour and black and white in this period, though Eastmancolor
would win out for the majority of their productions soon after), which Schilling
claims is a ‘reworking’ of Pépé le Moko (Julien Duvivier, 1937).7 It is the very
setting along the ‘quay’ (hatoba) that invokes a liminal space or borderlessness
and perhaps also calls to mind Le Quai des brumes (Port of Shadows, Marcel
Carne, 1938) – the two French films essentially containing the essence of noir.
Ishihara, himself, contained something of borderlessness about him – his long
legs made him seem somehow un-Japanese and the way he walked was closer
to John Wayne than to any Japanese star.8
The influence of both French and Hollywood cinema would continue to be
apparent in Nikkatsu Action. Following in the footsteps of Ishihara Yujiro
came Kobayashi Akira, three years Ishihara’s junior (both actors made their
film debuts in 1956, but Ishihara was an immediate star). It was in 1959 that
Kobayashi made his breakthrough out of a combination of Nikkatsu genre
and Hollywood themes. Inoue Umetsugu’s The Friendship that Started a Storm
(Arashi o yobu yujo) was clearly a reference to Ishihara’s 1957 hit as was the
film’s setting in Tokyo’s burgeoning jazz milieu. Saito Buichi’s Farewell to
Southern Tosa (Nangoku Tosa o ato ni shite) was another of those tales about
the ex-con who is trying to go straight but is pulled back into his old life. It,
too, was a smash.9
Kobayashi made numerous films every year in typical Nikkatsu business
mode. Yet the films were hardly thoughtless; they may have been churned out,
but they had things in mind. The mukokuseki ideal was at the top of the list.
The paradigmatic borderless films were to be the wataridori series inaugurated
by Saito’s The Rambling Guitarist (Guitar o motta wataridori, 1959). These
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were modelled on Hollywood westerns and today films in this series have come
to be understood as part of a subgenre known as the Asian western. Over half
a dozen instalments of the series testify to their popularity and to the star’s
appeal
With Ishihara and Kobayashi churning out action films (with a touch of
romance – Kitahara Mie for Ishihara, Asaoka Ruriko for Kobayashi) Nikkatsu
made sure to find more dynamic young male stars and did so in the appeal-
ing forms of Wada Koji and Akagi Keiichiro, forming the ‘Diamond Line’. In
the early 1960s, Joe Shishido joined the line as he became a leading man, if
a decidedly unromantic one. And romance was certainly important. Kitahara
and Asaoka became big stars, but not as action heroines. That was left to Kaji
Meiko, who found her niche in action films in 1970 with Stray Cat Rock:
Delinquent Girl Boss (Nora-neko rock: onna bancho, Hasebe Yasuharu) and
extending through four more films, the most famous of which is Stray Cat
Rock: Sex Hunter (Nora-neko rock: sex hunter, Hasebe). The introduction of
the issue of race into the film brings a social consciousness to the cycle. Here
the figures of half-black-half-Japanese teenagers bring forth a host of under-
lying tensions, including mixed race vs Japanese purity; the social inferiority
of Africa and African-Americans in the Japanese mind; and the reminder of
Japanese defeat in the war and the continuing presence of American soldiers
on Japanese soil. Shot near the US naval base in Yokosuka, the film manages
to balance its exploitation elements with its social concerns.
Kaji continued her career and achieved even greater cult fame at Toei with
the ‘Female Convict 701: Scorpion’ (Joshuu 70-1-go: Sasori, Ito Shunya)
series beginning in 1972. The noir elements are even stronger here than in
her previous series, as Kaji’s character Nami is set up by her corrupt police
officer boyfriend to take the fall for his crimes. Her attempt to stab him lands
her in prison and we have, then, also a Women-in-Prison film replete with all
the rape, torture, beatings and other excuses for nudity typical of the form
(which began in 1971 with Roger Corman’s The Big Doll House and Women
in Cages). Sequels inevitably followed, of course, though the third, Female
Convict Scorpion: Beast Stable (Joshuu sasori: Kemono-beya, Ito, 1973), finds
Nami/Sasori out of prison and trying to go straight. As in classic Japanese noir,
she is inevitably drawn into the dark world of the city, the world of yakuza,
prostitutes, vengeful cops and a touch of incest. Exploitation, perhaps, but the
noir world gives such exploitation every excuse to thrive.
Back at Nikkatsu at the turn of the 1960s, the ‘Kenju’, or ‘Tales of a
Gunman’ film cycle, all films of which were made in 1960 and directed by
Noguchi Hiroshi – Ryuji the Gun Slinger (Kenjû buraichô: Nukiuchi no
Ryû); Man in Lightning (Kenjû buraichô: Denko sekka no otoko); Man With
a Hollow Laugh (Kenjû buraichô: Futeki ni warau otoko); Man Without
Tomorrow (Kenjû buraichô: Asunaki otoko) – mark an important transition
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to noir. These films star Akagi Keiichiro and Joe Shishido as rival gunmen,
hired killers, who end up working together. Mark Schilling describes their
dominant tone as ‘noirish’.10 Akagi died in a car accident on the Nikkatsu lot
in 1961; his last film was another story of a hitman, Crimson Pistol (Kurenai
no kenju, Ushihara Yoichi, 1961).
As the early 1960s gave way to the mid-1960s, Nikkatsu’s stars, directors
and audiences aged, as will inevitably happen. One could say, too, that bor-
derless action suffered the inevitable decline of all genres – over-exposure and
over-familiarity. The films of the mid-60s began to take on a darker tone and
more adult themes. Films from this period, especially those of Ishihara Yujiro,
came to be called ‘mood action’ and, as Schilling puts it, ‘the mood was usually
down’.11 It was during this period, beginning in 1963 with Youth of the Beast
(Yaju no seishun) under the increasingly inventive direction of Suzuki Seijun,
that Joe Shishido became a star and, later, a cult figure. Schilling claims that his
films at this time – A Colt is My Passport, Branded to Kill (Koroshi no rakuin)
and Slaughter Gun (Minagoroshi no kenju, Hasebe Yasuharu) – began to
allow him to venture into the dark underside of contemporary Japanese life.12
Watari Tetsuya represented the last of Nikkatsu’s attempts to bring back
the glory days of the ‘Diamond Line’. He first made two films with Ishihara
Yujiro in 1965–6, and starred in remakes of four of his older colleague’s films,
including Velvet Hustler (Kurenai no nagareboshi, 1967), Masuda Toshio’s
loose remake of Red Quay. Schilling notes that the hitman played by Watari
was modelled on Jean-Paul Belmondo’s character in Breathless.13
It is Branded to Kill, Suzuki’s wildly incoherent and hilarious look at a
hitman with some interesting psycho-sexual proclivities, the film for which he
was notoriously fired in 1968, that has best come to represent the ‘Nikkatsu
Noir’ mode. The use of black and white as late as 1967 is one reason for its
paradigmatic status. But, as Miyao reminds us,
The dark surfaces of film noir . . . came about as a result of the financial
limitations imposed upon B pictures. In order to hide their cheap sets,
lighting was used in such movies in a very sparse and economical manner.
Branded was eventually shot in black and white even though it was
planned as a color film from the very beginning.14
The studio was experiencing a severe economic downturn at this time and so
the black and white might have been one concession to budgets. We note that
A Colt is My Passport also boasts monochrome cinematography. Putting the
two films side by side, so to speak, reveals interesting similarities, including that
of style as well as the presence of Joe Shishido. Though perhaps less ‘delirious’
than Suzuki’s film, Colt, under the direction of Nomura Takashi, does some
interestingly avant-garde things.15 A Nikkatsu contract director like Suzuki,
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Nomura had previously directed The Quick Draw Kid (Hayauchi yaro, 1961),
another perfect paradigm of the borderless action movie, where its hero, Ace
no Joe (Shishido), outwits and outshoots ‘the bad guys in a Japanese “Wild
East” town the likes of which could only have existed in a Japanese studio’.16
Colt differs from Branded only in degree, not in kind. The climactic shoot-out
features a segment of shot-reverse shot with takes of around one second each.
Nor is the script particularly tight: a subplot involving the waitress at the hotel
where the hitman and his driver hide out never really pays off in terms of
narrative or emotional closure.
What we must take away here is that a dual fascination had developed in
Japan in the 1960s, culminating in these two odd films: the hitman and the gun.
We have already seen the popularity of kenju (gun) in the ‘Tales of a Gunman’
series and we should note now the numerous other films that use kenju in their
title, as listed above. These films combine the gun with the gunman, typically a
hitman. We might well wonder which of these linked icons – the gunman and
the gun – give rise to the other. Guns are, in Japan, the province of criminals
and policemen. Japan has extremely tough and restrictive gun-control laws;
only shotguns and air rifles are legal and even they are difficult to acquire,
made onerous by various levels of state control. What is forbidden in life may
be fascinating on screen, and the man (or woman) who possesses a gun, who is
skilled in its use and knowledgeable of its properties, perhaps becomes doubly
fascinating. The figure of the hitman, though often employed by a criminal
organisation, is in stark contrast to the yakuza of the ninkyo films popularised
by Toei Studios in the postwar era through the 1970s and made by Nikkatsu
too in the mid-1960s.
Ninkyo-eiga is the term used in Japan to describe a specific variation of what
is more generally called the yakuza film (yakuza-eiga). The ninkyo-eiga, or
chivalry film, featured stories focusing on garishly tattooed gangsters attached
to warring gangs in the early part of the twentieth century. Nikkatsu utilised
young star Takahashi Hideki in their variation of the form, particularly the
Otoko no monsho (Symbol of a Man) series beginning in 1963. Of these
roles, he is best known for Tattooed Life (Irezumi ichidai, 1965), a relatively
straightforward film considering it was made by Suzuki Seijun. But it is the
Toei films that best reveal the distinction between the ninkyo yakuza and the
hitman variation. In lieu of a gun, the favoured weapon of the yakuza is a
sword (a shorter version of the samurai katana, kept in a plain wooden scab-
bard); instead of a suit the yakuza wears a plain kimono that, when he prepares
for a fight, is pulled down to reveal the complex interweaving of tattoos on his
back. Concepts of giri/ninjo, loyalty to the oyabun (gang boss) and to the
yakuza brotherhood are central, as are various rituals that make for exciting
cinema, especially the infamous yubitsume (slicing off the tip of the left little
finger). The use of a modified samurai sword and the practice of yubitsume (a
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violence’ brand, got things started in 1972 under the direction of respected
pink film director Suzuki Norifumi. Girl Boss Guerilla (Sukeban: Gerira)
was followed six months later by Girl Boss Revenge: Sukeban (Sukeban,
1973). The mantle of pinky sex and violence was taken up a few months later
by Nakajima Sadao with Girl Boss: Escape from Reform School (Sukeban:
Kankain dasso, 1973). Sugimoto Miki would continue for a few more years in
the noirish sex-and-violence mode, morphing her image from criminal to cop
in the especially violent and perhaps disturbing Zero Woman: Red Handcuffs
(Zeroka no onna: Akai wappa, 1974). Sugimoto would retire in 1977; Ike
Reiko, after some offscreen troubles, would retire in 1980. The genre of pinky
violence would also come to its end and Japanese noir would go on hiatus for
some few years, resurrected in the 1980s by the singular talent and genre ref-
erentiality of Hayashi Kaizo.
A period of quiescence seemed to unleash a torrent of neo-noir in the 1990s.
This was presaged in 1989 with the exciting directorial debut of Kitano
Takeshi. Taking over the directorial reins from stylish veteran yakuza director
Fukasaku Kinji, who had taken ill, Kitano made Violent Cop (Sono otoko,
kyobo ni tsuki). Though the image of Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry is often
invoked to describe the violent cop of the title, the film is far darker than
anything the San Francisco cop had to confront – inside or out. Corrupt cops;
powerful yakuza; drug dealing and addiction; the endangerment of his dis-
turbed sister – the film has all the elements of Japanese noir with new levels of
violence. Kitano, unquestionably the most important of post-1980s Japanese
directors, has long been associated with the crime film, especially his works in
the noir-filled 90s.
Much of the noir of the 1990s can be classified as neo-noir as the films
betray a certain knowingness in their evocations of the genre. Few, however,
are as knowingly winking as in the case of Hayashi Kaizo’s The Most Terrible
Time in My Life (Waga jinsei saikaku no toki, 1994). As in his first and still
best-known film, To Sleep so as to Dream (Yume miru yoni nemuritai, 1986),
the film is as much a meditation on cinema as it is an examination of character
and setting. The earlier film was a lovely and loving tribute to the particulari-
ties of the Japanese silent cinema, done largely in the form of a silent film. Its
plot revolves around a private eye and his search for an aging actress’s kid-
napped daughter. We can easily get lost in the silent-film stylings, especially the
use of a benshi, played by one of the last of the great benshi, Matsuda Shunsui
(who died shortly after the release of this film), and his disciple, the inestimable
Sawato Midori. Similarly, we may admire the recreation of a jidaigeki (period
film) from 1915 (though we could quibble and note that Hayashi’s film-within-
the-film is far more ‘advanced’ than a film of the era). But in so doing we miss
something important here, that in the use of a private eye searching for a
missing girl, who finds himself lost amidst a confusing swirl of clues, characters
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and conundrums, we have entered the world of noir. The framing story – the
hiring of the private eye – is set in the 1950s, which is to say at the height of
classic film noir, at a time when the genre had been named as such and when
genuine auteurs like Welles, Wilder and Aldrich were demonstrating both the
essential characteristics of noir and its stylistic flexibility. There is, for instance,
something of Sunset Blvd (1950) in the use of a fading actress who sends the
protagonist on his journey, along with the invocation of the silent cinema;
and when the private eye and his sidekick find themselves in 1915 Asakusa
(suggested more than recreated with brief glimpses of elements of the famed
entertainment area of Tokyo in the teens) are we that far from Welles’ famous
funhouse hall of mirrors in The Lady from Shanghai?
The Most Terrible Time of My Life uses the figure of the private eye in a
deliberate nod to the Hollywood figure of the hard-boiled detective. Called
‘Hama Mike’ (i.e. Mike Hammer and Mike Yokohama at the same time), it
is hard to miss the reference to the late-classic noir. Hama’s office is inside a
cinema, its marquee outside boasting ‘CinemaScope’, yet the film being shown
at that time is The Best Years of Our Lives, which, in the title sequence,
becomes the title of the film we are watching, i.e. The Most Terrible Time of
My Life. These jokey allusions (The Best Years of Our Lives was made half a
dozen years before the introduction of CinemaScope; few of the classic noirs,
even those made after 1952, were in ’Scope) are part of an intertextual chain
extending from American noir, the French New Wave and Nikkatsu Action.
Joe Shishido himself makes a longish cameo appearance as a mentor to Mike.18
Two direct sequels quickly followed: The Stairway to the Distant Past
(Harukana jidai no kaidan o, 1995), which abandons its black-and-white
look, and The Trap (Wana, 1996), also in colour. The films were made in
CinemaScope and all feature cult favourite Nagase Masatoshi in the leading
role. And all were directed by Hayashi. The third and final one is of particular
interest for the way in which it gets at the dark heart of noir – the unstable hero
who has lived by the code of being a good man, but who cannot be trusted,
even by himself.19
The private eye, the PI, is another figure of alienation. Like the hitman, he
works alone (private) or with a partner, taking cases that somehow appeal
to him or out of a sense of obligation. Yet the PI is an uncommon figure in
Japanese noir. Whereas Hollywood films are positively bursting at the seams
with private eyes, in Japan that is entirely not the case. Perhaps the PI, a
popular figure in American literature as well, appeals to American audiences
as a liminal figure, somewhere between the law and the outlaw. The kind of
in-betweenness represented by the PI may be linked to issues of social mobility
or the possession of multiple identities. We might say that in Japan it remains
more difficult to be in-between. One can lose social status, experience a shift in
circumstances, but perhaps the ability to move between social classes is more
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difficult. Think of the tragic figure of the ronin – he is more than an unem-
ployed samurai. Though today the term ‘ronin’ is sometimes used for a salary-
man who is between jobs, more typically ronin is used to describe a teenager
who has failed to win a place at a prestigious college or university and is taking
classes in order to resit the exam. This is a form of social alienation or even
disgrace, not a liminal figure moving between realms with one foot in each and
a self-satisfied sense of being a loner.
One can think of no such PI figure in classical Japanese noir. It would
take the 1990s to introduce him, especially in anime. Case Closed (Meitantei
Conan, aka Detective Conan), is a very popular manga series that began in
1994, with televisual anime beginning in 1996, followed by feature anime,
OVA (original video animation), video games and live-action television
specials. A typically bizarre world is created – a teenage boy is subjected to
a poison intended to kill him, but instead transforms him into a child who
calls himself Conan Edogawa (a variation on famed pseudonymous Japanese
mystery author Edogawa Rampo; i.e. Edgar Allan Poe). He seeks to destroy
the dastardly Black Organisation, whose members take the nom de guerre of
alcoholic beverages, with Gin, Vodka and Vermouth the major antagonists. An
earlier PI series was Goku Midnight Eye (Kawajiri Yoshiaki, 1989), released
as two OAVs, which concerns a dogged police officer who, while investigating
a series of police suicides, is warned off the case. When he refuses he is almost
killed, his left eye gouged out. He is then rescued by a mysterious scientist who
implants a cybernetic eye in place of his missing one. His cybernetic eye can
connect with any computer in the world. He becomes a PI in this generally
futuristic, adult-oriented manga and anime.
Most manga and/or anime featuring private detectives are closer to the
mystery genre than the tough-guy detective story. In addition, Goku Midnight
Eye is one of the few with an adult protagonist; the others use children
detectives – no surprise given the primary demographic of manga and anime.
Of equal import, however, is that anime is often intended for a global market,
being the new, successful version of the old Nikkatsu mukokuseki ideal. Thus,
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in creating detectives and private eyes, Japanese anime is relying on the global
penetration of such figures and not necessarily any particular Japanese dimen-
sion. To be sure, Detective Conan was wildly successful, but one might attrib-
ute that to its sci-fi setting and the transformation of its teenage protagonist
into a child as much as any detecting.
The mid-90s through the rest of the decade was clearly a golden age of
neo-noir. A wonderful retro/neo-noir is to be found in the form of Another
Lonely Hitman (Shin Kanashiku Hitman, Mochizuki Rokuro, 1995). Rarely
has colour cinematography looked and felt so much like black and white.
Sparse settings, minimal dialogue, a genuinely troubled tough-guy protagonist
(portrayed by up-and-coming star Ishibashi Ryo) and a dark world of betrayal
and disillusionment characterise this post-Nikkatsu neo-noir. Ishibashi por-
trays Tachibana, a yakuza hitman newly released after ten years in prison. He
is clearly out of step from the moment he steps out of prison. The world has
changed and the yakuza have changed with it. At first, however, his old gang is
welcoming, presenting him with a gift of cash, the aid of an admiring factotum
and a cute call girl for the evening. Tachibana, for all his skill at violence, is
sexually impotent. However, he begins a relationship with the call girl, Yuki,
after he beats her pimp for beating her. But that is when he learns the first of
many hard lessons, that the pimp is connected with another yakuza family, a
more powerful one – in fact the very family whose boss he killed (along with
crippling the boss’s daughter). He is dismayed when he sees that money is the
foundation of yakuza life now; violence is frowned upon when dealing with
other gangsters, but loyalty is becoming in short supply. Tachibana, a former
junkie, is also dismayed to see that drug pushing has become a lucrative yakuza
enterprise. He helps Yuki kick her habit.
Gang member Mizohashi is the most significant figure with whom Tachibana
must contend. He continually reminds him that money greases all wheels and
that conflict amongst yakuza families is to be avoided. Yet he plays all sides in
his role as go-between, with a lucrative side angle in heroin. He feels the big
money is in the building of a golf course and has worked hard (and behind
the scenes in secret) to acquire the land. This idea of heroin funding a golf
course is not just the perfect metaphor for the changes in yakuza life that alien-
ate Tachibana from his former gang family (his real family, his ex-wife and
his mother have completely renounced him, keeping him estranged from his
daughter and his sister), but is also a deft swipe at middle-class striving for the
attributes of wealth, golf and golf courses being extraordinarily expensive in
Japan.
Director Mochizuki, who got his start making roman poruno at Nikkatsu,
keeps the sex and nudity to an almost bare minimum. Eschewing roman
poruno for the most part (a rather odd scene of Yuki peeing her pants perhaps
being the only nod to the sometimes-perverse sexuality of the genre), and
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Triad members in the earlier film. He works in a slaughterhouse and also takes
assignments as a hitman from a Taiwanese crime boss. He is also being pursued
by a Japanese man who is most likely a hitman from a rival yakuza gang. His
life becomes infinitely more complicated still when a former one-night stand
leaves a mute youngster with him, claiming it is his son. Tom Mes notes the
resemblance to Luc Besson’s Léon (1994) only to note also the vast difference
in style, temperament and execution.20 Interestingly, Mes calls Yuji ‘the lonely
hitman’, an unintentional but revealing link to films like Mochizuki’s discussed
above.21 And, like Mochizuki’s earlier film, escape from the life is possible only
by death.
Ley Lines, the third film in the Black Society trilogy, is called by Tom Mes
‘the quintessential Miike film’.22 With a completely different plot and set of
characters than the earlier Japan-set film, many of the same actors appear:
Osugi Ren, Taguchi Tomorowo and Takeshi Caesar, along with now-regular
Aikawa Sho. Again, the uneasy presence of Chinese in Japan is highlighted,
this time through the use of characters born in Japan of Chinese parents; they
speak Japanese fluently and are completely acculturated to Japan, but are still
barely accepted as Japanese. Three boys flee their rural hometown and light
out for the dark world of Shinjuku. Once there they are scammed by a Chinese
prostitute, but when they later discover her bruised and beaten by her pimp,
they realise their solidarity as outsiders, not just as Chinese in xenophobic
Japan, but as marginalised workers living on the fringes. Mes even notes that
when they become low-level drug dealers, the drug they sell on the streets
is toluene: ‘They are such outcast [sic] that they aren’t even allowed to sell
a decent drug’.23 (Toluene is methylbenzene, a solvent as well as an octane
booster for petrol that can be used as an inhalant to get high, but only at the
risk of neurological damage.) Their outcast status forces them into a life of
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crime which inevitably leads to death, at least for some, and an ambiguous end
for others.
In the mid-1990s, films about female assassins/hitmen (hitwomen) combined
a decidedly noir sensibility with an overtly sexualised image of the leading
lady. Beautiful Beast (XX: Utsukushiki kemono, Ikeda Toshiharu, 1995) was
a direct-to-video feature starring Shimamura Kaori. Typically such films as this
are B films (shot in high-def video), in terms of budget and stars, along with
running time, but there is less stigma attached to this distribution pattern than
there is in the US. This is a common practice in anime, for instance, and was
part-and-parcel of the career trajectory of Miike Takashi. Director Ikeda is
best known for his cult horror hit Evil Dead Trap (Shiryo no wana, 1988) and
the connections between a film like that and Beautiful Beast tell us something
of the underlying darkness in these films. However, the link between sex and
violence is of greater import in this and other hitwomen films. Beautiful Killing
Machine (XX: Utsukushiki kino, Hara Takahito, 1996) starring Natsume
Rei, a model who eventually made only three films, features a female body-
guard up against the top hitman in the business in order to protect her client.
A third ‘Beautiful’ (utsukushiki) film was quickly turned out by Ikeda, also
in 1996. XX: Beautiful Prey (XX: utsukushiki emono) was the rare noir to
utilise a policewoman for its tormented protagonist, here caught up in a web
of S&M sex in her search for a rapist-murderer. Though the ‘Zero Woman’
series (1995–7, inspired by the original Zero Woman and the success of Luc
Besson’s Nikita, 1990, and its American remake, The Point of No Return,
John Badham, 1993) also focused on a policewoman, and it relies on copious
amounts of nudity as all these films do, the films draw strict lines between good
and evil and allow its protagonist to be free of self-doubt and torment.
Perhaps the most noir-like of any of these ‘girls with guns’ films (this seems to
be the transnational genre into which such films are categorised) is Black Angel
(Kuro no tenshi Vol. 1, Ishii Takashi, 1997). Filled with sex and violence, the
film manages, under the direction of the skilled Ishii Takashi – best known for
two entries in the controversial ‘Angel Guts’ series – to create the appropriate
noir atmosphere out of Tokyo’s neon-lit nights along with the aura of corrup-
tion on the mean streets. The second entry in the series is less noir and more
action. Indeed by the late 90s the ‘action’ film would become more of a global
genre, and would capture the imagination of the likes of Miike and dilute the
noir elements in favour of spectacle.
The 1990s, especially the last half of the decade, was, as we have seen, a mini-
Golden Age of neo-noir. It is easy to draw a connection between the cultural
context and the rise of the cycle. It seems clear that neo-noir was very much
attuned to the so-called ‘lost decade’ of the Japanese economy (ushinawareta
junen, or ‘lost ten years’). Whereas classic noir was a response to the Japanese
economic miracle, the downturn in the economy led to a myriad of societal
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problems. Overrated land and real-estate prices in the 1980s combined with
low interest rates led to massive borrowing and heavy investment in the stock
market. A rise in interest rates to counteract the bubble made it burst and the
stock market crashed. A debt crisis followed. Japan’s famed lifetime employ-
ment system was said to have collapsed as one result of the stagnant economy
that followed during this lost ten years. While that is something of a myth –
long-term employment increased during the 90s and the changing of jobs was
only negligibly more noticeable – over the course of the decade and thereafter
the nature of the Japanese workforce changed as did the impression of lifetime
work.24 Perhaps even more importantly, the nature of work did change for
Japanese youth. High school and university graduates of the 1990s came to be
called the lost generation. The smooth transition from school to work and the
lifetime employment that could be expected had broken down for many young
people. Here came the problem of ‘freeters’ and ‘NEETs’. The former refers
to workers employed in temporary or part-time work, originally by choice in
the 1980s when the term was coined, but later in the 90s due to the economic
downturn. The term is a neologism derived from the English ‘free’ and the
German Arbeit (work). The latter is an acronym meaning ‘not in education,
employment or training’. This is a social problem among the 18–34 year old
demographic, the same as that which makes up the major audience for the film.
Though we wish to see cultural connections to cycles of noir, there are other
compelling factors to consider. If we think of the Mike Hama trilogy as retro-
noir, we should certainly think of the noir films of Sabu (Tanaka Hiroyuki) as
neo-noir with a decidedly postmodern, hip twist. His early films, like the hilari-
ous Dangan Runner (1996), Postman Blues (1997) and Drive (2002), belong
less to any sense of lost-generation disillusionment and depression in Japan
than to the rush to imitate the early films of Quentin Tarantino – themselves
imitations of earlier films.25
Dangan Runner is the obvious forerunner to Tom Tykwer’s frenetic Run
Lola Run (Lola Rennt, 1998), though it lacks the narrative repetitions/
variation. It belongs to that category of films that grow out of the surrealism
of city life with its odd coincidences and juxtapositions. Pulp Fiction (1994) is
the model here, with its fragmented, disjointed narrative presentation. More
comedy than noir, though it eventually evolves into a dark comedy, Dangan
Runner concerns a two-bit would-be criminal (played by Miike favourite
Taguchi Tomorowo) who angers a convenience-store clerk with his attempt
to steal a gauze mask (in order to rob a bank). The clerk chases him with an
unending sense of purpose. In turn, the clerk, a strung-out former rock musi-
cian (played by real-life rocker Diamond Yukai), is being pursued by his drug
dealer (TV actor Tsutsumi Shin’ichi working his way into films), a low-level
yakuza. The three run with the stamina of Lola, maintaining a consistent dis-
tance apart as they wend their way through the city. One particularly piquant
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moment occurs when the three young men run past an attractive woman. The
small-time crook imagines making love to her in a gentle, romantic fashion;
the rock star fantasises a slightly more kinky encounter; the yakuza envisages
raping her. As they run the film flashes back to their stories. The chase is occa-
sionally interrupted by the discussions between two yakuza (one played by
Osugi Ren, one of his ten film roles in 1996) about the yakuza code of honour
and its concomitant willingness to die for one’s oyabun. There is even a fantasy
sequence done in classic yakuza-eiga style from their point of view.
Tsutsumi Shin’ichi and Osugi Ren return in Postman Blues. Again, the
figure of the hitman recurs, especially in the tragic image of the terminally ill
Joe (Osugi) whose name might be a nod to the figure of the American loner or
perhaps to Joe Shishido. The dark humour here occurs when postman Sawaki
(Tsutsumi) runs into his old schoolmate, now a low-level yakuza who has just
performed the ritual of yubitsume. Unbeknownst to either man, the fingertip
has rolled off the table and into Sawaki’s mailbag. From there on in, Sawaki is
mistaken for a vicious yakuza killer and drug-dealer by the clueless, frightened
police.
Chance encounter plays a significant role in Drive, Sabu’s third film, involv-
ing kinder, gentler versions of the yakuza. Tsutsumi Shin’ichi and Osugi Ren
are joined in this film by Terajima Susumu. This film is even lighter than the
others as a young man and woman are kidnapped after a botched mission by
completely incompetent yakuza. What could have been a tense ride through
the yakuza underworld is instead a bemused and amused look at the reality
behind the poseurs of gangland Japan.
Tsukamoto Shinya, already a cult favourite with his ‘Tetsuo films’ (1989,
1992), resisted the urge for postmodern pastiche or even the retro-noir of the
alienated hitman. Taking seriously not the figure of the gunman, but that of the
gun, Bullet Ballet (1998) is an intense psychological drama about a man trau-
matised by his girlfriend’s suicide by gunshot. Initially he seems less interested
in why she killed herself and more in the gun she used: what kind of gun was
it and how did she get it? He determines to acquire a gun just like hers. Given
the difficulty of getting a gun in Japan, Goda (played by Tsukamoto himself)
searches through the Tokyo underworld, the black-and-white cinematography
(as he had used in Tetsuo, the Iron Man) emphasising the noir world he now
moves through. Of course we understand that his quest to get a gun represents
a displacement of his sense of failure in his relationship, his emasculation. That
is an obvious reading, but for all that an important one. In his quest Goda also
acquires a secondary mission, that of saving Chisato from her self-destructive
ways as part of a small-time criminal gang. Goto’s downward spiral is inevi-
table and Tsukamoto captures it with jagged editing and sometimes dizzying
camerawork, a melding of theme and style that makes this a quintessential
neo-noir without the po-mo irony behind it.
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international noir
Either the end of the 90s or the start of the new millennium, depending
on your perspective, saw the intriguingly titled Film Noir (Koroshi, 2000,
Kobayashi Masahiro). Though the Japanese title means ‘killer’ and not ‘film
noir’, given its subject matter – an ordinary man becomes a hitman – the
English title seems appropriate enough. With its dedication to French noir
auteur Jean-Pierre Melville, it is hard not to place this film in its proper generic
context. Another Lonely Hitman’s Ishibashi Ryo stars as a salaryman who has
lost his job but is afraid to tell his harridan wife. So he trudges off to ‘work’
each morning, but goes instead to the next town to hang out at a pachinko
parlour. He and his wife continue to send money overseas to their daughter in
school in the States, so he knows his money supply is dwindling. One day he is
approached by a man, played by 80s cult favourite Ogata Ken, who offers him
a job as a contract killer. Needing the money, he eventually agrees. Soon he
finds the work satisfying as he equally finds sex with his wife satisfying.
The cultural chords here are plentiful. As a salaryman, Yuji would once have
lived with the expectation of lifetime employment. But the lost decade of the 90s
cost him his job. His daughter at school in the States represents another status
indicator in contemporary Japan. But mostly the wicked humour of equating
work as a salaryman with work as a hitman is the film’s most challenging idea.
The setting in rural, wintry Hokkaido seems anathema to noir – white snow vs
neon lights; cold vs hot (it rains in noir, but it never snows); small town vs big
city. Yet in its focus on a man betrayed by his society, emasculated by his job
and his wife, who is regenerated through violence, the film works as neo-noir.
And as the man known only as the Client, Ogata Ken brings to the role the nec-
essary sense of mystery, arbitrariness and even absurdity. Why these particular
people need to be killed is never explained and only when Yuji is assigned to
kill someone he knows does he come up short in his blithe killing spree.
The hitman figure continues to recur in neo-noir of the new millennium.
One interesting example brings back the hitwoman/assassin cycle of the mid-
1990s. Model-turned-actress Yonekura Ryoko stars in Gun Crazy: A Woman
from Nowhere (2002), directed by Muroga Atsushi. Its success inspired not
a series of sequels, but a series of episodes, not much longer than an hour,
featuring different casts, all released as direct-to-video. Gun Crazy is a com-
petent, if ultimately uninvolving amalgam of Yojimbo/A Fistful of Dollars,
Once Upon a Time in the West with a soupçon of The Good, the Bad and
the Ugly thrown in. Given its contemporary setting – although in a fictional
town – replete with motorcycles, cars, trucks, swimming pools and big guns, it
is closer in tone to the original source for Kurosawa’s influential samurai film,
Dashiell Hammett’s Red Harvest. Crucially, however, it does not feature the
lone gunfighter offering his services to two competing cartels. Instead, it is a
story of vengeance as if paring down Once Upon a Time in the West just to the
Harmonica/Frank story.
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japanese film noir since the late 1950s
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japanese film noir since the late 1950s
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international noir
got him fired, only this time studio president Hori Kyusaku was long gone,
having passed away in 1974.
The year 2001 also saw the increasingly outrageous Miike Takashi make
Ichi the Killer (Koroshiya 1). Along with the horror film Audition (1999),
Ichi remains Miike’s signature film for both cultists and general audiences.
Certainly its most memorable element is the extremity of its violence. While
Audition climaxes with horrifying torture-porn, Ichi confronts the audience
with ever-increasing ways to maim, hurt, injure, wound, mutilate, mangle,
disfigure and deform a human body. A quartet of cult favourites, including
Asano Tadanobu, Terajima Susumu, Sabu and Tsukamoto Shinya, head the
cast of this blood-drenched gore-fest. Yet at its basic level this is a noir set in
the yakuza underworld, whose protagonist, Kakihara, is a loyal lieutenant to
gangland boss Anjo. When his boss disappears (he has been murdered, but
Kakihara wants to believe he is missing), Kakihara seeks him out, literally
cutting a swathe through the yakuza underworld. The psycho-sexual perver-
sity of the noir hero, pioneered by Joe Shishido in Branded to Kill, is taken to a
dimension even beyond Suzuki’s avant-garde imaginings. Kakihara is a maso-
chist, his face a nightmare of scars and piercings. Crime boss Anjo was the only
one who could satisfy his masochistic urges. Thus the yakuza theme of loyalty
to one’s oyabun combines with the noir motif of sexual desire that is somehow
perverted. With the clandestine machinations of Jiji, both Kakihara and Ichi
(the latter a victim of hypnosis and false memories) find ever-new and unpleas-
ant ways to torture and slaughter. But at its (admittedly difficult to find) heart,
the film is really a search for family and fulfilment. Ichi craves sexual normal-
ity; Kakihara a suitable sadist; young Takeshi a sense of safety; his disgraced
ex-cop father a sense of belonging. Miike’s films may lack clarity and coher-
ence, but certainly they continue to participate in the Japanese neo-noir where
being an outsider, alienated and alone, is the most frightening thing of all.
Perhaps appropriately, the master manipulator that was Jiji in Ichi the Killer
is played by Tsukamoto Shinya. The director of Bullet Ballet, one of the cycle
of neo-noir not concerned with cops or killers, contributed to post-millennial
neo-noir with another psycho-sexual exploration, A Snake of June (Rokugatsu
no hebi, 2002). As the marriage of a middle-class couple deteriorates, the
younger wife is blackmailed into performing ever-more socially dangerous acts
of a sexual nature. She, however, finds these liberating and soon her husband is
drawn into the erotic regeneration. The figure of the mysterious photographer,
who has power over her – the power to blackmail her, the power to control the
gaze, but also the power to know her better than she does herself – is precisely
the neo-noir vision of the sexual pervert, the dangers of the city and the fear of
social ostracism. Hand-held camera work, jagged editing and the rain-slicked
city streets also contribute to the noirish atmosphere.
Like A Snake of June, Villain (Akunin, Lee Sang-il), the Kinema Junpo Best
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japanese film noir since the late 1950s
One Award winner of 2010, avoids both the gunman and the gun tropes. We
have here the stuff of melodrama, perhaps, or a throwback to the taiyo-zoku
(sun tribe) films of the 1950s or a neo-noir in the spirit of the Coen brothers.
With issues of social class, self-hatred, anger and alienation, Zainichi Korean
director Lee Sang-il has crafted a penetrating look at the lingering effects
of discrimination across a variety of characteristics in contemporary Japan.
Sexual desire, violence, betrayal and the possibility of redemption structure the
film in archetypal neo-noir fashion despite the lack of the familiar characters
we have seen since the 1950s.
Nevertheless, the familiar icons of the gunman and the gun have ruled the
roost of Japanese noir and neo-noir for over forty-five years, testimony to the
hold these images have on the Japanese imaginary. Whereas the American
hitman, the assassin, is prized for being a loner, a variation on the gunfighter
of many a Hollywood western, a skilled craftsman of killing, the Japanese find
such a figure to be a tragic one. To be alienated and alone, adrift from family
and friends, is a fate worse than death, though death tends to be his ultimate
fate.
Bibliography
Croce, Fernando F. (2009), ‘Eclipse Series 17: Nikkatsu Noir’, online at www.slant-
magazine.com/dvd/review/eclipse-series-17-nikkatsu-noir (accessed 30 June 2013).
Desser, David (1992), ‘Ikiru: Narration as a moral act’, in Arthur Nolletti, Jr and David
Desser (eds), Reframing Japanese Cinema: Authorship, Genre, History, Bloomington,
IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 56–68.
——. (2003), ‘Global noir: Genre film in the age of transnationalism’, in Barry K. Grant
(ed.), Film Genre Reader III, Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, pp. 516–36.
Field, Simon and Tony Rayns (1994), Branded to Thrill: The Delirious Cinema of
Suzuki Seijun, London: Institute of Contemporary Arts.
Geller, Theresa L. (2008), ‘Transnational noir: Style and substance in Hayashi Kaizo’s
The Most Terrible Time in My Life’, in Leon Hunt and Leung Wing-fai (eds), East
Asian Cinemas: Exploring Transnational Connection on Film, London: I. B. Tauris,
pp. 172–87.
Gerow, Aaron (1995), ‘When the East fails to meet the West’, Daily Yomiuri, 8 August
1995, online at http://pears.lib.ohio-state.edu/Markus/Review/Films95/East.html
(accessed 6 January 2014).
Iles, Timothy (2009), ‘Noir’s dark heart: Hayashi Kaizo’s Hama Maiku trilogy’, online
at www.japanesestudies.org.uk/reviews/filmreviews/2009/Iles1.html (accessed 10
January 2014).
Martinez, Dolores (2014), ‘Kurosawa’s noir quartet: Cinematic musings on how to
be a tough man’, in Chi-Yun Shin and Mark Gallagher (eds), East Asian Film Noir:
Transnational Encounters and Intercultural Dialogue, London: I. B. Tauris, pp.
1–21.
Mes, Tom (2003), Agitator: The Cinema of Miike Takashi, Goldaming: FAB Press.
Miyao, Daisuke (2007), ‘Dark visions of Japanese noir: Suzuki Seijun’s Branded to Kill
(1967), in Alastair Phillips and Julian Stringers (eds), Japanese Cinema: Texts and
Contexts, London: Routledge, pp. 193–204.
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——. (2014), ‘Out of the past: Film noir, whiteness and the end of the monochrome
era in Japanese cinema’, in Shin and Gallagher (eds), East Asian Film Noir, pp.
27–47.
Okamoto, Daisuke (2011), ‘Revisiting Japanese lifetime employment system: Financial
performance analysis using artificial neural networks’, Keio Business Review, 46:
1–23.
Raine, Michael (2001), ‘Ishihara Yujiro: Youth, celebrity and the male body in late
1950s Japan’, in Dennis Washburn and Carole Cavanaugh (eds), Word and Image in
Japanese Cinema, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 202–25.
Rich, Jamie S. (2012), ‘A Colt is my passport – Eclipse Series 17’, online at www.cri
terionconfessions.com/2012/03/nikkatsu-noir-cold-is-my-passport.html (accessed 30
June 2013).
Schilling, Mark (2007), No Borders, No Limits: Nikkastsu Action Cinema, Godalming:
FAB Press.
Stephens, Chuck (2009), ‘Eclipse Series 17: Nikkatsu Noir’, online at www.criterion.
com/current/posts/1216-eclipse-series-17-nikkatsu-noir (accessed 3 January 2014).
Yaju no webpage (n.d.), online at http://shishido0.tripod.com/shishido.html (accessed
3 January 2014).
Zipangu Fest (2012), ‘To sleep so as to dream’, online at http://zipangufest.com/
films/2012/to-sleep-so-as-to-dream (accessed 30 June 2013).
Notes
1. Mark Schilling, No Borders, No Limits: Nikkastsu Action Cinema (Godalming:
FAB Press, 2007), p. 87.
2. Daisuke Miyao, ‘Out of the past: Film noir, whiteness and the end of the mono-
chrome era in Japanese cinema’, in Chi-Yun Shin and Mark Gallagher (eds), East
Asian Film Noir: Transnational Encounters and Intercultural Dialogue (London:
I. B. Tauris, 2014), p. 30.
3. Ibid., p. 39.
4. Foster Hirsch, Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir (New York:
Limelight Editions, 1999), p. 2.
5. Schilling, No Borders, No Limits, p. 14.
6. Ibid., p. 15.
7. Ibid., p. 15.
8. Michael Raine, ‘Ishihara Yujiro: Youth, celebrity and the male body in late 1950s
Japan’, in Dennis Washburn and Carole Cavanaugh (eds), Word and Image in
Japanese Cinema (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001), pp. 207–9.
9. Schilling, No Borders, No Limits, p. 15.
10. Ibid., p. 50.
11. Ibid, p. 7.
12. Ibid., p. 22.
13. Ibid. p. 23.
14. Daisuke Miyao, ‘Dark visions of Japanese noir: Suzuki Seijun’s Branded to Kill
(1967)’, in Alastair Phillips and Julian Stringers (eds), Japanese Cinema: Texts and
Contexts (London: Routledge, 2007), pp. 196–7.
15. See Miyao, ‘Dark visions’, for a discussion of Branded to Kill as an avant-garde
film. For the notion that Suzuki’s cinema is ‘delirious’, see Simon Field and Tony
Rayns, Branded to Thrill: The Delirious Cinema of Suzuki Seijun (London:
Institute of Contemporary Arts, 1994).
16. Aaron Gerow, ‘When the East fails to meet the West’, Daily Yomiuri, 8 August
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6. DARKER THAN DARK:
FILM NOIR IN ITS ASIAN CONTEXTS
Stephen Teo
136
film noir in its asian contexts
which had not really been present before. Noir’s manifestation in Hong Kong
cinema can be attributed to the fact that many of the New Wave directors were
educated in the West and had brought back with them Western influences. The
1970s was a time of transition in which the dawn of the New Wave marked
a modernist phase of development in Hong Kong cinema which had, after all,
patterned itself after Hollywood. As noir took critical hold in the American
critical discourse during the 1970s (Paul Schrader’s ‘Notes on film noir’ was
first published in 1972), Hong Kong was affected one way or another. Noir
was a ‘kind of modernism in the popular cinema’ that could spread across ‘vir-
tually every national boundary and every form of communication’, as James
Naremore tells us,2 and the Hollywood film noir, symbolised in the 1970s by
Polanski’s very influential Chinatown (1974) and Scorsese’s equally influential
Taxi Driver (1976), ‘is both a type of modernism and a type of commercial
melodrama’3 which may best describe the kind of new paradigmatic formula
that the Hong Kong New Wave filmmakers sought to introduce into their own
highly commercial industry.
Yim Ho’s Happenings (1980), Tsui Hark’s Dangerous Encounters of the
First Kind (1980), Alex Cheung’s Man on the Brink (1980) and Patrick Tam’s
Love, Massacre (1980) were just the kind of challenging works of the Hong
Kong Noir Wave, suggesting a consolidation of noir sensibility in the indus-
try as these young directors went about tackling sensitive material in a social
if not political fashion by injecting an even deeper feeling of black funk into
the system. This darker-than-dark sensibility went on to fructify around the
specific genre of the jingfei pian (or ‘cops and robbers’ films) which mostly
centred on the conflict between Triad gangsters and the Hong Kong police
force. Johnny Mak’s Long Arm of the Law (1984) established the black-realist
conditions of the confrontation between Triad gangsters and the police in
the Hong Kong crime genre,4 but the latter films of John Woo and Johnnie
To went on to develop the more abstract ‘cops and robbers’ strain of noir
which Naremore has rather shrewdly observed is ‘inflected by the French New
Wave’s fascination with noir’.5 Indeed, it is this very strain that is now the
most closely identified with Hong Kong cinema’s noir sensibility. Johnnie To
is the one director who has done most to engender the neo-noir sensibility in
the Hong Kong-style jingfei genre. In fact, To has been the most distinctively
creative of the jingfei directors, and his films of the last ten years or so con-
stitute some of the foremost neo-noir works of Asian cinema. They include
PTU (2003), Breaking News (2004), Election (2005), Triad Election (2006),
Exiled (2006), Mad Detective (2007), Sparrow (2008), Vengeance (2009),
Life without Principles (2011) and Drug War (2012). In addition, To’s work
has influenced a whole series of Hong Kong jingfei films including the Infernal
Affairs trilogy (2002–3), One Night in Mongkok (2004), Confession of Pain
(2006), The Detective (2007), Protégé (2007), Shinjuku Incident (2009),
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film noir in its asian contexts
House), and one involving femmes fatales (Hypnotized, The Scarlet Letter,
Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, Black House, Helpless). Films like Bystanders,
Seven Days, Mother, Secret and Pieta portray the femme fatale as subtle modu-
lations of the Korean mother and wife, subverting the traditional roles of the
female in South Korean’s male-dominated and largely misogynistic society.
Then, there is the long line of serial killer noirs which the South Koreans
have made into a quite singular form all their own (Public Enemy, Memories
of Murder, Sympathy for Lady Vengeance, Bystanders, Black House, The
Chaser, I Saw the Devil, Helpless, Confession of Murder).
The quantitative mass of South Korean and Hong Kong films noirs rep-
resents a late-capitalist surge of industrial and creative energy, and one that
virtually cries out for critical attention. This Asian noir outburst demonstrates
the transgeneric sensibility of noir with both cinemas sharing the striking
qualities of unrelenting violence and a deep, unrelieved pessimism. The theme
of this chapter is to try to work out how Asian films noirs are distinctive while
fulfilling the generic notions and conditions of noir as an international style.
The present South Korean cycle seen in toto is possibly the darkest and most
disturbing of all the noir films produced in Asia – and the Hong Kong films
are not far behind. The fact that Asian films noirs are darker than most noir
films produced internationally seems to mark them out as unique but how does
one explain this uniqueness? Hyangjin Lee has stated that Asian films noirs
‘combine transnational flows with national attributes, localising the regional
and global genre’.7 I do not wish in this chapter to delve into national psyches
and the dark recesses of the socio-political environments of both the South
Korean and Hong Kong contexts to explain the reasons why Asian films noir
are darker than dark. What I intend to do in the short space of this chapter is
to place Asian films noirs in the generic context of international noir while also
gradually trying to define what is distinctive about the Asian variation.
Fundamentally, the thesis here is to discuss film noir in its Asian contexts as
late reactions to the noir traditions of Hollywood, or as a cycle of films relating
to the international contexts of noir or neo-noir. In its essence, to discuss noir
is to put it into its contexts, following the subtitle of James Naremore’s book-
length study More Than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts. While Naremore’s
main title More Than Night suggests a fairly amorphous kind of contextual
setting – an imaginary or subconscious formless field or domain in which noir
fiction operates – the book does attempt to locate noir firmly in its cinematic
milieu and to come to terms with noir’s paradoxical nature. Naremore tells us
that film noir has ‘no essential characteristics’8 but is rather ‘a critical tendency
within the popular cinema – an antigenre that reveals the dark side of savage
capitalism’.9 That noir has no essential characteristics I take to imply that
noir is not a genre – it does not fulfil the conditions outlined by Rick Altman
that genre films should ‘have clear, stable identities and borders’10 and share
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film noir in its asian contexts
shifted: for example, Naremore addresses noir in an Asian context but primar-
ily discusses American films with an Asian theme.13 Naremore tells us that
the French ‘invented the American film noir’14 even if ‘it is not a specifically
American form’.15 Marc Vernet had earlier asserted much the same thing in his
essay ‘Film noir on the edge of doom’16 and had provided a good contextual
background of how the French invented film noir. Robin Buss avows that the
term ‘had a special relevance to the French context’,17 and wrote a whole book
on French film noir as if noir was contextually native to French cinema.
However, while the French may have instituted the critical study of film
noir, the literature on noir has overwhelmingly concentrated on the films
produced by the classical Hollywood studio system which established the
kinds of genres (the detective film, the gangster film or the crime film) that
came under the noir rubric. The literature on noir has solidified around this
American contextual link. The editors of Film Noir: The Encyclopedia claim
that film noir is ‘an indigenous American form’.18 In the wake of Naremore’s
book, Paula Rabinowitz’s Black & White & Noir: America’s Pulp Modernism
is premised on a view of film noir ‘as the context (in which) its plot structure
and visual iconography make sense of America’s landscape and history’.19
Edward Dimendberg’s book Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity exam-
ines American cities as the storehouse of noir forces. He makes no distinction
between ‘content and context’,20 showing that American cities are the spatial
context in which the content of noir takes shape. To Dimendberg, postwar
American cities and landmarks are ‘the very cultural force that legitimated
scholarship on film noir’.21 Ken Hillis’s article ‘Film noir and the American
dream: The dark side of enlightenment’ submits that film noir ‘is central to
understanding the formulations of postwar American identity and its rela-
tionship to the meaning of citizenship’.22 Donald Pease makes the point that
‘the conventional wisdom concerning the film noir (is) namely, that film noir
emplots within its narrative the ideological contradictions and social antago-
nisms intrinsic to the U.S. social order’.23 Charles Scruggs argues that ‘film
noir is American to the core, having its source not only in post-World War
II paranoia but also in American literary Gothicism’.24 And so on it goes: the
overwhelming evidentiary track of research in noir is its reliance on, or indeed
its complete identification with, the American context.
Against the fact of American centricity, it is pertinent to ask whether Asian
films noirs suggest some kind of misplacement of a style from the West to the
East, or whether they are completely distinctive in their own right? If noir is
a transnational style and mood, it stands to reason that it can spring out of
a particular cinema’s own conventions and genres, and it seems unnecessary
to connect it to a prior cinema with its own noir tradition. For example, the
Hong Kong jingfei genre is sometimes known as heibang (‘black gang’) or
heidao (‘black path’ or ‘black force’). Blackness is intrinsic to the Hong Kong
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or Chinese concept of crime, signifying a path that is corrupt and deviant from
that of the white, which stands for righteousness and justice. The black and
white paths (heidao and baidao) are tropes that are consistent with the cops
and robbers genre (they also apply to other genres, such as the martial arts
wuxia and kung fu movies), referring to the moral implications of good (white)
and evil (black). Gangsters are said to have chosen the black path, while a
copper has chosen the white one and a kind of counter-balancing between the
two paths is operative, with both sides dependent on each other for their exist-
ence. Hong Kong noir cinema is intrinsically a native black cinema, with all
the concomitant sensibilities of angst, violence and moral perversity. There is,
however, no recognition of a ‘white cinema’ or baidao film; any film with cops
as protagonists seems automatically to be black.
The blackness of the heidao invests Hong Kong cinema with its own con-
ceptual (and moral) framework of blackness. In order to address the Asian
noir contexts of the Hong Kong and South Korean films under discussion in
this chapter, it is appropriate, for my purposes, to connect to the whole noir
tradition of the American context, which, while not the only context avail-
able for reference, is by far the most representative. Asian films noirs are
usually referred to as a later movement or a late style in the currents of world
cinema, which suggests that it was influenced by more dominant cinemas and
had inherited the style from a much later tradition in the dominant cinemas.
Indeed, most critics refer to the Hong Kong and South Korean films noirs as a
movement that essentially began from the 1990s onwards (though, as I have
suggested, it began much earlier in the case of Hong Kong), which is the period
in which traditional noir morphed into ‘neo-noir’ in its original American
historical context. Noir had already fundamentally changed according to con-
sumer tastes in America in the 1990s, as Norman M. Klein has intimated in
his essay entitled ‘Staging murders: The social imaginary, film, and the city’.
Klein’s short essay places neo-noir in a poststructuralist age which ‘reflects
the perversities of consumer panic as a way to hide urban realities’.25 From
Klein’s perspective, noir films take place in a range of American cities that are
decaying, overrun by gangster warlords who deal in drugs, prostitution and
murders. They are also populated by ethnic communities, and one of the key
films in this regard is Polanski’s Chinatown (1974), which evokes an ethnic
noir community even though the film itself has substantially nothing to do
with this community. Chinatown as a notion is enough to evoke the mystery
and dread of ethnicity in the American context, marking a mode of perception
of the noir detective portrayed by Jack Nicholson, and indeed of the whole
noir universe, ‘as Western, white, and male’, as Philip Novak has put it.26
Novak echoes James Naremore who has described this ethnic trait of noir as
one that involves ‘white characters who cross borders to visit Latin America,
Chinatown, or the “wrong” parts of the city’.27 Naremore’s description (which
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covers a greater geographic scope) appears also to fall smack into the lap of
Klein’s reading of noir (or contemporary noir) as ‘delusional journeys into
panic and conservative white flight’ which ultimately help to ‘sell gated com-
munities, and “friendly” surveillance systems’ in America.28
Klein sees noir as a consequence of contemporary urban existence in the
United States, but also something of an allegory of American life in the city,
albeit a limited form of allegory since, for Klein, noir shows ‘very little of the
totality of urban experience’.29 What it shows are imaginary but specific loca-
tions where murders are staged: ‘perhaps only twenty minutes out of a day,
usually the ten minutes before and after a murder’.30 While noir might have
begun as social critique, contemporary noir ‘has just the right tropes for pro-
moting shopping malls . . . and has become even more purely a variation of
tourism; it belongs more at an Urban Outfitters than on a city street’.31
Klein tends to reduce noir in its contemporary form to being a logistical kind
of film method, in which ‘staging murders’ and its locational ‘requirements’ are
really the primary obsessions. Their effect is to reinforce ‘a Victorian panic about
ethnicity and class’ as well as to reinforce ‘illusions about where crime-ridden
cities end and safe suburbs begin’.32 Klein’s article, as with all the literature cited
above, reinforces the America-centric view of film noir. In this American centric-
ity lies a sense that noir’s attraction to critics and scholars is its very attachment
to the American context. As noir shifts to other contexts, we need to consider the
nature of the American context and what exactly it is that makes it American.
Americans themselves may take their contextuality for granted and may be hard
put to tell how it is that noir contexts are exactly American. The critics I have
cited above show that noir is intimately bound up with an American localism
and such is the key to understanding American contextuality. Klein’s view of
contemporary noir or neo-noir is perhaps more local than most, since his points
of reference are essentially specific parts of the city of Los Angeles.
Klein’s view boils down to locational scenes of murder and crime as if such
locations were essential to noir, which of course they are, without losing sight
of their social contexts (in fact, Klein is lamenting neo-noir’s tendency to
create visual shorthands instead of concentrating more on the social context
of its locations). It may be instructive to follow Klein’s local instinct here,
since he presents us with some possible analytical tools to understand Asian
films noirs and their contexts. Klein refers to noir in the contexts of the ‘urban
“requirements” for a location where a murder should take place’.33 He speaks
of murder where others might speak of some crime or violence taking place
in a location, and it is the location that is vital to shape our response to noir
(one can think of the streets, the alleys, as well as the placement of buildings
and the type of neighborhoods). Vivian Sobchack has provided other charac-
teristic settings: ‘the cocktail lounge, the nightclub, the bar, the hotel room, the
boarding-house, the diner, the dance hall, the roadside café, the bus and train
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station, and the wayside motel’.34 Edward Dimendberg mentions ‘the sky-
scraper, the jazz nightclub, the magazine or newspaper office, the bus terminal,
the diner, the automobile, the traffic-congested street, and the highway’ as the
‘characteristic twentieth-century spaces’ of film noir.35 As noir has morphed
into neo-noir, there is a fascination with urban decay, and Klein calls this
‘the American obsession’.36 R. Barton Palmer suggests that noir films portray
‘a version of contemporary urban America that also contains its nightmarish
mirror image’.37 ‘This negativity customarily assumes textual solidity through
the dark city, a site of transgressive modernity whose most characteristic figure
is the alienated individual’.38 In the context of the dark city, ‘conservative
white flight’ seems like a natural psychological disposition. There is, of course,
a racial dimension to film noir’s American context. In his article ‘Film noir and
the racial unconscious’, Julian Murphet asserts that ‘any reference (no matter
how veiled) to blackness in US culture instantly evokes the entire history of
race relations in US politics and everyday life’.39 In the Asian context, black-
ness evokes gangsterism and the forces of evil (as I have explained above in
connection with the concept of heidao) and there is a more metaphorical
dimension to the idea of blackness, which is not to say that there is absolutely
no racial issue in Asian films noirs. The notion of white flight can be seen in the
light of the notions of the heidao and the baidao (the black and the white paths
or forces inherent in Asian noir) and thus be applied as a dialectical response to
the concept of heidao. In other words, Klein’s evocation of white flight could
be used as a critical method – in completely metaphorical terms. Klein, then,
actually offers us a useful trope that allows us to expand the horizons of noir
as an international form.
while classic American films noir allude to the threat to male authority
(in the figure of the femme fatale), Noir East films depict the stranglehold
patriarchy still has on Asian society. What is new in Noir East is the ren-
dering of Confucian patriarchy in such an extreme form, which in and of
itself suggests a challenge to it.43
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film noir in its asian contexts
take place in local places (the very streets and alleys of ‘staged murders’ which
Norman Klein ruminates about) and it is up to local detectives to solve the
crimes. Part of the fascination of detective fiction lies in its empiricism and pro-
ceduralism, which are methods based entirely on local, native contexts. In this
way, Gittes is very much a local detective, with a parochial sense of identity.
It is with this in mind that we should understand Phillip Novak’s claim that
Gittes is ‘a negative example’,45 whose view of the world is clearly coloured by
the prejudices arising out of his community and its contexts (prejudices which
he no doubt shares and which ultimately brand him). Novak goes on to dissect
Gittes’ character as a negative example of the conventional American detec-
tive, focusing on his misogyny and latent racism. ‘The movie is about him,’
Novak writes, ‘about his way of seeing things: his way of conceiving the world,
himself, and others’.46
Chan Tam mirrors Gittes in that he is a Chinese variation of the American
detective, with some differences in character – and the differences may be
attributed to the differences of their local contexts. As an Asian detective,
Chan Tam is no longer ‘a negative example’ of a noir stereotype. If anything,
he may be seen as a positive example, even though he does share with Gittes
some traits of flawed character. The movie is also about him and his way of
seeing things. In fact, Chan Tam is equally obsessive as a detective and what
essentially drives him is his need to find out about his long-missing parents
since the time of his childhood, both of whom he discovers at the end of the
film have been murdered. Chan, then, is perhaps the prototypical Asian filial
detective, and the noir contexts of his locality involve what might be called
Asian variations of Polanski’s Chinatown, or, indeed, the Chinatown syn-
drome of Novak’s analysis. These variations turn the syndrome into a super-
natural set of variables. It turns out that the woman whom Chan Tam was
hired to find was in fact a murdered woman whose ghost had instigated the
whole investigation and had helped the detective to discover the corpses of his
parents as well as to uncover the mystery of her own real murderer.
The supernatural elements of this noir mystery are a surprising and effec-
tive twist. They are somehow in tune with the underworld dimensions of the
Bangkok Chinatown setting and make its seediness and even its foul smells
completely perceptible. Chinatown, it might be said, is a syndrome of the spirit
in which a symptom is a sense of white flight – whiteness here representing
spirits and ghosts, or in fact representing one’s spirit and the implicit emptiness
of character following spiritual flight. Pang’s film very cleverly exploits noir
mood and the expectations of the detective genre from Polanski’s Chinatown
and transposes them into an Asian Chinatown setting, in the process transmut-
ing the detective genre into the supernatural ghost genre. The sense of white
flight is that of ghosts fleeing (or seeking to escape) from the blackness of
the world. Chinatown represents the Chinese sense of blackness, marked by
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criminality, murder and violence, and it is this world that Chan Tam continues
to reside in and the blackness of which he must learn to deal with.
White flight is a palpable conceit in Johnnie To’s Drug War which deserves
some attention here because it is the most recent outstanding film of its director,
a noir stalwart whose work bridges the Asian and the international contexts of
noir. His films are highly regarded by local critics in Hong Kong and have gone
down well particularly in France if not so much in America. The film is notable
for being To’s ‘first-ever full-fledged mainland Chinese production’,47 and, as
such, it marks To’s (and Hong Kong cinema’s) attempt to implant Hong Kong-
style noir into mainland Chinese cinema. To subverts the clear demarcations of
black and white (an imposition of the Chinese censors) by making the Chinese
police protagonists (who represent the baidao or the white force) a mobile
group which easily blends into the heidao (the black force) they are pursuing
(the plot concerns the efforts of Chinese drug enforcers to capture drug runners
from China and Hong Kong who are trafficking illicit products from the south
to the main northern port city of Tianjin from where the drugs can be trans-
ported elsewhere into Asia). The methods used by the Chinese police involve
underhand means of subterfuge, disguise, role-playing and entrapment. We
might see this as a case of the forces of white retreating into blackness, even
if temporarily. The film maintains the theme of flight – the black, of course,
fleeing from the white (a foregone conclusion), but the white itself fleeing from
its own whiteness, and this is To’s most subversive touch in his first mainland
Chinese production where he had to grapple with the censorious hand of the
Chinese authorities (particularly over the depictions of the Chinese police). At
the end, To shows us a remarkable dénouement in which both the white and
the black are seemingly converging in a violent resolution and there appears
to be no difference between them. Death combines the white and the black.
Perhaps everything, then, is black, in the blackest of all possible worlds – and
it is worthwhile remembering that in Hong Kong cinema, there is really no
recognition of a white cinema. Asian films, then, show the blackest of all pos-
sible worlds in the noir community, and there is no white world in the sense
of a happy ending (there are, of course, exceptions to the rule, but such films
tend to be the weakest and least convincing of Asian noirs). White flight can
only lead to a bad end. Such a resolution is quite typical of Johnnie To’s noir
films and it is the kind of tradition that seems now to be closely identified with
Asian films noirs, as in the South Korean cycle which is possibly the blackest
in the world of contemporary noir. I come back, finally, to the question of why
this is the case and how it may possibly be seen as a unique Asian trait of noir.
One might see Asian films noirs as a psychoanalytical complex of fantas-
matic blackness and violence, its characters being Asian ‘noir subjects’ follow-
ing Slavoj Žižek’s ‘ “The thing that thinks”: The Kantian background of the
noir subject’. The violence and utter blackness of Korean films noir suggest
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film noir in its asian contexts
the line of Žižek’s analysis that noir involves a shift ‘from logic-and-deduction
narrative (as in the classical detective film) into noir narrative . . . the shift of
desire into drive’.48
Desire is that very force that compels us to progress infinitely from one
signifier to another in the hope of attaining the ultimate signifier that
would fix the meaning of the preceding chain. In opposition to desire,
drive is not ‘progressive’ but rather ‘regressive’, bound to circulate end-
lessly around some fixed point of attraction, immobilized by its power of
fascination.49
In a sense, the South Korean films noirs exemplify the drive of an entire
industry in late-capitalist mode, translating its libidinal desire of fantasies and
dreams into a plausible and credible cinema with an explicit drive to offer
alternative variations or reactions to the dominant cinema that is Hollywood.
Korean noirs have attained their deepest degree of blackness because they are
fundamentally negative copies of the American classical noirs and neo-noirs.
Violence is that fixed point of attraction around which Korean cinema has crys-
tallised its power: violence as a regressive hence more powerful mode vis-à-vis
the Hollywood model. Such engagement with Hollywood makes the Korean
films noirs a cutting-edge form of filmmaking in international cinema today.
Christina Klein’s article ‘Why American Studies needs to think about Korean
cinema, or, transnational genres in the films of Bong Joon-ho’ has made the
case clear that South Korean filmmakers have an ambivalent relationship with
Hollywood, and that a filmmaker like Bong Joon-ho (the director of Memories
of Murder, perhaps the best of the South Korean noirs) has appropriated the
American crime film and reworked its genre conventions:
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This is generally the reason for the appeal of South Korean film culture at the
present moment, but the violence in Korean noir is a challenging and provoca-
tive strain of international noir. The Koreans have demonstrated that noir is
an object of baroque cruelty, in essence a harsh, critical form transmitting
just the kind of warning ‘about the disastrous social issue of a felt mutation
in the structures of power’ that Joan Copjec proclaims in her Introduction to
Shades of Noir.51 If the Korean noirs are an appealing kind of cinema, it is as
a cinema of fatal attraction. Oldboy, A Bittersweet Life, Black House, The
Chaser, Handphone, The Yellow Sea, The Man from Nowhere and I Saw the
Devil are some of the most violent films ever made in world cinema today and
there is a sense of more to come from the South Korean film industry – so
conscious are the South Korean filmmakers of their historical moment. In her
discussion of the discrepancies between ‘Noir East’ and American noirs, Joelle
Collier has made the point that in American noirs, ‘violence is more potential
than actual’ and that ‘the threat of violence is constant, but its realisation
infrequent’.52 In Asian noirs, the violence is ‘orgasmic’ and ‘prolonged’ and
it is the killing that is prolonged, not the dying.53 In this one discrepancy, we
may discern how in fact South Korean cinema has pushed the envelope on vio-
lence in noir; and this achievement has generally been recognised as a kind of
Asian ‘extreme cinema’, following the UK Tartan DVD ‘Asia Extreme’ label;54
but such a label may be misleading as labels often are, taking no account of
the subtleties of character behaviour as well as the social contexts of violence.
Korean noirs such as Memories of Murder, Spider Forest, The Scarlet Letter
and A Tale of Two Sisters are violent in a less gratuitous way than may be
perceived by the ‘extreme’ label, and they perhaps show film noir at its darkest
best, reaching heights of Gothic poetry in their psychological sensitivity
and intense characterisations. The films are also striking contemplations on
memory and identity.
Memories of Murder has a political critique to boot which increases the
depth of its contextuality. As Christina Klein has pointed out, the true subject
of the film is ‘daily life in the late 1980s – that is, during the darkest years of
Korea’s military dictatorship’.55 The film may have won international recogni-
tion, but like Polanski’s Chinatown, it is essentially a high-context film which
presupposes a high knowledge of Korean politics and recent history, as well
as the ambivalent relationship between South Korea and the United States.
In a sense, the surface features of noir (the darkness, depravity and despair)
may overshadow and hide the depths and degree of the local contexts of the
narratives in films noirs. On the other hand, it could also be argued that it is
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precisely such surface features that make the film more accessible to audiences
everywhere, whereby we should then refocus our attention to the function of
contextuality and ask the question, what is noir without contextuality?
The contexts of South Korean society and its social problems are manifest in
all the Korean noirs. Issues touched upon include corruption in the police, the
justice system, business and politics, prostitution, drugs, organ-peddling, gang-
sterism, loan-sharking, kidnapping and, above all, violence against women and
children, against one’s own parents and against migrants (including Chinese
citizens of Korean descent). These social contexts serve to identify and define
the noir sensibility in Korean terms. Noir may be a transcribed, transliterated
and transmuted form but once its Korean contexts kick in, it assumes a certain
urgency towards a new epistemological cognition of film noir all over again.
The locational imperatives are just as striking as in the American contexts: the
streets and alleys, the highways, the roads, the skyscrapers, the bars and night-
clubs, and the decaying warehouses of Seoul and Busan (these cities being the
main locations featured in Korean noir) satisfy the urban requirements of noir,
although a film like Memories of Murder is actually set in the rice-growing
countryside and a small town – which makes it even more special as a film
noir in the Asian context. Most Korean noirs may ultimately also reflect ‘the
perversities of consumer panic as a way to hide urban realities’56 and therefore
induce a sense of white flight into inner sanctuaries (films like Secret Reunion,
Hindsight and The Thieves fall more aptly into this category, and all of them
have happy endings that seem to go against the grain of Korean noir). White
flight as a motif is present in the violent reactions of the mostly male protago-
nists of Korean noirs. This is the spiritual whiteness of terror and nihilism,
which, to the credit of the Korean filmmakers, is laid bare for all to see. The
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Conclusion
The ever-increasing volumes of scholarship on noir predicated on American
contextual studies can in effect be subjected to a hegemonic impulse mar-
ginalising the achievements of Asian films noirs. This chapter offers some
preliminary arguments for a greater scope in the study of noir as it moves into
its Asian contexts. It adopts the methodology of comparative engagements of
Asian films noirs with their American predecessors in an effort to demonstrate
how the contexts of Asian films noirs can transmute the contexts of American
noirs. The American centricity of noir drives the contextual tool of analysis, as
the literature on noir suggests, but contextuality itself suggests that a topic of
research must be covered in greater range and depth which thus compels the
need to examine noir in other national or continental contexts. This chapter
has not covered the social, political, historical, cultural and nationalist dimen-
sions of film noir in its Asian contexts and I leave these areas of research for
future scholars to pursue. I have attempted to place Asian films noirs in rela-
tion to the American readings of noir scholarship. Asian films noirs are seen
as correlative and interactive reactions to the American form and their con-
texts change and adjust according to Asian circumstances in their respective
national contexts (here the focus is on Hong Kong and South Korean noirs).
The intense violence of Korean films noirs is a response both to the social
and political contexts of the South Korean milieu and to the American ten-
dency of film noir as a global movement. Against the American contextual
hegemony, the South Korean films noirs attain a cutting edge particularly in
the depictions of violence. Korean films noirs contain their own contextual
vibrations and social and political readings but in their violence, they approach
a unique kind of cinema. Violence also marks Hong Kong cinema’s contribu-
tion to the noir sensibility. Why is it, then, that as film noir shifts from the
American to the Asian contexts, the whole sensibility becomes darker, much
more violent, belligerent and psychotic? This demands more, not less, study
of the contexts of Asian noir in order to further understand not so much the
nature of violence as the nature of noir cinema itself and its contexts. Suffice it
for now to conclude that the violence of Asian noir is an unrepressed expres-
siveness in the function of the cinema of attractions, an industrial response to
the institutional weight and hegemony of the Hollywood machine, and to the
overwhelming American-centricity of the discourse on noir. Asian noir is sig-
nificant for its receptivity to the American context and, even if purely for this
reason, it deserves to be integrated into the discourse, following Marc Vernet’s
declaration that noir ‘belongs as a notion to the history of film criticism’.57
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Asian noir should be widely discussed within this ultimate context, so that noir
may deservedly be recognised as an international tendency.
Notes
1. Paul Schrader, ‘Notes on film noir’, in R. Barton Palmer (ed.), Perspectives on Film
Noir (New York: G.K. Hall, 1996), pp. 99–109, at p. 99.
2. James Naremore, More Than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts, Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press, 1998, p. 38.
3. Ibid., p. 48.
4. Raymond Durgnat had observed that ‘black realism’ had evolved out of the crime
thriller. See Raymond Durgnat, ‘Paint it black: The family tree of film noir’, in
Palmer (ed.), Perspectives on Film Noir, pp. 83–98, at p. 83.
5. Naremore, More Than Night, p. 228.
6. For example, the martial arts film, as in Tsui Hark’s Detective Dee and the Mystery
of the Phantom Flame (2010) and Wong Kar-wai’s The Grandmaster (2013).
7. Hyangjin Lee, ‘The shadow of outlaws in Asian Noir: Hiroshima, Hong Kong, and
Seoul’, in Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir, London:
Wallflower, 2009, pp. 118–35, at p. 121.
8. Naremore, More Than Night, p. 5.
9. Ibid., p. 22.
10. Rick Altman, Film/Genre (London: British Film Institute, 1999), p. 16.
11. Ibid., p. 24.
12. Naremore, More Than Night, p. 10.
13. Ibid., pp. 225–9.
14. Ibid., p. 13.
15. Ibid., p. 5.
16. Marc Vernet, ‘Film Noir on the edge of doom’, in Joan Copjec (ed.), Shades of Noir
(London and New York: Verso, 1993), pp. 1–31, at p. 8.
17. Robin Buss, French Film Noir (New York: Marion Boyars, 1994), p. 13.
18. Alain Silver, Elizabeth Ward and James Ursini (eds), Film Noir, The Encyclopedia
(New York and London: Overlook Duckworth, 2010), p. 15.
19. Paula Rabinowitz, Black & White & Noir: America’s Pulp Modernism (New York:
Columbia University Press, 2002), p. 14.
20. Edmund Dimendberg, Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2004), p. 7.
21. Ibid., p. 3.
22. Ken Hillis, ‘Film noir and the American dream: The dark side of enlightenment’,
The Velvet Light Trap 55 (spring 2005), 3–18, at 3.
23. Donald E. Pease, ‘Borderline justice/states of emergency: Orson Welles’ Touch of
Evil’, CR: The New Centennial Review 1(1) (spring 2001), 75–105, at 80.
24. Charles Scruggs, ‘ “The power of blackness”: Film noir and its critics’, American
Literary History 16(4) (winter 2004), 675–87, at 675.
25. Norman Klein, ‘Staging murders: The social imaginary, film, and the city’, Wide
Angle 20(3) (1998), 85–96, at 91.
26. Phillip Novak, ‘The Chinatown Syndrome’, Criticism 49(3) (summer 2007),
255–83, at 276.
27. Naremore, More Than Night, p. 13.
28. Norman Klein, ‘Staging murders’, p. 89.
29. Ibid., p. 89.
30. Ibid., p. 89.
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154
7. NORDIC NOIR AND NEO-NOIR:
THE HUMAN CRIMINAL
Andrew Nestingen
In the closing scene of Niels Arden Oplev’s Män som hatar kvinnor (The Girl
with the Dragon Tattoo, 2009), the film’s principal female character, Lisbeth
Salander (Noomi Rapace), steps from a limousine onto a seaside promenade.
She walks down the promenade, away from the camera. The scene depicts
Salander as a femme fatale through cinematography and costuming. As the
scene begins, the camera is positioned on the passenger side of the car; the
driver-side door opens and the chauffeur rises and steps back to open the door
for his passenger. The camera moves to the driver’s side, tilting down to
ground level, then rising from Salander’s stiletto heel, over the car door to her
face, shielded by large sunglasses. The camera movement from her legs to her
face recalls the angular cinematography of film noir. It also works to lay stress
on her costume of stiletto heels, black stockings, business suit, heavy make-up
and platinum blonde wig – a costume that differs from her appearance in the
rest of the film. The scene then moves to a medium shot of Salander paying
the chauffer, then to a final long shot of her walking down the promenade,
refusing to yield the pavement to conversing businessmen. Salander got the
money, and got away with it. Does her costume in the concluding scene reveal
what Salander has always been, a femme fatale? Or is it a ‘costume’, which
dissimulates, obscuring another identity? Why does the film close on a citation
of the noir repertoire? Such questions presume more fundamental ones. What
is the genealogy of film noir in Nordic cinema? Where does the femme fatale
fit into Nordic cinema? These questions take on special interest because the
term ‘Nordic noir’ has gained currency as the catch-all term for crime fiction
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on page, screen and television from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and
Sweden.1
While film noir is a minor tradition in Nordic cinema, neo-noir has come
to figure prominently, as we see in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. All the
Nordic cinemas (except that of Iceland) produced films during the 1940s and
1950s, which scholars and critics would later come to see as films noirs. Since
the 1990s, neo-noir has dominated much of Nordic cinema, often as part of
films inspired by, or adapted from, Nordic crime fiction. Nordic crime fiction
itself has come to be known as ‘Nordic noir’, particularly in UK usage. (To
avoid confusion over these terms, this article uses the term ‘Nordic noir’ and
‘classical film noir’ to speak of the period of production during the 1940s
and 1950s, during which films now called noir were produced. I use the term
‘Nordic neo-noir’ to speak of films produced since the 1970s.) The tradition
of film noir in the Nordic countries on the whole, including both noir and
neo-noir, is distinct in the broader film noir tradition for its characterisation
of noir’s criminal perspective. In the Nordic noir universe, criminals tend to
be humanised, and often childhood experience or a traumatic event is used to
gloss their criminality. The doomed characters of Nordic noir thus have their
fates shaped by social forces, in a way somewhat reminiscent of the characters
in the French poetic realist films of the 1930s.2 Their fates are not a matter of
chance, pathology or pursuit of anti-social pleasure. Such a world-view also
resonates with the social-democratic outlook, which dominated political life in
the Nordic countries from the 1930s to the 1980s, with the exception of the
war years. The noir legacy is also relevant for its impact on auteur filmmakers,
notably Lars von Trier and Aki Kaurismäki, who draw on classical noir, as
well as the poetic realist films, to give their films a sometimes overt, sometimes
subtle, neo-noir quality.
Classic Noir
An account of film noir in the Nordic countries is inseparable from the con-
ceptual problems that figure in the historiography of film noir. As is well
known, the term was first used by French critics writing about American
films of the 1940s. Since the 1970s, English-language critics have disagreed
about noir: genre, style, mode, historical period, family concept, American
or international? French critics writing in the 1940s connected the pessimis-
tic, high-contrast American crime films made during the war years to French
poetic realism of the mid-1930s. James Naremore reminds us that ‘the term
film noir had in fact been employed by French writers of the late 1930s in
discussions of poetic realism’.3 What is relevant in the genealogy of noir to an
account of Nordic film noir is its bifurcated source; filmmakers in the Nordic
countries who made what we now call film noir often found their inspiration
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in French poetic realism. And critics in the Nordic countries at the time noticed
the French connection. At the same time, canonical accounts of domestic noir
in the film histories of the Nordic countries have tended to use the term ‘film
noir’ in relation to Hollywood production history, emphasising the relation-
ship between noir in the Nordic countries and the emergence of Hollywood
noir. Yet the noir films in Nordic cinema of the 1940s and 1950s are arguably
more melodramatic than the Hollywood noirs, as well as more interested in the
causes of their characters’ amorality and criminality. The distinction has to do
with the Nordic films’ adherence to a notion of moral foundation: whereas the
Hollywood productions are cynical, tending to the nihilistic, the Nordic films
are more melodramatic in tending to affirm a notion of redemption – their
narrative worlds rest upon a moral foundation. These features are related to
Nordic noir’s connection to poetic realism, as well as to the impact of cultural
radicalism and social democracy on Nordic popular culture.
The issues that arise from the relationship between the French and American
notions of noir are evident in the historiography of film noir in Finland, for
example. In a 2005 article titled ‘On film noir in Finland’, critic Rami Nummi
argues that twenty-three noir films were made in Finland during the 1940s
and 1950s.4 They were crime films set in the city, shot in low-key lighting with
strong contrasts. The films used the crime story to depict social conflicts and
the psychic trauma of the war experience and postwar malaise in a changing
social situation.5
Nummi’s notion of noir echoes Paul Schrader’s point about noir as a reflec-
tion of postwar American malaise. ‘The disillusionment many soldiers, small
businessmen, housewife/factory employees felt in returning to a peacetime
economy was directly mirrored in the sordidness of the urban crime film’.6
It is notable, however, that whereas Schrader emphasises realism in his argu-
ment, Nummi emphasises melodrama. A number of the films he discusses
find redemption and hope (and even comedy) in their stories, despite the pes-
simism. Such films require the moral registers of melodrama. This melodrama
leads Nummi to suggest that Finland’s noir films combined influences of
Hollywood’s noir and poetic realism.
Nummi argues that the most significant director of noir in Finland was the
studio filmmaker Matti Kassila. For example, he lists his film Radio tekee
murron (The Radio Breaks In, 1951) as an important noir, although many
critics at the time wrote of the film as a comedy, praising it for the ‘subtle
spicing of its parody’.7 The film depicts a radio reporter whose ever more
daring reportage pieces end up entangling him in a museum robbery, which he
must then investigate. He discovers a criminal gang committed the robbery and
sought to pin it on him. The film is constructed around the point of view of the
fall guy, in noir style, yet some cheerful comedy minimises the sense of doom
typical of noir. The film ends happily.8
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Another key figure for Nummi is Teuvo Tulio, a Latvian émigré who made
his career in Finland. Tulio is mainly known as a melodramatist. Such films as
Sellaisena kuin sinä minut halusit (Just as You Wanted Me, 1944), Rikollinen
nainen (A Criminal Woman, 1952) and Olet mennyt vereeni (You’ve Gotten
Into My Blood, 1956) include many noir elements, such as the sinful, criminal-
ised city and the femme fatale figure. And yet the films’ confusions of identity,
love triangles and sentimental relationships are also typical melodramatic
features.
What we see in Finnish noir is how the noir definition can give us a broader
international history of the form – a set of Finnish noir films – but how such
a broad definition causes us to perhaps force into the category of noir film
forms that were part of a broad popular response to the trauma, pessimism
and malaise of the early postwar period, but whose fit with noir is problem-
atic. Nevertheless, critics of the time recognised the universality of these dark
stories. Tulio’s films were often praised for their international style, a point
also made about The Radio Breaks In. Nordic noirs were often praised in the
Nordic countries for their artistic ambition and international style.
The same issues arise in Norwegian cinema too, although Norwegian noir
also has a distinctive genealogy. This has been established by Audun Engelstad
in his richly researched study, Losing Streak Stories: Mapping Norwegian
Film Noir.9 Again, French poetic realism is an important source of inspiration.
Engelstad notes that between 1936 and 1940 ‘more than one hundred French
films had theatrical release in Oslo, among them films by Marcel Carné, Jean
Renoir, Julien Duvivier, [and] Pierre Chanal’.10 The definitive films of French
poetic realism received enthusiastic critical attention. Engelstad writes that
‘when the first Norwegian film noir was made, Edith Carlmar’s Døden er et
kjærtegen (Death is a Caress, 1949), it was the influence from French film that
was noticed’, even though the films the French critics called film noir – Double
Indemnity (1944), Murder, My Sweet (1944), The Blue Dahlia (1946) and
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) – also screened in Oslo in 1947 and
1948, only a year after they had screened in Paris.11
Norwegian culture has some other sources for noir in the literary and visual
arts, in particular in the work of Edvard Munch. Engelstad reminds us that
Munch was a key source for German expressionism, as Paul Schrader has
emphasised.12 Engelstad points out that the expressionist staging of some of
Henrik Ibsen’s plays in Germany drew on Munch’s work, or involved commis-
sions for Munch to do the set design.13 ‘Despair, anxiety, jealousy, and loneli-
ness are recurring themes in [Munch’s] paintings, just as they are in film noir,’
writes Engelstad.14 Munch’s work also recurrently features the femme fatale
figure, for example in Vampyr and Dødskys (Kiss of Death).15
Munch was also an interest of the novelist and art critic Arve Moen, whose
novel Death is a Caress was adapted for Edith Carlmar’s film of the same title.
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dark street in safety because law and order are things we talk about but refrain
from practicing’.23 By contrast, the Norwegian noirs emphasise weakness and
fate as the source of murder, rather than venality and monstrosity. In this,
they resonate with the modernist logic of the rising social-democratic world-
view, whose key principles include the notion that social ills have their root in
poverty and neglect, and that rational legislation and policy by the state can
ameliorate these problems. As a result, the figures tend to be rounded charac-
ters, who are let down by society and whose lives are thus negatively impacted
by social forces; this characterisation prompts a sympathetic response from
readers and viewers.24
A similar point could be made about the few Swedish noirs that have been
analysed by scholars. The most important study of the history of Swedish
crime films has been written by Daniel Brodén.25 Brodén argues that only a few
films were produced in Sweden during the classic noir period of the 1940s and
1950s which could be seen as noirs, including Alf Sjöberg’s Hets (Torment,
1944) – the screenplay for which was written by Ingmar Bergman – and Hasse
Ekman’s Flicka och hyacinter (Girl and Hyacinths, 1950). Brodén’s study
encompasses the corpus of Swedish crime films, seeking to theorise the cul-
tural politics of subgenres of crime film. He writes about the whodunnit, the
psychological thriller, the gangster film, the police procedural and the politi-
cal thriller, claiming that noir is not a relevant category, although he draws
to some extent on Dudley Andrew’s study of French poetic realism, Mists of
Regret26 and James Naremore’s study of noir, More Than Night, to develop his
argument about other subgenres of crime film. Brodén ultimately argues that
the crime film works out an ambivalent relationship to the Swedish welfare
state, tending to criticise and affirm culturally dominant notions about its his-
torical phases, whether the class solidarity of the 1950s or the individualistic
neo-liberalism since the 1990s.
Girl and Hyacinths has been held as the chief example of noir in Sweden.
Mia Krokstäde observes that the director of the film, Hasse Ekman, spent
six months in Hollywood during the late 1940s observing production prac-
tices at the studios; he sought to imitate what he learned when he returned
to Sweden.27 Girl and Hyacinths tells the story of the investigation into the
suicide of Dagmar Brink (Eva Henning). Puzzled by her death, her neighbours
the Wikners seek to find out why the promising woman killed herself. The
film recounts their investigation, revealing a love triangle. But the object of
Dagmar’s love is finally revealed not to be the involved man, but the mysteri-
ous Alex (Anne-Marie Brunish), a lover who Dagmar met in Paris. Alex is also
depicted as a femme fatale in a world of sexual decadence.28 The love trian-
gle encodes the doom of noir in a way reminiscent of the Norwegian noirs,
suggests Krokstäde, for Dagmar’s fate is to be queer under the regime of the
‘postwar years’ ideals of family unity and conformity’.29 In this way, Dagmar
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nordic noir and neo-noir
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162
nordic noir and neo-noir
and cultural politics; similarities of visual style also connect them to American
noir. In their similarity to French poetic realism, classic Nordic noir’s charac-
ters’ criminality and amorality is often explained by way of social conditions,
a character’s past or a traumatic experience. This aligns the films with the
universalism of the Social Democratic or Labour parties, which dominated
postwar politics in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. They sought to build a
system that provided resources and security to all, as a means of making the
population productive and minimising social ills. The Nordic noir films seek
out these social ills in everyday life, but tend to suggest that those touched
by such ills are affected for a reason. Pathological criminals such as Moose
Malloy and spider women such as Phyllis Dietrichson are not the model.
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international noir
164
nordic noir and neo-noir
Rather than attacking the welfare state from the left, as Sjöwall and Wahlöö
had done, these writers defended the welfare state from its left flank, affirming
social-democratic political solidarity against neo-liberalism, retrenchment and
economic globalisation. The most prominent exemplar of this crime fiction
is Henning Mankell and his Kurt Wallander series of the 1990s. Mankell’s
critique echoes in the careers of other key writers in the Nordic countries, for
example in the feminist hard-boiled crime fiction of Leena Lehtolainen and the
social criticism of Danes Agnete Friis and Lene Kaaberbøl, as well as in the
novels of Jussi Adler-Olsen. It can also be found to some degree in the hard-
boiled texts of Jo Nesbø and in the police procedurals of Icelander Arnaldur
Indridason. It is arguably present in such television shows as Unit One, The
Killing and The Bridge too. Capitalising on the popularity of these popular
texts, film producers have adapted scores of crime novels, making the boom in
Nordic crime fiction a source for Nordic neo-noir film and television.
Since the Sjöwall-Wahlöö novels of the 1960s and 70s, fiction connected
to crime, whether on page or screen, has enjoyed consistent attention, which
has only increased since the 1990s. For some commentators, it has been
too popular. A recurrent argument has been that audience enthusiasm for
such popular crime stories crowds out and attenuates serious high culture.42
Moreover, in keeping with the tradition of the socially critical Nordic crime
story, crime novels and neo-noir films have tended towards social criticism,
making them ubiquitous and culturally salient. In this way, they are instances
of middlebrow popular culture, embracing entertainment values while also
seeking to be prominent and influential in public debate. Finally, the com-
mercial success of the crime novels and cinematic neo-noirs have attracted
large domestic and international audiences, and created a brand identity,
‘Nordic noir’, resulting in the production of more of the same, not least high-
concept neo-noir adaptations of crime fiction43 – for example Stieg Larsson’s
Millennium trilogy, Jo Nesbø vehicles such as Headhunters or the Vares adap-
tations of Reijo Mäki’s novels in Finland. What we find, though, is that in their
embrace of social criticism, the neo-noir films continue to contextualise and
humanise their doomed criminal protagonists, in ways that call to mind some
of the examples from the classical noir period in Nordic cinema.
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international noir
noir, here we can skirt such debate about the status of the object of analysis
and instead treat neo-noir as part of a discourse and critical practice, as James
Naremore suggests.45 Naremore’s response to the definitional problem also
helps make clear the importance of connecting film and popular literature,
an important connection for Nordic neo-noir. Naremore’s ‘loose, evolving
system of arguments and readings that helps to shape commercial strategies
and aesthetic ideologies’ in noir also overlaps with a similar discourse concern-
ing crime fiction.46 Bringing these discourses and critical practices together can
help us develop an account of a broad notion of Nordic neo-noir by identifying
some recurrent debates in the discourse that help situate the objects of study
more richly.
Two related distinctions are relevant, a formal one and an epistemological
one. The formal point can be drawn from Nino Frank’s essay on film noir, in
which he writes that in noir ‘the essential question no longer has to do with
who committed the crime, but with how the protagonist handles himself’.47
To make sense of Frank’s point as a formal principle, it is helpful to recall
Tzevtan Todorov’s observation that crime fiction always includes two stories,
the story of the crime and the story of the investigation.48 While Frank is not
writing about crime fiction, one can make a useful point about noir by reading
Frank through Todorov. What noir does, according to Frank, is diminish or
eliminate the formal significance of the story of the investigation. As a result,
the formal interest in noir resides in what Todorov calls the crime story. The
noir texts make this clear by often aligning the viewer with a criminal protago-
nist’s perspective, making his or her moves structure the narrative; it is not the
structure of the investigation the shapes the narrative, as in crime fiction.49 The
formal organisation of the narrative thus concerns the organisation of a series
of encounters with characters, problems and settings, rather than the assembly
of an investigation working towards answering the question, ‘whodunnit?’
This is important for Nordic neo-noir, because these films tend to structure
their protagonist’s narrative in a broad way, which accommodates the contex-
tualisation and humanisation we have traced.
The second distinction concerns Joan Copjec’s argument about the self in
noir, which I read as an epistemological point about what the viewer can know
about the criminal perspective of the protagonist. Copjec’s point also relates
to Frank’s observation. Copjec maintains that the classical detective story and
noir invoke different notions of the self. In crime fiction, the self is imagined to
be bounded, containing an interiority; in noir, the self is boundless and without
interiority, continually being remade through symbolic associations.50 Crime
fiction’s interest lies in the investigation that prises criminal secrets from the
private self, which identify the criminal. The notion is that the investigation can
come to know the perpetrator’s motive, that it can match a theory developed
through investigation to the interior world of the perpetrator’s private self. By
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contrast, argues Copjec, in noir divulging secrets is not the point, because the
self is epistemologically different. The noir self is continually shaped through
chains of signification within the surrounding social world, she argues. One
might call this a Lacanian reading of Frank, for what Copjec is saying is that
the protagonist’s handling of him- or herself occurs through signifying chains.
The viewer thus asks about what leads the protagonist to behave the way he
or she does, but noir does not offer the assurance of motive available in crime
fiction. What is of interest, then, is how the protagonist is made and remade in
different contexts. This epistemological point helps us see the extent to which
Nordic neo-noir invites viewers to seek to understand how the protagonist is
shaped, even if, as Copjec suggests, noir is not premised on an idea that we can
understand such shaping.
Using these formal and epistemological points about neo-noir can help us
see some important features of neo-noir in Nordic cinema which also connect
it to the films of the classical noir period discussed above.
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international noir
turns on the decision by the protagonist and his partner to have children. In
Easy Money, many of the characters have children on their mind or in tow,
as they conspire and then execute violent crimes. Slim Susie is about adoles-
cents trapped in a provincial, neo-noir world. In one of Swedish crime writer
Henning Mankell’s best-known novels, Villospår (Sidetracked), adapted both
for Swedish television and by the BBC, an abused teenage boy murders a
number of men who have victimised underage prostitutes, of which the boy’s
sister is one.53 Norwegian Karin Fossum’s novels recurrently deal with young
people who commit crimes against other young people, for example Svarte
sekunder (Black Seconds) and Varsleren (The Caller).54 Finnish crime writer
Leena Lehtolainen’s novels and their television adaptations often deal with the
murder or abuse of children, for example Kuolemanspiraali (Death Spiral).55
In contrast, children are absent from the classical noir films of the Nordic
cinemas during the 1940s and 1950s, just as they are absent from auteur
Nordic neo-noir.
One of the most striking aspects of the ubiquity of children is their relative
absence from classic film noir, as has been noted by such scholars as Vivian
Sobchack. She argues that such absence implicitly naturalises the isolation of
noir’s characters. She writes: ‘hotel rooms, cocktail lounges, bars, roadside
diners and even the cold interiors of the houses of the rich and corrupt . . . all
refuse individual subjectivity and intimacy (as they encourage individual isola-
tion and secrecy)’.56
Even when noir enters the domestic sphere, it finds itself in a space of inhu-
mane and ill-gotten ‘cold glitter’.57 Sobchack argues that in these settings we
have a Bakhtinian chronotope of what she calls lounge time, a textual space
and time in which certain events and characters recur:
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Sobchack’s view resembles the argument made by Sylvia Harvey about the
family in noir. Harvey argues that
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international noir
his family’s apartment. These men spend a lot of time in the bars and hotels
mentioned by Sobchack, but they also spend a lot of time at home with their
children, and each of them (except Abdulkarim) speaks of changing his child’s
life as a means of erasing the abuse he suffered at the hands of his father. When
they bring children into lounge time, the characters are depicted as having a
past and a life outside of the lounge, which works to humanise them.
JW’s painfully obscure family connections, and the disappearance of his
sister at a young age, also humanise and motivate his character. At the same
time, the dystopian representation of families makes the characters’ desires for
their children appear ironically misguided and impossible, an expression of the
frustration identified by Harvey.61
On another view, a historicist reading of the figure of the child and family in
Nordic neo-noir leads us to link these films to the cultural politics of the welfare
state. In this way, humanising the criminal character by depicting his or her
relationship to children and to an emptied ideology of the family also works
to create a dystopian image of the state. The figure of the child underscores the
criminality of the social world of neo-noir. For any social milieu that allows,
or even encourages, the abuse, degradation and destruction of children goes
against social norms in all of the Nordic countries, each of which maintains an
‘Ombudsman for Children’, who guides and monitors each state’s compliance
with the rights of the child, outlined in the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child.62 The Ombudsman office dates to the early 1990s. The convention
holds that ‘every child has certain basic rights, including the right to life, his or
her own name and identity, to be raised by his or her parents within a family
or cultural grouping’.63 Sweden made corporal punishment of children a crime
in 1979, and many of the universal benefits of the welfare state are aimed at
children, including free health care, free education, exceptionally generous
parental leave polices, subsidised daycare and a monthly child subsidy paid
to mothers. To be sure, one can see the operation of Foucaudian bio-power in
such a state apparatus, but that doesn’t change the fact that in historicist terms
the child is a societal canary in the coalmine.64 Depicting abuse of children and
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Auteur Neo-noir
The films of Aki Kaurismäki and Lars von Trier also affirm the noir legacy, but
do so at least in part as a way of rejecting the political filmmaking of the 1970s,
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international noir
Kaurismäki and Trier can he seen as parallel Nordic auteurs with hardly
any connection . . . Both Kaurismäki and Trier emerged in the era in
which postmodernism predominated in the international art film. On
the agenda were aesthetic experiments with the music video genre, the
postmodern genre par excellence, and, most important, the ironic play
with genres and clichés, which often connected high and low culture.67
Such self-aware use of genres and clichés helps makes evident a cinephilic rela-
tionship to the history of cinema, which shows up in the filmmakers’ use of
noir. Von Trier’s debut feature film, The Element of Crime (1984), has been
received as a neo-noir, and the director himself has remarked that the ‘film
relates to and makes use of certain film noir clichés’.68 In its cinephilic way,
The Element of Crime uses ‘the Tarkovskian theme of the incursion of nature
within a “world of decay” as perceived through the detritus of memory’, as
Linda Badley writes, pulling together the film’s doomsday rejection of politics,
its affirmation of aestheticism and its love of the cinematic past.69 His third
feature, Europa (1991), though not stylised as a neo-noir in such a pronounced
way, also includes noir elements. In both films, the Euro-American hybridity
of film noir is foregrounded. Aki Kaurismäki’s films of the 1980s are also visu-
ally and thematically within the noir tradition. These films include Rikos ja
rangaistus (Crime and Punishment, 1983), Calamari Unioni (Calamari Union,
1985), Varjoja paratiisissa (Shadows in Paradise, 1986), Ariel (1988) and
Tulitikkutehtaan tyttö (The Match-Factory Girl, 1990). Among Kaurismäki’s
later films, Laitakaupungin valot (Lights in the Dusk, 2006) is overtly neo-
noir in visual style and narrative. Kaurismäki and von Trier’s films display a
self-reflexive relationship to cinematic history, and this dimension makes their
films noteworthy examples of neo-noir. Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg
Tuck underscore self-reflexivity as a definitive characteristic of neo-noir:
While many of the makers of film noir would have been conscious of the
work of their contemporaries and predecessors, none of them would have
set out to make something called ‘film noir’ . . . The concept and category
simply did not exist for them. Neo-noir is made and watched by people
familiar with the concept of film noir.70
What do these filmmakers do with the noir repertoire, then? What might
explain their engagement with neo-noir? At least a part of the answer has to
do with both filmmakers’ affirmation of noir as a dialectical rejection of the
social realism that dominated 1970s Nordic cinema. In furnishing a world
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nordic noir and neo-noir
of isolated individuals, doomed fates and a cinematic toy box of visual style
choices, the noir repertoire provide these filmmakers with a means of opting
out of the previous generation’s collective emphasis, utopian aspirations and
earnest realism, while embracing a filmmaking that gave voice to impulses of
the 1970s and 1980s.
Both von Trier’s and Kaurismäki’s first films were praised as generational
films which gave voice to the emergent punk ethos. In his book on von Trier,
journalist Nils Thorsen writes about that ethos of the late 1970s and 1980s:
‘Youth culture had been shaped by humanistic, leftist thought. When punk
broke in, that was the end of writing love on one’s forehead . . . The new
slogan was no future!’71 Doom, pessimism and decadence featured in the anti-
social attitudes of punk, its DIY rejection of the mainstream and its search
for an alternative pared-down musical language and culture. These attitudes
found cinematic expression in a self-aware aestheticism, which differed from
the realism of the 1970s. This aestheticism is evident in both filmmakers’
early experiments with noir: Element of Crime’s sepia lighting, shooting loca-
tions in the sewers of Copenhagen, its intertexts with Welles, Dreyer, Lang,
Scorsese and Tarkovsky, and hypnotic voiceover give it an arch-noir quality.
Kaurismäki’s early films are instances of film noir seen through the lens of the
French New Wave, and its fixation on Hollywood noirs, among other films. In
Calamari Union, for example, the twelve Franks (and one Pekka) who make
up the cast face their doomed fates coolly, in black and white, wearing suits,
fedoras and trenchcoats. The majority of actors in the films were musicians,
a number of whom played in bands that created a period-defining Finnicised
version of punk, for example the emblematic band Eppu Normaali. The same
turn to aestheticism and punk is also evident in Kaurismäki’s casting. Regular
actors in his early films – Matti Pellonpää, Kari Väänänen, Vesa Vierikko –
were participants in a definitive 1978 production of the play The Death of a
Tightrope Walker, or How Pete Q. Got Wings (Nuorallatanssijan kuolema
eli kuinka Pete Q sai siivet), a mystical story about artistic inspiration in
conflict with political dogma, which affirmed art as a kind of anarchic, anti-
authoritarian moral act.72 The aestheticism, as in von Trier, was a means of
defining a new cinematic direction.
Von Trier’s experimentation with genres continued in diverse directions,
but Kaurismäki continued to come back to the noir sources. For example, the
lighting, the clipped dialogue of his films (rendered in strange, ‘book’ Finnish
that eschews everyday dialects but calls to mind the terse language of noir) and
the doomed fates of his characters show his debt to noir. At the same time,
many commentators have observed that the hint of optimism and redemp-
tion in his films cause them to differ from noir, and link them to the French
poetic realist films. Those films were associated with the leftist Popular Front,
one of whose anthems was the optimistic song, ‘Les temps des cerises’, a song
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international noir
associated with the French Left since the Paris Commune of 1871. That song
features in a late poetic realist film Kaurismäki has called one of his all-time
favourites, Casque d’or (Golden Marie, 1954), as well as in Kaurismäki’s own
Juha (1999) and Le Havre (2012). The latter film is set in the French port city,
which is also associated with poetic realism because it was a key setting in such
films as La Bête humaine (The Human Beast, 1938) and Le Quai des brumes
(Port of Shadows, 1938).
If the early use of noir by von Trier and Kaurismäki can be seen as an affir-
mation of cinematic aesthetics that rejected a reigning style and the politics
that underpinned it, Kaurismäki’s 2006 Lights in the Dusk marks an interest-
ing shift. The film tells the story of Koistinen (Janne Hyytiäinen), a hapless
security guard working for a large Helsinki security firm. Koistinen’s occupa-
tion is a noteworthy metonymy for the ‘night-watchman state’ – the neo-liberal
view that the state should provide a modicum of security, and no more. Such
ideas have led to policies like that in Helsinki, where the municipality has
subcontracted out significant parts of its policing, for example maintenance of
law and order in the public transportation system. Koistinen is targeted by an
organised crime group, whose boss Lindholm (Ilkka Koivula) dispatches his
girlfriend, the femme fatale Mirja (Maria Järvenhelmi), to seduce Koistinen
and steal his security codes in order to rob a jewellery shop. Koistinen takes the
fall, protects Mirja and is aggressively prosecuted by state officials, who tacitly
work on behalf of the kingpin Lindholm. Koistinen loses everything, goes to
prison and continues to be persecuted after his release.
In Lights in the Dusk, Kaurismäki returns to neo-noir. Yet rather than an
embrace of noir as an affirmation of anarchy and an aesthetic rejection of a
reigning style, neo-noir becomes a vehicle for affirming social-democratic soli-
darity with the average worker, who is portrayed as being exploited by bold
and aggressive criminals and abused by supine state authorities. The pessimism
of film noir and poetic realism is palpable here, only in this film it is used to
depict the globalised, deregulated Nordic welfare state as a dystopia. Notably
absent from Kaurismäki’s film, however, are the children and memories
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nordic noir and neo-noir
of popular neo-noir. In this way, the film gives voice to a nostalgia for the
classical period of American film noir, which is an element of Kaurismäki’s
auteurism – just as it was for one of his idols, Jean-Luc Godard.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Rune Christensen, Audun Engelstad, Maaret Koskinen, Anders
Marklund, Kerstin Bergman and Eric Ames.
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Wallflower, pp. 1–10.
Brodén, Daniel (2008), Folkhemmets skuggbilder: En kulturanalytisk genrestudie I
svensk kriminalfiktion i film och TV, Stockholm: Ekholm & Tegebjer.
Chandler, Raymond (1995), ‘The simple art of murder’, in Raymond Chandler: Later
Novels and Other Writings, ed. Frank McShane, New York: Library of America, pp.
977–92 [1945].
175
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Christensen, Rune (2009), ‘Local inflections of darkness: Danish film noir during the
classical noir cycle’, unpublished dissertation, University of California, Davis.
Copjec, Joan (1993), ‘The phenomenal and nonphenomenal: Private space in Film
Noir’, in Joan Copjec (ed.), Shades of Noir: A Reader, New York: Verso, pp. 167–98.
Eisner, Lotte (1969), The Haunted Screen, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Engelstad, Audun (2006), Losing Streak Stories: Mapping Norwegian Film Noir, Oslo:
Faculty of Humanities, University of Oslo.
——. (2011), ‘Dealing with crime: Cyclic changes in Norwegian crime films’, Journal of
Scandinavian Cinema 1(2), 205–21.
Forshaw, Barry (2012), Death in a Cold Climate: A Guide to Scandinavian Crime
Fiction, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
——. (2013), Nordic Noir: The Pocket Essential Guide to Scandinavian Crime Fiction,
Film & TV, London: Oldcastle Books.
Fossum, Karin (2002), Svarte sekunder, Oslo: Cappelen.
——. (2009), Varsleren, Oslo: Cappelen.
Frank, Nino (1996), ‘The crime adventure story: A new kind of detective film’, in R.
Barton Palmer (ed.), Perspectives on Film Noir, New York: G. K. Hall, pp. 21–4
[1946].
Hedling, Erik and Ann-Kristin Wallengren (eds) (2006), Solskenslandet: Svensk film på
2000-talet, Stockholm: Atlantis.
Hjort, Mette (2005), Small Nation, Global Cinema: The New Danish Cinema,
Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2005.
Iversen, Gunnar (2011), Norsk filmhistorie: spillefilmen 1911–2011, Oslo:
Universitetsforlag.
Krokstäde, Mia (2010), ‘Little Miss Lonely: Style and sexuality in Flicka och hyacinter’,
in Anders Marklund and Mariah Larsson (eds), Swedish Film: An Introduction and
Reader, Lund: Nordic Academic Press, pp. 161–8.
Kulick, Don (2005), ‘Four hundred thousand Swedish perverts’, GLQ: A Journal of
Lesbian and Gay Studies 11(2), 205–35.
Lapidus, Jens (2008), Snabba Cash: Hatet, rivet, jakten, Stockholm: Månpocket [2006].
——. (2008), Aldrig fucka upp, Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand.
——. (2011), Livet deluxe, Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand.
Larsen, Jan Kornum (2003), ‘A conversation between Jan Kornum Larsen and Lars von
Trier’, in Jan Lumholdt (ed.), Lars von Trier: Interviews, Jackson, MS: University of
Mississippi Press, pp. 32–46.
Larsson, Stieg (2005), Män som hatar kvinnor [The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo],
Stockholm: Norstedts.
——. (2006), Flickan som lekte med elden [The Girl who Played with Fire], Stockholm:
Norstedts.
——. (2007) Luftslottet som sprängdes [The Girl who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest],
Stockholm: Norstedts.
Lehtolainen, Leena (1997), Kuolemanspiraali, Helsinki: Tammi.
Luhr, William (2012), Film Noir, Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Mankell, Henning (1995), Villospår, Stockholm: Ordfront.
Moen, Arve (1957), Woman and Eros, trans. Christopher Norman, Oslo: Forlage
Norsk Kunstreproduksjon [1947].
Naremore, James (2008), More Than Night: Film Noir in Contexts, revised edition,
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Nestingen, Andrew (2013), The Cinema of Aki Kaurismäki: Contrarian Stories, New
York: Columbia University Press.
Nestingen, Andrew and Paula Arvas (eds) (2011), Scandinavian Crime Fiction, Cardiff:
University of Wales Press.
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nordic noir and neo-noir
Filmography
Angst (Oddvar Bul Tuhus, N, 1976, Anguish)
Ariel (Aki Kaurismäki, SF, 1988)
Besættelse (Bodil Ipsen, DK, 1944, Obsession)
Bortreist på ubestemt tid (Pål Bang Hansen, N, 1974, Away For an Indefinite Period)
Bron (Måns Mårlind, Hans Rosenfeldt, Nikolaj Scherfig, DK, TV series, 2011–, The
Bridge)
Calamari Unioni (Aki Kaurismäki, SF, 1985, Calamari Union)
Casque d’or (Jacques Becker, F, 1952, Golden Marie)
Døden er et kjærtegen (Edith Carlmar, N, 1949, Death is a Caress)
Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, US, 1944)
En forbryder (Arne Weel, DK, 1941, A Criminal)
Europa (Lars von Trier, DK, 1991)
Flammen og citronen (Ole Christian Madsen, DK, 2008, Flame and Citron)
Flicka och hyacinter (Hasse Ekman, S, 1950, Girl and Hyacinths)
Forbrydelsen (Søren Sveistrup, DK, TV series, 2007–12, The Killing)
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Notes
1. Barry Forshaw, Nordic Noir: The Pocket Essential Guide to Scandinavian Crime
Fiction, Film & TV (London: Oldcastle Books, 2013).
2. Naturalism here means the literary and philosophical movements of the 1870s
and 1880s. Its promulgators included, among others, Hyppolyte Taine, Émile
Zola, Georg Brandes, August Strindberg and Henrik Ibsen, the last speaking to
the impact of naturalism on Scandinavian culture through the so-called Modern
Breakthrough of the 1870s.
3. James Naremore, More Than Night: Film Noir in Contexts, revised edition
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008), p. 15.
178
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179
international noir
180
nordic noir and neo-noir
181
8. INDIAN FILM NOIR
Corey K. Creekmur
Has the Indian film industry – often identified as the world’s largest – pro-
duced film noir? Pursuing an answer to this seemingly straightforward ques-
tion may require, like the tangled plots of many noir films, tracing a forward
path through a series of flashbacks and unexpected detours. Most claims for
the existence of non-Hollywood film noir are relatively recent, reinforcing the
fundamental historical circumstance succinctly emphasised by Tom Gunning:
‘Film noir may be the great achievement of film studies’.1 Indeed, any attempt
to expand the international purview of film noir, once viewed as distinctly and
exclusively American (despite recognisable European roots), cannot ignore the
nagging reminder that film noir was discovered – if not wholly invented – by
film critics rather than the Hollywood studio filmmakers making movies they
and their initial audiences would have readily identified as thrillers, detective
stories or mysteries, among other more familiar genre terms.2 As has been
the case elsewhere, the designation or categorisation of a group of films as
‘Indian film noir’ is emphatically retroactive, a critical act of explicit historical
reclassification that may ultimately be as misleading as illuminating. In fact, as
Nikki J. Y. Lee and Julian Stringer have warned, the larger, now commonly
invoked category of ‘Asian noir’ may be no more than a ‘dubiously unifying
concept’, ‘a mere category of convenience behind which lurk a range of more
stubbornly complex stories concerning the historically specific characteristics
of multiple regional film industries’.3 If we belatedly locate examples of Indian
film noir, we must also acknowledge the historical and cultural conditions that
now allow us to do so, decades after the films we seek to make comprehensible
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through this category were made and enjoyed: in short, any responsible claim
for the existence of Indian film noir must waver with critical uncertainty.
Nevertheless, while crime stories, as elsewhere, have been an unsurprisingly
common component of Indian popular cinema, contemporary critics have, if
only in passing, increasingly attributed a ‘darker’ aspect to a portion of India’s
vast corpus of films, thereby affiliating these recently retrieved examples with
Hollywood and other commercial national cinemas, in effect constructing a
comparative perspective that retrospectively ‘corrects’ the absence of popular
Indian cinema from most historical accounts of world cinema until the 1990s.
Now that popular Indian cinema has secured a place in this expanded history,
perhaps, it appears, there once was Indian film noir too. For instance, in the
groundbreaking Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (first published in 1994, and
revised in 1999), the Hindi film Baazi (Wager, Guru Dutt, 1951) is described
as ‘a confident assimilation of the Warner Bros. noir style, esp. in the lighting,
the camera placements and the editing’.4 Elsewhere, the Encyclopedia says,
of Bambai Ka Babu (Gentleman from Bombay, Raj Khosla, 1960), ‘After
the film’s noirish beginning, as in so many Dev Anand starrers, it turns into
a romance’.5 Such claims are infrequent and notably hesitant assertions of
the approximation of film noir in Indian cinema, allowing at most ‘noirish
assimilation’ rather than the real thing. Similarly tentative claims can be found
throughout the first wave of serious scholarship on Indian popular film, which
was simultaneously attentive to a large body of previously neglected examples
while in dialogue with the Western cinephilia that had canonised film noir
in the development of the discipline of film studies. Thus Ravi Vasudevan,
emphasising the symbolic function of the city street in 1950s Hindi cinema ‘as
the space of the dissolution of social identity’, links key Indian examples of
what he labels ‘crime melodramas’ to ‘the glistening rain-drenched streets so
familiar from the American film noir’.6 Jyotika Virdi is similarly circumspect
when noting ‘noir lighting’ in Bimal Roy’s Madhumati (1958),7 or when she
claims that Raj Khosla’s C.I.D. (1956) is ‘fashioned after noir thrillers both
in form and content’ and ‘visibly influenced by noir films’.8 Such claims are
telling in their willingness to acknowledge the evident influence of film noir on
Hindi cinema, but they also stop short of declaring as film noir these specific
Indian films.
More recently, however, as the possibility of viewing film noir as a genu-
inely transnational phenomenon has been more widely asserted and accepted,
it seems that such hesitation is fading. For instance, in a recent book centred
upon Mumbai’s history as a prominent film location, Ranjani Mazumdar
briefly cites a few historical precursors from the 1940s and 1950s featur-
ing ‘the expressionistic lighting common to noir’, before crediting a cycle of
contemporary (post-1989) Hindi crime and gangster films with instantiating
‘Mumbai Noir’, a term that, she notes, ‘only gained currency in the 1990s
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after the release of a few landmark films that directly drew on the stories of the
underworld’.9 (I, perhaps pedantically, think these films may more accurately
be identified as ‘neo-noir’, and will discuss them as such later in this chapter.)
Another recent volume, the lavishly illustrated Bollywood Posters, with com-
mentary by the prominent Indian film journalist Jerry Pinto, contains a section
on crime films, among other prominent genres. After summarising earlier
Indian sound films as ‘morality plays’ that ‘gave cinematic expression to the
idea of the struggle between good and evil’, Pinto boldly announces: ‘When
film noir arrived, things began to change somewhat’. After citing Kismet
(1943), an important and wildly popular pre-independence crime film, as a
prototype, Pinto asserts that ‘It was only in the 1950s that Bollywood began to
develop the outlines of its own version of noir’.10 In these more recent exam-
ples of criticism, Indian film noir is more confidently asserted than hesitantly
pondered, ostensibly confirming what others have wondered: whether film
noir, even in its early, ‘classical’ phase (roughly 1941–58), was already a trans-
national cultural phenomenon, extending not only to somewhat expected loca-
tions like France, Great Britain and Germany but even to South Asia. Whether
earlier, in the Indian film industry, or only lately, in Indian film criticism, film
noir appears to have finally ‘arrived’.
However, perhaps the sort of caution glimpsed in earlier criticism is still
warranted: to simply, belatedly affirm the existence of Indian film noir too
easily avoids implicit and crucial questions regarding the ways we understand
the cultural functions of film styles or genres, the shaping role of film criti-
cism upon film history and especially the ideological implications of locating
transnational film genres within the larger bodies of national cinemas, with the
latter an especially complex category in relation to India, which has produced
both art and popular cinema from its multiple regions and in multiple lan-
guages, both under colonial rule and, since 1947, as an independent nation.11
What conceptual negotiations are involved in at last locating a form of
popular American cinema first identified by French critics within South Asian
cinema, otherwise marked by distinct cultural traditions and stylistic conven-
tions? Claims for non-Hollywood film noir tend to challenge older models of
cultural imperialism that viewed the international circulation and impact of
Hollywood cinema as unidirectional and simply oppressive: rather, as Andrew
Spicer writes with reference to European cinemas, ‘although European film
noirs have characteristics that are specific to their national cultural formation,
each has been profoundly affected, in various ways, by American noir, in a
complex, two-way process that ranges from imitation to radical originality via
all shades of hybridity’.12 Similarly, Jennifer Fay and Justus Nieland argue ‘that
film noir is best appreciated as an always international phenomenon concerned
with the local effects of globalization and the threats to national urban culture
it seeks to herald’.13 If (to raise the persistent question) film noir is a genre,
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185
international noir
186
indian film noir
187
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traditional values of the village and the undeniably attractive modern style
of the city – much like the position of cinema itself in its frequent attempt to
invoke authentic ‘Indian’ narratives within a medium and technology that was
inevitably modern, urban and Western.
If the regular focus on Bombay grounds Indian gestures towards film noir,
the postwar ennui that underlies the darkest Hollywood film noir (so often
noted by scholars attempting to explain the genre’s social origins) and the
semi-official, nationalist optimism of India in the wake of independence under
the influence of Nehruvian progress are starkly opposed. Whereas Hollywood
film noir is often striking in its rejection of Hollywood’s penchant for happy
endings that join (rather than destroy) romantic couples, Hindi cinema pro-
duced in the same era cannot so readily displace optimism with cynicism.
More often than not in popular Indian cinema of the period, heroes triumph
and couples overcome the obstacles that have prevented their happiness until
the final reel. The corruption that is often revealed at the heart of the city is
exposed and presumably vanquished for a brighter future. In this regard, the
assimilation of film noir in 1950s Hindi cinema arguably reaches its ideological
limit and inevitably appears naive when placed against Hollywood’s increas-
ingly brutal products.
There is also, perhaps, another important way in which the darkest moods
of Hollywood film noir could not be wholly imported into popular Indian
cinema: in summarising the early sequences of Baazi earlier, I neglected to
add that, a short while into the narrative, a wholly expected thing in popular
Indian cinema happens: the gambler hero of the film sings a song. (More accu-
rately, the hero mimics a song performed by an unseen but more often than not
famous ‘playback singer’, a formal arrangement known to all Indian audiences,
in contrast to Hollywood’s rigorous obscuring of the traces of such dubbing
practices.) Moreover, he sings a song about money while wandering among
the city’s sleeping pavement-dwellers, a ‘realistic’ element indicative of modern
urban life that provides a vivid contrast to the choreographed stylisation of
the performed musical number. Among the most important and lasting con-
ventions of Indian popular cinema, the organisation of film narratives around
a series of choreographed song sequences disallows any straightforward
transposition of Hollywood genre categories to Indian film. Films that might
otherwise be identified as socials, historicals or mythologicals, or via Western
terms such as thrillers, romances or comedies, all contain songs (a ‘require-
ment’ that moreover renders any distinct genre of the musical unnecessary in
India). While song performances are, in fact, fairly common in Hollywood
film noir, they are usually reserved for ‘realistic’ locations like nightclubs, and
are rarely featured more than once in a film. Whereas Indian viewers expect
songs in virtually all popular films as a primary attraction, many Western
viewers are startled to encounter, for instance, singing and dancing detectives
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indian film noir
Mumbai Neo-noir
If the status of film noir in the ‘golden age’ of Hindi cinema necessarily remains
unstable, confirming the active presence of neo-noir in contemporary Indian
film seems secure. India’s increasingly globalised media landscape and rela-
tively easy access to diverse examples of international cinema (whether legal or
not) via a range of video formats has permitted Indian filmmakers as well as
their audiences to view many of the American, East Asian and European crime
films critics have identified as neo-noir.15 (Among other things, Indian cinema
paralleled most of the rest of the world by making the virtually complete shift
from black-and-white to colour film stock by the end of the 1960s.) Even
somewhat earlier, since the mid-1970s, representations of Bombay’s crimi-
nal underworld and the glamorous if doomed lives of gangland ‘dons’ and
‘goondas’ (gangsters) had become staples of Hindi cinema.16 The latter half
of the decade was especially dominated by a series of films featuring superstar
Amitabh Bachchan in his wildly popular ‘angry young man’ persona. Although
a populist anti-hero and even a sympathetic criminal in most of his key films,
his breakthrough role was as a wronged police inspector in Zanjeer (Chains,
Prakash Mehra, 1973), while he was unambiguously a gangster in Deewar
(The Wall, Yash Chopra, 1975) and a petty thief in Sholay (Flames, Ramesh
Sippy, 1975), among the most successful and influential films in the history of
Hindi cinema. However, even Bachchan films set more directly in the under-
world, such as Don (1978), where he plays the double role (an Indian film
tradition) of a crime lord and his innocent doppelganger, seem only vaguely
affiliated with the stylistic elements of film noir that can be located in earlier
Hindi cinema: indeed, the Bachchan vehicles of the 1970s are a reminder
that the gangster film, in India and elsewhere, has typically been viewed as a
distinct genre, lacking many of the elements associated with film noir despite
their shared basis in crime stories. The ‘Bachchan phenomenon’ – the virtual
domination of the cinema by the star during an especially volatile period in
Indian history, most notably Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s ‘Emergency’ from
1975 to 1977, when elections and civil liberties were suspended – has received
extensive commentary within Indian film studies, but seems on the whole a
tangential link to any ‘tradition’ of Indian film noir.17 Rather, after decades of
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popular romantic films featuring female leads, the massive success of his films
seems to have solidified the centrality of the male star in action-driven films,
often but not necessarily built around crime elements, in the last decades of
twentieth-century popular Indian cinema.
Neo-noir thus arrives in India more fully following the period of Bachchan’s
dominance, through a remarkable series of gangster films that re-energised the
genre in India. Beginning with director Mani Ratnam’s influential Tamil film
Nayakan (Hero, 1987), starring South Indian superstar Kamal Hassan and
partially inspired by The Godfather (1972), and followed by Vidhu Vinod
Chopra’s Parinda (Bird, 1989), the contemporary gangster film signalled by
these examples immediately appeared more realistic and more brutal than
its predecessors. Soon thereafter, a loose trilogy of stylishly directed films by
Ram Gopal Varma – Satya (1998), Company (2002) and the less successful D
(2005) – were built upon their audience’s knowledge that the characters and
events onscreen closely resembled the well-publicised and notorious offscreen
gangsters and crimes that had in some cases infiltrated the film world: among
other self-reflexive moments, Satya features a shooting at a crowded cinema
and Company depicts an assassination on a film set. Whereas the gangsters in
Satya are on the lower or perhaps middle rungs of the underworld hierarchy
(albeit with links to powerful political figures), Company and D (named after
the infamous D-Company led by actual crime boss Dawood Ibrahim, the
model for a number of recent cinematic interpretations) are more ‘globalised’,
as dangerous for the killings they arrange via their mobile phones as with guns.
(Satya is the film often cited as the first example of ‘Mumbai noir’. Once again,
I am arguing that the historical specificity of the now widespread term ‘neo-
noir’ is more appropriate for such post-classical examples.) Again, as in critical
discussions of the Hollywood cinema that has sometimes inspired such films
– both Parinda and Ram Gopal Varma’s Sarkar (2005) and its sequel Sarkar
Raj (2008) borrow rather obviously, if often inventively, from The Godfather
– the gangster film might be distinguished from most examples of film noir,
despite family resemblances. Amidst this revival of the Hindi gangster film,
among the more inventive recent examples is a pair adapted from Shakespeare:
Vishal Bharadwaj transforms Macbeth into Maqbool (2004) and Othello into
Omkara (2006), with surprisingly effective connections between the original
characters and their contemporary underworld avatars. Other contemporary
Hindi neo-noir films typically rely on less elevated and more recent sources: the
heist film Kaante (Thorns, 2002), directed by Sanjay Gupta and shot entirely
in Los Angeles with a cast of prominent male stars, draws rather obviously
upon Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs (1992), Bryan Singer’s The Usual
Suspects (1995) and Michael Mann’s Heat (1995) to construct its convoluted
bank robbery plot: such ‘borrowing’, which often skirts the legal niceties of an
official remake, has become common in contemporary Hindi cinema, and is
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indian film noir
often cited by critics to decry the industry’s lack of originality: in other cases,
the act of ‘translation’ results in witty and perceptive hybrids. Perhaps the
full arrival of an arguably more creative, highly self-reflexive, postmodernist
variation on neo-noir is best represented by Johnny Gaddaar (Johnny Traitor,
2007), directed by Sriram Raghavan.18 The flamboyantly stylised film, organ-
ised in an intricate but playful flashback structure, is packed with allusions to
both Hindi cinema – the title invokes Vijay Anand’s Johny Mera Naam (My
Name is Johnny, 1970) – as well as Hollywood film noir, including Stanley
Kubrick’s The Killing (1956). Much like Quentin Tarantino’s collage-like neo-
noir films, Johnny Gaddaar presumes an increasingly cine-literate viewer, not
only familiar with the ‘classics’ it quotes relentlessly, but equally attentive to
the hyperkinetic and foregrounded formal techniques in the film. Most signifi-
cantly, the film assumes viewers whose cinephilia is global as well as ‘local’,
as adept at catching a witty reference to Brian De Palma’s Scarface (1983)
or Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane (1941) as to Jyoti Swaroop’s Hindi thriller
Parwana (Moth, 1971), which featured Amitabh Bachchan in one of his first
villain roles. Such films, increasingly common from younger Indian filmmak-
ers, increasingly take for granted that their audiences (at home and abroad) are
savvy consumers of a wide range of global media, rather than the mass audi-
ence which filmmakers once seemed to treat as naive spectators of the exotic,
unattainable world on Indian screens.
Notes
1. Tom Gunning, ‘More than night: Film noir in its contexts’ (book review),
Modernism/modernity 6(3) (1999), 151.
2. The argument for identifying non-Hollywood film noir (and neo-noir) in five
European countries is outlined carefully in the editor’s ‘Introduction’ to Andrew
Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007),
while Jennifer Fay and Justus Nieland, Film Noir: Hard-Boiled Modernity and the
Cultures of Globalization (New York: Routledge, 2010) centres on ‘film noir as an
always international phenomenon concerned with the local effects of globalization
and the threats to national urban culture it seems to herald’ (p. ix). Their study
locates examples of film noir in the United States, Europe, Asia (including India, via
a single film) and Latin America. On the other hand, Spencer Selby, The Worldwide
Film Noir Tradition (Ames, IA: Sink Press, 2013) lists films from almost two dozen
countries (including India, with six titles) as examples of film noir, but provides
virtually no critical justification for its selections.
3. Nikki J. Y. Lee and Julian Stringer, ‘Film noir in Asia: Historicizing South Korean
crime thrillers’, in Andrew Spicer and Helen Hanson (eds), Companion to Film
Noir (New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), p. 502. In the same volume, Lalitha
Gopalan’s illuminating essay on what she terms ‘Bombay Noir’ begins with an even
more bold warning: ‘Looking for film noir in India is to miss the point of Indian
cinema altogether’. See Lalitha Gopalan, ‘Bombay Noir’, p. 518.
4. Ashish Rajadhyaksha and Paul Willemen (eds), Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema:
New Revised Edition (London: British Film Institute, 1999), p. 322.
5. Ibid., p. 362.
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international noir
6. Ravi S. Vasudevan, ‘Shifting codes, dissolving identities: The Hindi social film of
the 1950s as popular culture’, in Ravi S. Vasudevan (ed.), Making Meaning in
Indian Cinema (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 110.
7. Jyotika Virdi, The Cinematic ImagiNation: Indian Popular Films as Social History
(New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2003), p. 51.
8. Ibid., pp. 100–1. Virdi mistakenly identifies producer Guru Dutt rather than Raj
Khosla as the director of C.I.D., although claiming Dutt’s influence on the style of
the film seems reasonable.
9. Ranjani Mazumdar, ‘Mumbai Noir: An uncanny present’, in Helio San Miguel
(ed.), World Film Locations: Mumbai (New York: Intellect, 2012), p. 68.
10. Jerry Pinto and Sheena Sippy, Bollywood Posters (Mumbai: India Book House,
2008), pp. 60–1. As has become common in writing on Hindi cinema, Pinto retro-
actively names the earlier film industry ‘Bollywood’, a practice I and other critics
find historically misleading.
11. This essay concentrates on the large popular Hindi-language cinema produced in
Bombay (now Mumbai), now commonly and somewhat controversially identified
as ‘Bollywood’. (The retroactive designation of earlier Hindi cinema as ‘Bollywood’
cinema is an especially misleading historical inaccuracy.) I also refer to Bombay
for the period before 1995, when the name of the city was officially changed to
Mumbai, although the older name remains in common use. Increased critical atten-
tion is now being paid to India’s many so-called ‘regional’ cinemas, including the
Tamil and Telugu industries, which are often as large as the Hindi cinema: whether
early examples from these cinemas might be reasonably associated with film noir
remains to be argued.
12. Andrew Spicer, European Film Noir, p. 1.
13. Jennifer Fay and Justus Nieland, Film Noir, p. ix.
14. M. K. Raghavendra, Seduced by the Familiar: Narration and Meaning in Indian
Popular Cinema (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 134.
15. On neo-noir as an international phenomenon, see David Desser, ‘Global noir:
Genre film in the age of transnationalism’, in Barry Keith Grant (ed.), Film Genre
Reader IV (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press), pp. 628–48, and a number of
the essays in Mark Bould, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir (London:
Wallflower, 2009). Neither of these texts includes examples from Indian cinema.
16. I discuss contemporary Hindi gangster films in Corey K. Creekmur, ‘Bombay
Bhai: The gangster in and behind popular Hindi cinema’, in Corey K. Creekmur
and Mark Sidel (eds), Cinema, Law, and the State in Asia (New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2007), pp. 29–43. For illuminating analyses of Nayakan and Parinda,
see the full chapters devoted to each film in Lalitha Gopalan, Cinema of
Interruptions: Action Genres in Contemporary Indian Cinema (London: British
Film Institute, 2002). Also see Ranjani Mazumdar, Bombay Cinema: An Archive
of the City (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2007), especially
Chapter 5, ‘Gangland Bombay’, pp. 149–96, and Ranjani Mazumdar, ‘Friction,
collision, and the grotesque: The dystopic fragments of Bombay cinema’, in Gyan
Prakash (ed.), Noir Urbanisms: Dystopic Images of the Modern City (Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 2010), pp. 150–84.
17. Among many treatments of Amitabh Bachchan’s significance in the 1970s, see
the chapter in Vijay Mishra, Bollywood Cinema: Temples of Desire (New York:
Routledge, 2001), pp. 125–56.
18. For an ingenious and detailed analysis of Johnny Gaddaar, see Gopalan, ‘Bombay
Noir’, pp. 504–10.
192
9. THE NEW SINCERITY OF NEO-NOIR
R. Barton Palmer
193
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194
the new sincerity of neo-noir
in the sense that they take the viewer outside the film to its intellectual and
textual sources, marking it out as overtly secondary. It is revealed as an appro-
priation of the already written and the already filmed, underlining the ‘neo’
in ‘neo-noir’, a term that was already well established in critical usage by the
time that the Coens set about recreating the cinematic and literary past. Such
allusions, of course, play with the temporality of the film, showing for those in
the know that it refers to a cultural (also cinematic and literary) ‘then’ that is
summoned up for, and aligned with, a textual ‘now’. The affect they create so
doing is nostalgia, which is, as many have noted, especially Fredric Jameson, a
key element in the postmodernism that constitutes the larger aesthetic context
of the neo-noir movement.1
Exemplifying processes at work more generally in New Hollywood, Body
Heat and The Man Who Wasn’t There conjure up a past that is usable in two
senses – first, as the pleasurable object of an informed yearning (or a pleasur-
ably poignant contemplation of its absence); and, second, as an extensive body
of conventions with proven appeal upon which a new production might easily
and profitably draw. It is this basic form of re-use (characteristic of commercial
cinema’s conservation of popular material in general) that largely accounts for
Body Heat’s noirness. And yet some neo-noirs, and here The Man Who Wasn’t
There is a useful example, break decisively from the models of the Hollywood
past by probing deeply the social and cultural history of the early postwar
years. Such retro productions acknowledge their deep connection to a bygone
cinematic era, interestingly mirroring the way in which noir protagonists often
find themselves confronting something that comes out of the past, destabilising
the present. Neo-noirs of this type also self-reflexively explore understandings
of wartime and postwar culture developed during the last half century in a
film culture that has become increasingly fascinated by noirness, for which
no one at the time of its flourishing in America had a name. Retro neo-noirs
thus ‘know’ a tradition (not just the texts themselves but their contexts of
production and reception) that could not know itself. In pretending to this
awareness, they are thoroughly New Hollywood, of which more below. With
Peter Brooker, we may well see older styles and artistic movements as any-
thing but extinct, as making available in fact a different form of newness that
might result from ‘the practice of an imaginative remaking which edits, echoes,
borrows from, recomposes and “refunctions” existing narratives or images’.
Suitably transformed, what has been borrowed can then ‘work in a different
medium with an invigorated social and artistic purpose’.2
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argument that supports the emergence of a group style in the American film
industry during the first half of the twentieth century. This was, in sum, an
aesthetic that developed inevitably from standardised modes of production
at all levels within Hollywood and served well the assembly-line aspects of
studio work.3 Yet such centripetal tendencies towards identity and regularity
(natural enough forces in a business based on the efficient, rapid manufacture
of product that needed to fit the stabilised needs of the exhibition sector) were
from the outset necessarily balanced by an equally strong commitment to dif-
ference and diversification. Studio-era productions, to put it simply, needed at
a fairly general level to be as interchangeable as practically possible (in order to
take advantage of economies of scale and to keep the exhibition sector running
smoothly), but, in terms of specific appeals to the audience, Hollywood’s
releases had to be seen as interestingly and significantly different from one
another.
The essential fact about Hollywood is that it was simultaneously ‘industrial’
in the modern sense (and thus could profit from such business practices as elab-
orate production schema and specialised long-term contract labour arrange-
ments) but also ‘artisanal’, that is, absolutely dependent in the final analysis
on the flexible and ever-evolving talents of craftsmen. Classical Hollywood
filmmaking was necessarily supervised by businessmen committed to providing
a predictably profitable service, even as creative personnel, however Taylorised
their eventual contributions might in some sense become, still played an indis-
pensable role because they bent or violated industry rules, often pursuing an
agenda of creativity rather than simply following established procedures. In
this way, Hollywood’s craftsmen became the guarantors of novelty, as well
as powerful sources of irregularity and often disruption. Yet such unpredict-
ability, we might say, was something that studio executives counted on to be
predictable.
These aspects of the Hollywood system reflected the inalterable reality
that consumption was modulated by a dialectic of identity and non-identity.
Audiences went to the cinema week in and week out to have essentially the
same experience (popularly conceived as ‘going to the movies’), but each time
with a never-before-seen film. As Murray Smith points out, moreover, filmgo-
ers needed to be encouraged in their attendance habit not so much by singu-
lar, but by multiple (and constantly shifting) appeals to their interests of the
moment: ‘The variety of genres and the range of stars testified to and catered
for a range of different audience tastes; and . . . the individual film is distinctive
to a degree that most mass-produced commodities are not’.4 We might in fact
go further and say that the individual studio-era film, in terms of its claims to
uniqueness, was absolutely dissimilar to all other mass-produced commodities
and therefore better suited than were they in appealing to ever-protean popular
tastes. Henry Ford achieved his early success by selling only the Model-T (with
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black the sole colour ‘option’), but Hollywood offered its customers something
new and appealing more than twice a week for decades, collectively producing
more films than even diehard fans could see in the course of a year.
Forces of divergence were in this way matched by equally powerful forces
of convergence during the studio era. And yet, as Michael Storper has con-
vincingly shown, the pre-1948 Hollywood industry (that is, commercial film-
making before the end of vertical integration) was essentially Fordist, that
is, catering in terms of product, pricing and service to a mass public largely
conceived as undifferentiated.5 Classical Hollywood was certainly not post-
Fordist in the sense of providing specialised products for a cluster of divergent
markets.6 Whether the New Hollywood of the last three decades is thoroughly
post-Fordist is currently much debated. Blockbusters, a central element of New
Hollywood textuality, are arguably Fordist in their calculated appeal to huge
mass audiences. In any event, it is undeniable that the American industry, at
least in part, now seeks to develop and control profitable niches in the exhibi-
tion sector through the production of radically different kinds of films.7 This
post-classical strategy is perhaps most visible in the New Hollywood treatment
of what might be called the genre repertoire, an essential element of classical
Hollywood filmmaking that provided producers and filmgoers alike with set
of easily readable signs allowing them to negotiate effectively the dialectic of
similarity and difference.
In the studio era, genre films were defined by a shared identity: that is, their
claims to uniqueness, established by the fashion in which they inevitably modi-
fied the conventions of the genre, were simultaneously compromised, as those
same conventions were referenced and perpetuated by the very act of redefini-
tion. During the studio period, individual genres (musicals, detective stories,
women’s pictures and so forth) might be more attractive to some (theoreti-
cally) identifiable element of the mass audience, but, and this was crucial, every
genre was thought to have some appeal to all filmgoers. This was, of course,
true also for the film type (or genre or cycle or series or discursive formation)
that we retrospectively identify as film noir, whose emergence and (always
limited and minoritarian) success with audiences of the time had its sources in
the ‘irregular’ or ‘creative’ permeability of Hollywood to an unlimited number
of literary, cinematic and cultural influences. The stylistic, thematic and nar-
rative difference that so marks these films for scholars today should thus be
understood as a predictably unpredictable divergence from the template that
was the ‘classical text’. Never produced for or marketed to an identified niche,
film noir was ‘for everyone’, even if these dark tales of urban malaise, which
offered versions of the contemporary national experience that challenged the
optimism that was then more generally a feature of Hollywood films, did not
suit every taste every time.
In contrast, film noir’s contemporary reflex is not ‘for everyone’. This
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change in the nature of the noir phenomenon has everything to do with the
conditions now prevailing in the American industry. A singular quality of New
Hollywood production is that there has been, as Smith puts it, ‘a return to
genre filmmaking’ after the brief period in the late 1960s and early 1970s when
an American art cinema held sway. This return to genre establishes a continuity
with the studio past, but with the crucial difference that this production strat-
egy is, as Smith observes, ‘now marked by greater self-consciousness’.8 In part,
this self-consciousness manifests itself in a rhetoric of metagenericism; genre is
referenced in these films so as to comment pleasurably on genre. Genre, instead
of simply informing and shaping the viewer’s experience, is foregrounded as
theme and as textuality, in gestures of self-reflexivity not unknown to classic
Hollywood films, though much more common and forcefully present since
the 1980s. More important, however, self-consciousness today manifests itself
also in product differentiation; in other words, genre is inflected diversely in
the films designed for separate niche markets.
Thus New Hollywood metagenericism becomes a key element, on the one
hand, in the deliberate playfulness and ‘knowing’ escapism of such B-movie
extravaganzas as the Jurassic Park or Indiana Jones or Harry Potter fran-
chises, and, on the other, in the intellectually compelling contemplation of
the workings of intertextuality, including generic conventions, that is such
an attractive feature in commercial/independent productions such as Todd
Haynes’ Far From Heaven (2002), which resuscitates in an exaggerated yet
‘realistic’ fashion the 1950s melodramas of Douglas Sirk in order to dissect
and correct their gender, sexual and racial politics; or Steven Soderbergh’s
Side Effects (2013), which updates the Hitchcockian ‘wrong man’ thriller by
providing it with a richly detailed contemporary metrosexual setting, even
while invoking Production Code era theories of poetic justice in an interest-
ing retro gesture. Today’s ‘event’ franchises are also connected to readily
identifiable genres (among other aspects of popular culture such as comic
books or graphic novels), built on special effects and designed to hasten the
flow of adrenaline for huge audiences of largely youthful filmgoers. These
films constitute the essential first and profitable steps taken towards creat-
ing after-markets of huge earnings potential. The event film finds its other
in the commercial/independent production in its several, constantly evolving
industrial forms, films put together on a modest budget and marketed to a
relatively small coterie of cognoscenti and media buffs, whose expected pleas-
ures are more dependent upon notions of difference, artistry, style, wit and
intellectually engaging themes.
These tastes are especially catered to by many neo-noir productions, those
which not only recycle studio-era conventions, but take the idea of classical film
noir (as inferred from valued texts and critical works) as their subject matter,
thus solidifying the claims of those films to be a genre (and, more broadly
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‘old’ to the ‘new’ Hollywood, importantly engaging the vexed concept of ‘con-
tinuity’. Questions difficult or, perhaps, impossible to answer inevitably arise.
How do we account for the persistence of foundational institutional elements
in the face of inevitable historical evolution or change? What exactly would it
mean for film noir to ‘end’ so that it could be revived? And so forth.
But perhaps periodising (and, to be sure, essentialising) speculations of this
kind are all ultimately beside the point, especially if film noir is, as I think, like
all other generic or classificatory categories (at least from a critical point of
view) no more and no less than a heuristic enabling discussion of some body
of films selected for critical discussion, a concept useful, then, only insofar as
it advances rather than retards their collective analysis. As Naremore wisely
points out, in fact, ‘there is no transcendent reason why we should have a noir
category at all’.14 Indeed. But, of course, as he goes on to affirm, this is not a
question left entirely up to the discretion of critics since genres are not simply
‘categories’ that the academy finds useful or not; they are also part of a broad
film culture in which the notion of noir has become truly global, as this volume
demonstrates through its anatomising of noirness in regional or national
cinemas. The variety and abundance of international noir films therein
anatomised are likely to surprise even the most informed cinephile. Film noir,
Naremore persuasively argues, is fundamentally a discursive category, a way
of talking about selected Hollywood productions and similar releases from
other film traditions. But within contemporary film culture, film noir has also
become a set of conventions, values and ideas that govern production even
as they decisively inform and shape consumption for certain niche viewers
around the world. The globalness of the noir phenomenon thus owes much
to what Richard Martin has termed the ‘industrial assimilation’ of what was
originally simply a critical label.
Metagenericism, the self-conscious and critical return to the cinematic past,
is one of the most important of the features of contemporary American noir,
and it marks this stage of the phenomenon as radically different from its clas-
sical phase. These earlier films exist within the boundaries of an emerging, if
unorganised, group practice; neo-noir films, more often than not, take that
practice as their subject matter, as the ‘meaning’ they intend to express and
deconstruct for a narrowly defined audience knowledgeable about, and fasci-
nated by, Hollywood history, which such filmgoers are eager to see recognised
and commented upon. This is one of the differences between modernist and
postmodernist versions of cultural production, or between Fordist and post-
Fordist senses of product.15
As one might expect, given the general appeal to cinematic ‘knowingness’
of New Hollywood production, neo-noirs self-consciously reflect a central
thematic preoccupation of the genre: the domination of the present by the past
(put another way, the failure of a future for the characters to emerge from the
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to look at it, but your looking changes it’. Applied to human affairs, this means
that you can never truly know ‘the reality of what happened’ as you explore
actions and motivations. Thus Riedenschneider places his concern about alibis
and workable defences (a motif derived directly from The Postman Always
Rings Twice) within a broader context of ideas through these meditations on
the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle (which is never named as such). For it
no longer seems the case that lawyers like Riedenschneider are simply being
cynical when they ignore getting at the ‘truth’ of the case as they search for an
explanation that will work rhetorically, as it were, to convince jurors that they
in fact do not know what happened.
Viewed from the perspective of universal and inescapable uncertainty,
reasonable doubt is no more than the admission that provisional certainty (a
certainty subject to only minimal doubt) is often a mirage. In the courtroom,
the provisional certainty needed to convict is easily undermined by the dem-
onstration that there is a plausible alternative, some other way of construing
the facts. This plausible alternative, however, does not require absolute and
detailed proof; it does not require, in fact, provisional certainty. It must point
only towards the improbability of knowing for sure. Thus Riedenschneider’s
profession, as he explains, occupies itself with the serial demonstration of
a central epistemological axiom, of whose ineluctability he must persuade
jurors. As he puts it, ‘there is no what happened’, and the ironic correlative of
this postulate is that ‘the more you look, the less you know’. An inescapable
paradox rules human affairs; the ‘only fact’, the only certainty, is uncertainty.
Not only does uncertainty undermine the all-too-human search after determi-
nate knowledge. It also reveals an unknowability that deepens as the desire to
know and thereby master experience grows stronger.
The lawyer understands, if in a partial and self-serving fashion, some of
the larger implications of Heisenberg’s theorising (whose ultimate point is
quite the opposite of what he maintains, it being to identify a provisional
form of certainty, the relative probabilities in the tracking of the position and
momentum of subatomic particles). But Riedenschneider deceives himself that
the Uncertainty Principle offers him mastery over Doris’s plight. And this is
because he falls victim to another paradox, his own certainty about uncer-
tainty, the mistaken notion that the chain of ‘unknowing’ must end somewhere
in an unshakable predictability of which he may take advantage, that, in short,
there are no surprises in store. Riedenschneider’s detective has discovered what
the lawyer thinks is the key to the successful defence of Doris. Big Dave, it turns
out, was not the war hero he always bragged of being; though drafted, he never
left the United States. Dave’s fabrications provide the blackmailer that Doris
said approached her lover (it was, of course, Ed) with an exploitable weakness.
Big Dave would have been easy prey to anyone learning the truth of his service
record, which would not have been hard to do. And, as Riedenscheider points
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out, the fact that Big Dave had lied to the very people sitting on the hometown
jury means that they would be more likely to see such a blackmailer as a real
possibility. He exults that the jurors will feel reasonable doubt about the state’s
version of Dave’s death. Doris will thus be acquitted.
And yet it is not to be. We should not forget that ‘the more you look, the
less you see’. Big Dave’s continual self-revelation, his incessant bragging, actu-
ally conceal unexpected secrets. But the exposure of these lies offers only a
slim point of certainty with regard to him. And, most important, that Dave
has been unmasked does not mean that either Doris or Ed is now knowable.
Riedenschneider, as it turns out, hasn’t even learned all that there is to know
about Dave. But knowledge, even the immediate kind that flows from one’s
own experience, is of dubious value. The knowledge that the lawyer thought
would assure his client’s deliverance actually drives her to suicide, making any
question of legal proceedings irrelevant. Riedenscheider never takes the trouble
to determine if Doris and Dave were actually having an affair, even though
Ed’s ‘confession’ offers his jealousy about their relationship as his motive,
which Doris never disputes. Thus the revelation about Big Dave’s past has an
effect on Doris that Riedenschneider in no way foresees. Doris’s attraction to
her lover, as Ed had earlier surmised, was based on, first, the he-man image
he presented to the world (so much of a contrast to slightly built, unassuming
and depressive Ed, who proved unfit for war service because of fallen arches);
and, second, the promise Dave offered her of a deliverance from economic
marginality and sexual boredom. Dave was going to expand his department
store operation by building an ‘annex’ where Doris would be comptroller. The
blackmailer deprived them of this hope by taking the money Dave needed for
the new enterprise and put them in jeopardy by forcing Doris, who was the
bookkeeper, to betray her profession and embezzle money (‘my books were
always perfect’). Then, in an ironic turning borrowed straight from Cain,
Doris, who had sacrificed herself to save him, stands accused of his murder.
But the revelation that Dave’s ‘bigness’ was in the final analysis only a
mirage proves too much for her to bear. She commits suicide in her cell the
night before the trial can begin. Shocked, Riedenschneider still fails to under-
stand, thinking that Doris had despaired of his ability to get her off. Because
he does not even consider the truth of Ed’s revelation that Dave and Doris
were having an affair, the lawyer never thinks that ‘getting off’ might no longer
matter to her once she has learned the truth about him. Sometimes knowledge
is indeed a curse, a truism that echoes interestingly throughout the remainder
of a narrative built upon misunderstanding, misdirection, misreading and
misconnection.
The Man Who Wasn’t There offers a series of variations on the uncertainty
principle (‘there is no what happened’) and its twin, though opposed, cor-
relatives: unknowability (‘the more you look, the less you know’) and the
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anticipated last moments of Ed’s life ‘play’ out in an execution chamber whose
abstract, minimalist design comes right from German Expressionism as Walt
Disney might have imagined it. As a whole, however, the film eschews such
eclecticism (carried to a humorous extreme in that ingenious pastiche, Dead
Men Don’t Wear Plaid, in which a character from ‘now’ speaks, through
the magic of special effects, to filmic counterparts from ‘then’, who can be
manipulated to make it seem as if they were present rather than ‘filmed’). The
resurrected, confected nature of the revitalisation, of course, is always already
present. In contrast, The Man Who Wasn’t There attempts to locate the
‘missing harmony’ of classic noir, that structure of feeling that in some sense
animates the earlier movement, never hitherto fully evoked, it being the result,
properly speaking, of the objectifying intellectualisation to which the cinematic
past has been subject.
Identifying a spiritual malaise rather than, in the classic noir tradition, the
criminality of the dark city, the film’s title refers to Ed Crane, whose lack of
passion makes him absently present. Like Camus’s Meursault, he is a man both
alienated and anomic, but he becomes, at least retrospectively, self-analytical,
the possessor of knowledge that separates him from others, who live happily
unenlightened about life’s bitter ironies and impenetrable strangeness. At first
saying not ‘yes’ but only ‘all right’ to life and, afterwards, refusing to reconnect
with the epistemological limitations of his fellows, Crane is never fully ‘there’,
and this alienation sets him both apart from and over others. After his encoun-
ter with the absurd (the chain of events that ‘lead’ him involuntarily to kill Big
Dave and bring about the deaths of Doris and his erstwhile business partner),
Ed refuses the easy embrace of unreflective meaninglessness that full immer-
sion into everydayness brings. But the title can also be taken as usefully char-
acterising the film’s cultural archaeology: the attempt of the Coens to bring to
life the noir protagonist such as he never was, but in some sense should have
been (or, rather, is now for us, corresponding to our desire for complexifying
reconfiguration).
The Coens, it must be said, not only re-inscribe but also revise the tradition
upon which they so deeply depend. Cain’s heroes never manage the escape
from solipsism Ed Crane haltingly manages. They are never free from the
powerful desires that move them, never manage to move ‘outside’ the entangle-
ments caused by their transgressiveness and scheming. Ed’s sudden movement
of consciousness owes more to Camus. As he dramatises in The Stranger (and
discusses at more length in his 1942 essay The Myth of Sisyphus), the realisa-
tion of death’s inevitability and arbitrariness strips the world of obfuscating
romanticisms, revealing it to be foreign, strange and inhuman, indifferent to
human hopes and hardly accommodating of any attempt to endow it with
transcendent meaning. Like Ed, the absurdist finds himself living a life parallel
to others, inhabiting their world but refusing to share with them the protective
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With the projects finally getting PCA approval during the war as film culture
became somewhat more liberal, the screenplays in each case retained the main
outlines of Cain’s plotting, massaging the endings to bring them more in line
with industry conventions, as the malefactors find themselves not only pun-
ished, but appropriately penitent, cognisant of sinfulness and accepting the
eminently righteous judgement they had in large part brought upon themselves
(as, to be sure, the novelist himself had outlined).28
Though adulterous lust, for which the protagonists initially feel no guilt,
figures as an important motivation in both novels, Cain was no D. H.
Lawrence or Henry Miller; he did not share the interest of literary modern-
ists in pushing the limits of sexual representation. Given the censorship, both
formal and informal, that governed literary production in the era, he could
not, of course, have offered an account of sexual passion that went beyond
euphemistic abstraction. And yet, as Gregory Porter puts it, Cain found sex
‘primal, foundational, structurally and ontologically indispensable’.29 Neither
novel offers even a brief description of the sexual passion that so strongly
bonds the illicit couple in each case, while Cain’s language is never even mildly
prurient. What PCA officials, and many readers at the time, found morally
problematic was the characters’ unpained disregard for hallowed institutions,
expressed through an adultery whose logic is that it becomes coldly murder-
ous, concerned with transforming in both cases inconvenient husbands into a
financial windfall, into easy money of the most horrific kind. It is hardly sur-
prising, of course, that the initial film versions feature nothing more than brief
embraces and kissing that would hardly qualify as ‘lustful’, which is the kind
of physical self-indulgence that would violate the Production Code. In fact, the
sexual encounters that are dramatised between Walter and Phyllis in Double
Indemnity and Frank and Cora in Postman are almost chaste, even within the
context of Old Hollywood, making it more than a little difficult for viewers to
sense properly the irresistibility of the connections that motor these relation-
ships. In promoting the centrality of sexual attraction, Cain’s novels speak
eloquently to long-established structures of feeling in the national culture, of
this there is no doubt for those of us who inhabit a post-Kinsey America. But
classic film noir could only hint at the carnality that existed uneasily beneath
the surface of conventional living, stipulating but not spectacularising its
existence, often displacing it metaphorically. In Henry Hathaway’s Niagara
(1950), for example, which recycles the key elements of Double Indemnity’s
plot, the marketing copy proclaimed ‘Marilyn Monroe and Niagara, a raging
torrent of emotion that even nature can’t control’. The Falls, and the rushing
waters that feed them, stand in for the eroticism that prompts the unfaith-
ful wife’s murderous plot and causes the husband, who survives her lover’s
attack, to then strangle the woman whom, even in death, he cannot cease
loving. Undone by passion, he actualises in his dying the film’s foundational
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metaphor, as he is swept over the falls in a boat that, with appropriate irony,
has run out of gas.
Changing mores as well as the industry’s rapidly evolving relationship to
American culture more generally led to the abandonment of the Code in 1968
and the institution of the Classification and Ratings Administration (CARA),
which was charged with rating the variable suitability of films for audiences
of different ages. In effect, the advent of CARA, and the audience tastes that
brought it into existence, made it possible for Hollywood to push the envelope
on sexual representation quite far. The American industry, if only for a brief
time in the early 1970s, even agreed to major distributors experimenting with
making available for adult audiences more generally witty and sophisticated
versions of what had hitherto been considered to be hardcore pornography and
thus of interest to only a specialised viewership.30 This moment quickly passed,
however, and by the 1980s, film producers had turned instead to stylish soft-
core productions whose sexual charge was amplified by glamour rather than
the all-revealing anatomical realism that was the stock-in-trade of films such as
Deep Throat (Jerry Gerard) and Behind the Green Door (Mitchell Brothers),
both released in 1972 as part of what became known as the ‘porno chic’ move-
ment (Green Door, interestingly enough, got a screening at Cannes that year,
indexing the changing position within establishment film culture of sexually
explicit films). Hardcore films, however sophisticated, proved unworkable
for various reasons, mostly legal. Harry Reems, who acted in Deep Throat,
found himself persecuted by the legal system in New York and Tennessee, and
actions were brought in several communities against the filmmakers by state
and local attorneys. With self-imposed limits on representation, the softcore
approach proved to be more commercially practical, especially since the US
Supreme Court determined in Miller v. California (1973) that in order to avoid
prosecution for obscenity a film needed to possess serious artistic, scientific
or social significance. Hollywood-style melodrama, as it turns out, would be
serious enough to foreclose any legal difficulties, except in those jurisdictions
(notably Fulton County in Atlanta, Georgia) where zealous prosecutors went
after even these releases.31
Classic noir films, in which lust more than affection figured as the basis of
‘romance’, were an obvious source for remaking as a new genre, soon chris-
tened ‘erotic thriller’ within the industry, quickly rose to profitable promi-
nence, with such early releases as Dressed to Kill (Brian De Palma, 1980),
Cat People (Paul Schrader, 1982), Body Double (Brian De Palma, 1984) and
Fatal Attraction (Adrian Lyne, 1987). If the retro noirs such as The Man Who
Wasn’t There recontextualise their literary and cinematic sources, adding
intellectual complexity for viewers interested in the more intellectual and,
especially, existential aspects of the original series, the early erotic thrillers do
not eschew obvious connections to the classic period. Dressed to Kill and Body
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because he pursues her and she finds him irresistible, even though she is a
married woman. Ned thinks it is because they cannot be happy apart that
they decide to murder her inconvenient husband Edmund (Richard Crenna),
a lawyer turned developer who quickly judges Ned a failure when they meet.
The plot goes ahead, and Edmund is defeated in a hand-to-hand struggle that
almost turns against Ned, but this takes place without the elaborate staging of
Cain’s original version, which constitutes the most elaborate proof of Walter’s
cunning and intrepidness. In Kasdan’s rewriting of the novel, the murder is
made to seem an implausible accident, and there is no symbolically significant
substitution of the murderer for his victim to complete the deception. Ned
gradually learns that his plotting is nothing more than a useful illusion, con-
structed by Matty in order to frame him for Edmund’s murder. Looking for
a lawyer she could easily hoodwink, Matty had set out to seduce Ned for
the purpose. Her attraction to him was feigned, and her cold-bloodedness
extended far enough to murdering a lookalike girlfriend, whose identity she
had stolen years before, in order to provide a corpse that will fool the police
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into thinking she is dead. Ned winds up in prison, convicted of murder, but
only then – much too late for it to make any difference – does he find the
evidence that uncovers Matty’s scheme. The film ends with a shot of Matty
comfortably reclining on a beach chair in some obviously far distant tropical
beach, having triumphed over the feckless men she has lured into her life and
then destroyed for her own purposes.
In the original film version of Double Indemnity, Walter remains firmly in
control of the narrative, killing his lover Phyllis after she failed to kill him and
revealing the details of their plotting in a confessional Dictaphone recording
meant for his boss. Kasdan’s sexual politics are quite different, and they con-
stitute, to be sure, a significant updating of Cain’s original concept. But, as
the title indicates, this is a film about sexuality, pure and simple. Criminality,
especially the sociopathy of the two lovers and their quite different levels
of self-possession and cunning, only constitutes the requisite plot in which
passion and lust find their appropriately extended representation, with Cainian
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twists and turns providing a strictly subordinate form of pleasure. Body Heat,
in short, is a kind of anti-romance in which the illicit and murderous plotting
of the two lovers legitimates a carnality that had first found much more limited
cinematic representation in the two classic noir versions of Cain’s fiction. In
this film, and in other neo-noir erotic thrillers such as Catherine Hardwicke’s
recent Plush (2013), which also accords full, and often disturbing, representa-
tion to the destructive power of sexual compulsion, the ‘something missing’ of
classic noir is both evoked and supplied.
Notes
1. See, in particular, Jameson’s collected essays on the subject, The Cultural Turn:
Selected Writings on the Postmodern (London: Verso, 1998).
2. Peter Booker, ‘Postmodern adaptation: Pastiche, intertextuality and re-functioning’,
in Deborah Cartmell and Imelda Whelehan, The Cambridge Companion to
Literature on Screen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 114.
3. David Bordwell, Janet Staiger and Kristin Thompson, The Classical Hollywood
Cinema: Film Style and Mode of Production to 1960 (London: Routledge, 1985).
The argument toward aesthetic and production regularity advanced by Bordwell
et al. probably goes too far. For a recent partial corrective, see Nick Smedley, A
Divided World: Hollywood Cinema and Émigré Directors in the Era of Roosevelt
and Hitler, 1933–1948 (Bristol: Intellect, 2011).
4. Murray Smith, ‘Theses on the philosophy of Hollywood history’ in Steve Neale
and Murray Smith (eds), Contemporary Hollywood Cinema (London: Routledge,
1998), p. 8. Further references noted in the text. This point is also made usefully,
if in a different way, by Richard Maltby, who argues that ‘Hollywood functions
according to a commercial aesthetic, one that is essentially opportunist in its eco-
nomic motivation. The argument that Hollywood movies are determined, in the
first instance, by their existence as commercial commodities sits uneasily with ideas
of classicism and stylistic determination’, in Richard Maltby, Hollywood Cinema,
second edition (Oxford: Blackwell, 2003), p. 15.
5. Vertical integration of the film industry involved, for the five major studios, the
organisation of production, distribution and exhibition activities under the same
corporate structure, a powerful business arrangement that was ended by Supreme
Court action at the close of the 1940s.
6. Michael Storper, ‘The transition to flexible specialisation in the US film industry’, in
Ash Amin (ed.), Post-Fordism: A Reader (Oxford: Blackwell, 1994), see especially
pp. 216–17.
7. In addition to the Smith chapter already cited, a useful contribution to this ongoing
discussion comes from Richard Maltby, ‘‘Nobody knows everything’: Post-
classical historiographies and consolidated entertainment’, in Neale and Smith,
Contemporary Hollywood Cinema, pp. 21–44.
8. Smith, ‘Theses’, p. 11.
9. Richard Martin, Mean Streets and Raging Bulls: The Legacy of Film Noir in
Contemporary American Cinema (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 1999), p. 5.
10. James Naremore, More than Night: Film Noir in its Contexts (Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press, 1998), p. 277.
11. See, for example, Martin, Mean Streets and Raging Bulls, pp. 11–34; Foster
Hirsch, Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir (New York: Limelight
Editions, 1999), pp. 1–20; and Alain Silver and Elizabeth Ward (eds), Film Noir:
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218
the new sincerity of neo-noir
32. See Hirsch, Detours and Lost Highways for further discussion of this key critical
term.
33. Nina K. Martin provides an admirable survey of this debate in her Sexy Thrills:
Undressing the Erotic Thriller (Urbana, IL: Illinois University Press, 2007), which
focuses on direct-to-video releases.
219
10. POST-NOIR:
GETTING BACK TO BUSINESS
Mark Bould
For anyone attempting to periodise a genre, let alone discuss its ‘postness’,
there is a vital lesson in perspective to be learned from Tag Gallagher’s cri-
tique of evolutionary models of genre. He points out that Robert Warshow,
writing in 1954, ‘found differences between early-1950s and pre-war westerns
almost identical to those which critics like [Thomas] Schatz . . . detect between
westerns of the 1970s and early 1950s’.1 Gallagher attributes this, at least in
part, to critics often being ‘unsympathetic to the subtleties of “old” movies’,2
perhaps loving them ‘for their supposed naïveté’ but nonetheless setting them
up ‘as the “fall guys” for invidious comparisons’3 which favour recent films
that are thus purported to be more ‘complex, . . . amoral, and . . . vivid’.4 Thus
it becomes clear that any film that might now seem to be ‘post’ will inevitably
– and soon, perhaps even in the lag between writing and publication – fall back
into the mass of genre productions. Whatever distinctiveness and exceptional-
ity was created for it by the sheer contemporaneity of its specific variation upon
generic repetitions will be speedily forgotten, levelled out, homogenised into
a general pattern. Furthermore, as current understandings of genre suggest, to
speak of post-noir is to speak of that which, in an important sense and like all
genres, does not, and cannot, exist. It is not a material object, but a contingent
and contested discursive construct; it is a claim, an argument, a manoeuvre.
This chapter begins with a reflection on the notions of ‘post’ and ‘postness’
and how they function. It indicates the ways in which dominant understand-
ings of noir as primarily a US phenomenon might be challenged and refreshed
by a turn towards noir in other national, international and transnational
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post-noir: getting back to business
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post-noir: getting back to business
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post-noir: getting back to business
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international noir
and styles’, as in Someone to Watch Over Me (Scott, US, 1987), Red Rock
West (Dahl, US, 1993), The Last Seduction (Dahl, UK/US, 1994) and Bound
(Wachowski and Wachowski, US, 1996).37 In a footnote, he argues against
‘consider[ing] this process only as one phase succeeding another’, pointing to
the ongoing production of pastiche neo-noir in films such as Miller’s Crossing
(Coen, US, 1990), Mortal Thoughts (Rudolph, US, 1991) and The Man Who
Wasn’t There (Coen, US/UK, 2001), as well European films, such as Shallow
Grave (Boyle, UK, 1994), The Near Room (Hayman, UK, 1995) and Croupier
(Hodges, France/UK/Germany/Ireland, 1998) ‘whose geo-cultural difference
are liable to lead to the sense of pastiche’.38 The idea that some contemporary
noirs are, thanks to the cycle of pastiches, now able to get back to the business
of just being noir is extremely appealing. Indeed, it is largely responsible for
the selection of films discussed in the remainder of this chapter. However, the
examples of such films that Dyer lists – the wording of his footnote implies that
he accepts this description of them – appear, less than a decade later, indis-
tinguishable from those listed as pastiches; and, given the style-consciousness
of their directors, Ridley Scott, John Dahl and the Wachowski siblings, it is
surprising to find that anyone ever thought otherwise.
Lest I should be charged with committing the very error identified by
Gallagher, to which the opening of this chapter referred, they did always seem
to me like pastiches. However, this does not necessarily exclude them from the
business of noir. To whatever extent Fredric Jameson is correct to describe pas-
tiche as ‘speech in a dead language’, ‘neutral . . . mimicry’ and ‘blank parody’,
he is only normalising his own response to textual features.39 Pastiche can be
a major element of a film without being a totalising dominant; and the social
relationships within which films are encountered, engaged with and consumed
do not produce uniform results. For example, while I personally find nothing
of political value in Someone to Watch Over Me and Red Rock West, there
can be no denying the cultural/political impact of The Last Seduction’s Bridget
(Linda Fiorentino) and Bound’s Corky (Gina Gershon) and Violet (Jennifer
Tilly) – and the fact that this lesbian couple get away with it – when the
films were released, regardless of both films’ narrative and visual pastiches of
classical Hollywood noir.
Therefore, just as construing noir after the 1980s as necessarily having
moved beyond pastiche is problematic, so too is any assumption that because
a noir is partly, or even primarily, pastiche it cannot also perform the genre’s
critical work.
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post-noir: getting back to business
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post-noir: getting back to business
into someone else; on the contrary, Salinger insists, life is always a matter of
making choices. Wexler then persuades him that he must choose to step outside
the law in order to find justice (in truth, he has already done so multiple times,
albeit without realising it). The IBBC cannot be brought down by legal means
because the whole system of global capital – multinational corporations, gov-
ernments, terrorist networks, organised crime – needs banks like the IBCC to
exist in order to operate in the grey and black economies that are intertwined
with, rather than distinct from, the legal economy. Salinger and Wexler inform
the Calvini brothers that the IBBC ordered their father’s death, thus forcing the
CEO, Jonas Skarssen (Ulrich Thomsen), to buy guidance systems from Ahmet
Sunay (Haluk Bilginer) instead. However, Sunay has already sold to Israel
countermeasures that will render the missiles ineffective, so all Salinger needs
to do is record Skarssen admitting to this knowledge and release the tape to
his Syrian and Iranian buyers, who will pull out of the deal and bankrupt the
IBBC. This is not defeating the system, but unleashing it upon itself. Of course,
in the way of noir, Salinger’s plan goes awry, and he finds himself drawing
a gun on Skarssen. His big moral dilemma, whether he should shoot or not,
is quickly rendered utterly redundant. The Calvinis’ hitman steps in from
nowhere and kills Skarssen. The system rumbles on.
The end credits display a series of newspapers, moving from front-page cov-
erage of Skarssen’s murder to business section accounts of the IBBC’s expan-
sion into a third world newly awash in Chinese small arms. The final headline
returns us to Whitman, who parted ways with Salinger at his behest when
he joined forces with Wexler. She has moved on to bigger and better things,
and is now heading an investigation into the money-laundering activities of
offshore banks. While it seems like a moment of personal triumph, it is just
global capitalism maintaining the façade of legality while ensuring its supposed
watchdogs remain powerless to check its lawlessness.
The International does not give any clear view of the primary victims of
the IBBC’s machinations, reducing them to some briefly glimpsed footage on
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post-noir: getting back to business
thinking that will be the end of it, but he becomes suspicious after his client,
who admits she is not Meenakshi Rathore and that her name is Manorama,
apparently commits suicide.
Manorama was actually a social worker and activist opposed to the con-
struction of the canal. Satyaveer tracks down her roommate, Sheetal (Raima
Sen) and follows her to the orphanage where she works. It is supported by,
and named after, the childless Rathore, whose real wife is confined to a wheel-
chair. The woman he photographed arguing with the minister turns out to be
Sameera (Poonam Gibson), the fiancée of Rathore’s personal physician, Anil
Poddar (Rajesh M), who also runs the orphanage’s clinic. Mistaking Satyaveer
for another journalist, she reveals that she is Rathore’s illegitimate daughter,
and that she needs him to admit to this publicly so that Anil’s parents will
permit their marriage to go ahead; he refuses to do so because her mother
was a Muslim. After witnessing the inflated prices being paid at auction for
plots of deserted wasteland that will face onto the canal, if and when it is
built, Satyaveer begins to piece the mystery together. He discovers that Sheetal
died some time ago and that Neetu, the woman pretending to be her, actually
works for Rathore. He is framed for the bloody murder of Sameera and Anil,
and while on the run finds the roll of film Manorama shot the night after his
failed attempt. It shows Rathore sexually abusing, and accidentally killing, a
young girl who had gone missing from the orphanage.43 Satyaveer concludes
Manorama was using it to blackmail Rathore into not restarting construction
on the canal. He could not be more wrong.
Manorama worked for Rathore, infiltrating NGOs and protest groups. Anil
is her brother, and when they discovered that Sameera was Rathore’s daugh-
ter, and that Rathore had terminal cancer, they kept the latter a secret from
the minister while trying to persuade him to recognise Sameera. Acknowledged
as his only child, she would inherit everything, including all the land he owns
through and alongside the canal route. They were just in it for his money – the
political corruption around the development project, even the decades of child
abductions and abuse, which seemed to be the very core of the narrative turn
out to have been peripheral to the scheme actually driving the narrative.
It is a clever switch. Early on, posing as a journalist writing an article on
an organisation protesting the canal, Satyaveer tries to gather information
about Manorama’s life and background. He explains to her colleagues that
he needs the human interest angle provided by her death to shape a story
that will allow him to express their shared ‘socio-political views’. In a similar
manner, Manorama resolves into a melodrama about the conniving of greedy
relatives, but not before foregrounding the socio-political backdrop to their
actions. After attending the auction, Satyaveer comes across the temporary
encampment of some dispossessed peasants, and asks an old man where they
are going. He replies:
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international noir
just moving along. We’ll go where our hunger takes us. Our land is gone
. . . I’m just a peasant, son. All this land belongs to Rathore. Our families
worked this land for generations, eked out a living from this dry dirt. But
now the canal’s coming – the Raja’s barren land will yield gold. There’s
no room for us or our hunger here now. May God have mercy on us.
This cannot help but recall the controversial Narmada dam project,44 which
displaced at least 70,000 people and, while state governments apparently
turned a blind eye, failed to comply with almost every mandated environment
and health safeguard. Such lucrative development projects, long favoured by
the regulatory and directive organisations that work to ensure the extension
and perpetuation of the capitalist global economy, are commonplace, as are
such consequences.
Despite Hollywood’s much commented upon turn to (occasional) nar-
ratively complex, broad-tapestry, ensemble-cast, cross-class melodramas in
the new millennium, such overt political commentary is relatively rare; John
Sayles’ semi-independent Lone Star (US, 1996) and Silver City (US, 2004) are
obvious exceptions. Instead, this kind of narrative has found a home in the
‘quality’ dramas of the TVIII era, most obviously The Wire (US, 2002–8),
Forbrydelsen/The Killing (Denmark/Norway/Sweden/Germany, 2007–12),
Engrenages/Spiral (France, 2005–) and, in a more fantastical mode, the
abruptly cancelled Day Break (US, 2006).
In contrast, one particular strength of lower-budget post-noir film lies in its
capacity for realist narratives focused on the lives of those Bauman describes as
the ‘locally tied’.45 Frozen River (Hunt, US, 2008) is set in upstate New York,
on the US border with Canada. In the winter, it is difficult to tell the grey sky
apart from the snow-covered ground. Ray Eddy (Melissa Leo) lives in a bat-
tered old single-wide trailer, with her two sons, fifteen-year-old TJ (Charlie
McDermott) and five-year-old Ricky (James Reilly), and a gambling addict
husband, Troy, who has just disappeared with their savings – money they need
to take delivery of their dream home, a double-wide with three bedrooms and
wall-to-wall carpet. She spots Troy’s car at the bus stop by the Territorial High
Stakes bingo hall on the edge of the reservation, just as it is being stolen by
Lila Littlewolf (Misty Upham). When Ray confronts her, the young Mohawk
woman tells her where she can sell the car to a smuggler who is always on the
lookout for a good car with a button release trunk; however, she goes on to
con Ray into crossing the over the frozen river that passes through the reser-
vation, and is thus not patrolled, into Canada in order to smuggle a pair of
Chinese workers into the US.46
Lila is unpopular with the tribal council, in part because of her husband’s
death, and is allowed no real contact with her infant son, who was taken away
from her and is being raised by her mother-in-law. Ray is reduced to serving
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post-noir: getting back to business
her sons popcorn and Tang for two successive meals, and with their television
about to be repossessed, she unsuccessfully pleads with her boss at the Yankee
Dollar store to put her on full time, as he promised he would after six months
when he hired her two years ago. Faced with losing the deposit on the double-
wide if she cannot make the balloon payment by Christmas, she sees no way
out other than to go into business with Lila; for each person they smuggle into
the US, they are paid $1,200.
Despite their initial antagonism, and the particularities of their different
situations, Ray and Lila grow to recognise their shared marginalisation and
immiseration. A kind of class solidarity emerges between them, affectively
figured as a bond shared between mothers whose children have no one else.
This is cemented when Ray, who knows she will be treated much more leni-
ently because she is white, gives herself up to the police so that Lila can avoid
arrest and expulsion from the reservation. Equally significantly, Ray trusts Lila
(who snatches back her own son) to take care of TJ, Ricky and their new home
while she serves a couple of months in prison.
As well as capturing the ceaseless, wearying precarity of minimum-wage
(and below) workers, Frozen River carefully links the constraints on its pro-
tagonists to global capital. When Ricky asks his mother what will become of
the single-wide when they move into their new home, she explains that it will
be flattened, shipped to China, melted down and turned into toys that will be
shipped back to the US for her to sell at Yankee Dollar. Although she does
not seem to connect this to the Chinese Lila tricked her into smuggling across
the border, on their next trip, the first at her own suggestion, the nature of
this commerce in people becomes clear. Their cargo have their shoes taken
away from them so that, once in the US, they cannot flee; each undocumented
worker is destined to indentured servitude to the snakehead gang behind the
trafficking operation until they have paid off the cost – some $40,000–$50,000
each – of being brought to the US. On their final trip, Ray even risks her own
safety to protect two young women, clearly destined for sex work, from a traf-
ficker’s physical abuse. Despite their global movement of such sans papiers,
they are every bit as locally tied as Ray and Lila.
Mang jing/Blind Shaft (Li, China/Germany/Hong Kong, 2003) is set in
Shanxi in northern China, one of the country’s poorest provinces. The high,
cold, dry plateau often appears like nothing more than a succession of open-
cast mines. In this coal-rich region, mine bosses cut corners so as to make
their quotas, and with thousands of deaths in the mines every year, they are
anxious to avoid investigations. As the opening minutes of the film show us,
Song Jinming (Yi Lixiang) and Tang Zhaoyang (Wang Shuangbao), two of
China’s millions of unemployed and underemployed migrant workers, have
found a way to take profitable advantage of this. Having convinced a third
man that it is necessary to pose as Tang’s brother in order to get a job at this
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particular mine, they murder him mid-shift then fake his death in a cave-in. So
as to contain news of the fatality, the boss orders thugs violently to turn back
anyone who tries to leave the mine camp, and then sets about persuading Tang
to accept cash compensation for his bereavement in exchange for signing a
waiver stating that his brother died from his own carelessness. When a hench-
man suggests just killing off Tang and Song, the only thing that keeps the boss
from doing so is the prospect of the much larger bribe he might have to pay
to the police if their deaths are discovered. Once Tang accepts the money, he
and Song are fired, which enables them to make their way to a nearby town
to remit their earnings to their distant families, and to find another victim for
their lethal scam.
Tang is a stone killer, indifferent to everyone except Song and, presum-
ably, the family he supports. Song is more humane, concerned about being
able to pay for his son’s tuition, and is genuinely reluctant when Tang tricks
Yuan Fengming (Wang Baoqiang) into posing as Song’s nephew. Yuan is just
fifteen, naive and goodhearted. His father left home six months earlier to look
for work and has not been heard from since. Yuan left school because he can
no longer afford it, and is desperate to earn the money necessary to keep his
younger sister in school. He even hopes to find his father while wandering in
search of work. When the threesome are eventually hired at a distant mine,
they must work a trial period for nothing, and pay for their boots and helmets,
before receiving even the meagre pay typical of the industry. Song becomes
attached to Yuan, although he denies it, and even wonders whether he is the
son of the last man they killed. He cannot bring himself to murder the boy, but
one day, after setting blasting charges in the shaft in which they are working,
Tang kills their snooping foreman and does not hesitate to strike down Song
to get to Yuan. Yuan flees, and Song manages to knock out Tang before
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post-noir: getting back to business
collapsing beside him. If either of them is still alive, they are both killed when
the charges are ignited. Over his confused protests, Yuan is bullied by the mine
boss into accepting compensation for his supposed uncle’s death.
Mang jing possesses a kind of grubby, digital documentary realism. It is
shot in such a way as to match the footage that was covertly shot on uncon-
trolled locations, including actual mining camps whose managers Li had to
bribe in order to gain access. As with Frozen River, affective bonds, albeit
considerably more attenuated, are intertwined with recognition of a shared
class position. This is apparent in the relationship between Song and Tang,
and in the paternal interest Song takes in Yuan, but its most potent and
touching expression comes elsewhere. One of the excuses Song concocts to
postpone Yuan’s murder is that the boy should not die a virgin, so they take
him to a brothel in the nearby town and set him up with a young prostitute,
Xiao Hong (Jing Ai). She presents herself as a somewhat jaded professional
to the older man, but lowers this front a little when alone with Yuan. Some
days later, when the men have finally been paid, they return to town, and
Yuan is eager to send his wages back home. As he queues up, a rather more
conservatively dressed Xiao exits the office where she, too, has been remitting
her earnings. He is too shy to respond to her greeting but, as she passes by,
she reaches out and squeezes him gently on the shoulder. It is a tiny moment
of human empathy, snatched from the cash nexus that otherwise dominates
social relations.
Although Blind Shaft makes no reference to extensive Western investment
and profiteering from China’s poorly regulated and extremely dangerous
mining industry, the film is careful to signal the global flows of capital through
the region. This is signalled by commodities – Song’s shoulder bag has a logo
saying ‘Monterey’; the pornographic images on the walls of the miners’ shack
and the less explicit ones that decorate Xiao’s small room in the brothel are all
of Western women – and also by the new lyrics to an old song that the two men
are taught by the sex workers in a karaoke bar. It no longer goes
but instead
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international noir
This history has produced a world in which, according to Tang, ‘only a mum’s
feelings for her kids are real’; and Song doubts that even that is true any more.
Conclusion
For Lyotard, ‘post’ represents a discursive strategy, a manner of construing the
present so as to shape our understanding of the past. It draws to the surface (or
perhaps creates) the latent content of memories. It causes us to remember or,
perhaps, creates memories (since, in a sense, that which has been forgotten is
not available for recollection). It implies a past that apparently causes, makes
necessary, the (construed) present. It normalises the past that can now be seen,
freeing it from the distorted view that once concealed it.
In proposing a version of post-noir, one that deliberately marginalises
expressionist visual style in favour of realist figuration and critique of capital-
ism, this chapter is not just an attempt to outline some post-millennial trends
in the genre. It also, in a modest way, remembers what noir, the pulp wing of
Critical Theory, does when it gets over itself and gets back to business.
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David Lynch, the Coen Brothers, and Quentin Tarantino’, in Mark Bould, Kathrina
Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir, London: Wallflower, pp. 152–67.
——. (2007), ‘Sex with the city: Urban spaces, sexual encounters and erotic spectacle
237
international noir
Notes
1. Tag Gallagher, ‘Shoot-out at the genre corral: Problems in the “evolution” or the
western’, in Barry Keith Grant (ed.), Film Genre Reader III (Austin, TX: University
of Texas Press), p. 263.
2. Ibid., p. 268.
3. Ibid., pp. 268–9.
4. Ibid., p. 263.
5. Jennifer Fay and Justus Nieland, Film Noir: Hard-Boiled Modernity and the
Cultures of Globalization (London: Routledge, 2010), p. ix.
6. Jack Boozer, ‘The lethal femme fatale in the noir tradition’, Journal of Film and
Video 51(3/4) (1999–2000), 20.
7. Ibid., 33.
8. Ibid., 33.
9. Greg Tuck, ‘Laughter in the dark: Irony, black comedy and noir in the films of
David Lynch, the Coen Brothers, and Quentin Tarantino’, in Mark Bould, Kathrina
Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds), Neo-Noir (London: Wallflower, 2009), p. 165.
10. Ibid., p. 166.
11. Ibid., p. 166.
12. Ibid., p. 166.
13. On the problems with evolutionary models of genre, see Gallagher, ‘Shoot-out at
the genre corral’.
14. Chuck Stephens, ‘A face in the crowd: Attack of the 100-foot hotcha. Late-noir
firestarter Beverly Michaels’s moment in the Hollywood sun’, Film Comment 48(4)
(2012), 18. His subtitle adds further confusion by describing Michael as a ‘late-noir
firestarter’.
15. See Rick Altman, Film/Genre (London: British Film Institute, 1999).
16. John Rieder, ‘On defining SF, or not: Genre theory, SF, and history’, Science Fiction
Studies 111 (2010), 200.
17. Mark Bould and Sherryl Vint, ‘There is no such thing as science fiction’, in James
Gunn, Marleen Barr and Matthew Candelaria (eds), Reading Science Fiction (New
York: Palgrave 2008).
18. John Frow, ‘ “Reproducibles, rubrics, and everything you need”: Genre theory
today’, PMLA 122(5) (2007), 1630.
19. Ginette Vincendeau, ‘French film noir’, in Andrew Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir
(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007), p. 45.
20. Raphaëlle Moine, Cinema Genre, trans. Alistair Fox and Hilary Radner (Oxford:
Blackwell, 2008), p. 60.
21. Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism
(London: Verso, 1991), p. 5.
22. Ibid., p. 40.
23. Ibid., p. 214.
24. Anne McClintock, ‘The angel of progress: Pitfalls of the term “postcolonialism” ’,
in Francis Barker, Peter Hulme and Margaret Iversen (eds), Colonial Discourse/
Postcolonial Theory (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2004), p. 254.
25. Francis Fukuyama, ‘The end of history’, The National Interest (summer 1989),
238
post-noir: getting back to business
online at http://ps321.community.uaf.edu/files/2012/10/Fukuyama-End-of-history-
article.pdf (accessed 18 July 2013).
26. Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Note on the meaning of “post-” ’, in Don Barry,
Bernadette Maher, Julian Pefanis, Virginia Spate and Morgan Thomas (trans.),
The Postmodern Explained: Correspondences 1982–1985 (Minneapolis, MN:
University of Minnesota Press, 1993), p. 77.
27. Ibid., p. 80.
28. Kwame Anthony Appiah, ‘Is the post- in postmodernism the post- in postcolonial?’,
Critical Inquiry 17(2) (winter 1991), 341–2.
29. Ibid., 348.
30. Ibid., 356.
31. Ibid., 353.
32. They are not alone in this drive to treat noir in ways that are not Americo-centric.
See, for example, David Desser, ‘Global noir: Genre film in the age of transnational-
ism’, in Barry Keith Grant (ed.), Film Genre Reader III (Austin, TX: University of
Texas Press, 2003), pp. 516–36; Carla Marcantonio, ‘The transvestite figure and
film noir: Pedro Almodóvar’s transnational imaginary’, in Jay Beck and Vicente
Rodríguez Ortega (eds), Contemporary Spanish Cinema and Genre (Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 2008) pp. 157–78; Chi-Yun Shin and Mark Gallagher
(eds), East Asian Film Noir: Transnational Encounters and Intercultural Dialogue
(London: I. B. Tauris, 2013); and Andrew Spicer (ed.), European Film Noir
(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007).
33. Richard Dyer, Pastiche (London: Routledge, 2007), p. 132.
34. Ibid., p. 129.
35. Ibid., pp. 132–3.
36. Ibid., p. 129.
37. Ibid., p. 129.
38. Ibid, pp. 135–6.
39. Jameson, Postmodernism, p. 17.
40. Manuel Castells, The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture, Volume
I: The Rise of the Network Society, second edition (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000),
p. 19.
41. Ibid., p. 131.
42. Zygmunt Bauman, Globalization: The Human Consequences (Cambridge: Polity,
1998), p. 88.
43. Rathore’s monstrosity is obviously indebted to Chinatown’s Noah Cross (John
Huston), himself a Richard Nixon figure. Some European post-noirs, such as De
zaak Alzheimer/The Memory of a Killer (Van Looy, Belgium/Netherlands, 2003)
and Män som hatar kvinnor/The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Oplev, Sweden/
Denmark/Germany/Norway, 2009), emphasise the monstrosity of the capitalist
class and its politician-compradors through their paedophilia, incest and other, fre-
quently murderous, sex crimes; others, such as Intacto (Fresnadillo, Spain, 2001),
13 Tzameti (Babluani, France/Georgia, 2005), Frontière(s)/Frontier(s) (Gens,
France/Switzerland, 2007), Frygtelig lykkelig/Terribly Happy (Genz, Denmark,
2008), Martyrs (Laugier, France/Canada, 2008) and Kill List (Wheatley, UK,
2011), often spill over into fantasy or horror to convey this monstrosity by sug-
gesting the hidden extension into present-day power relations archaic feudal
privilege and abuses, often linked to Europe’s fascist history and/or the occult. The
International’s Skarssen is perhaps unusual among such villain figures inasmuch as
there is nothing overtly unsavoury about him, although the scenes in which he is
seen at home with his young son, teaching him that relationships are instrumen-
tal, constantly to be weighed and strategised, do suggest that the sociopathy of
239
international noir
privilege, wealth and control that governs his business dealings – always seemingly
rational, but never reasonable – extends into all aspects of his life.
44. Familiar in the West from Arundhati Roy’s The Cost of Living (1999) and the doc-
umentaries A Narmada Diary (Dhuru and Patwardhan, India, 1995) and Drowned
Out (Armstrong, UK, 2002).
45. This emphasis on more overtly realist filmmaking here is not intended to suggest
that there is no place in post-noir for what could be broadly described as expres-
sionism. Beyond such oddities as Revolver (Ritchie, France/UK, 2005) and
Haywire (Soderbergh, US/Ireland, 2011) and such genuine one-offs as Southland
Tales (Kelly, Germany/US/France, 2006), The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call – New
Orleans (Herzog, US, 2009) and Black Swan (Aronofsky, US, 2010), there are
several directors pushing post-noir expressionism in new directions while getting
on with the business of noir, including: Tsukamoto Shinya, in Tokyo Fist (Japan,
1995), Bullet Ballet (Japan, 1998), Rokugatsu no hebi/A Snake of June (Japan,
2002); Nicolas Winding Refn, in Drive (US, 2011) and Only God Forgives (France/
Thailand/US/Sweden, 2013) especially, although this tendency has been evident
since his earliest films; and Neveldine & Taylor, in Crank (US, 2006) and Crank:
High Voltage (US, 2009), which are frenetic unofficial remakes of D.O.A. (Maté,
US, 1950) and Gamer (US, 2009). On Tsukamoto, see Greg Tuck, ‘Sex with the
city: Urban spaces, sexual encounters and erotic spectacle in Tsukamoto Shinya’s
Rokugatsu no Hebi – A Snake of June (2003)’, Film Studies 11 (2007), 49–60; on
Neveldine & Taylor, see Steven Shaviro, Post-Cinematic Affect (Winchester: Zero,
2010), pp. 93–130 and Lorrie Palmer, ‘Cranked masculinity: Hypermediation in
digital action cinema’, Cinema Journal 51(4) (2012), 1–25.
46. People trafficking is central to a number of post-noirs, including Dirty Pretty Things
(Frears, UK, 2002), Lilja 4-ever/Lilya 4-ever (Moodysson, Sweden/Denmark,
2002), Eastern Promises (Cronenberg, US/UK/Canada, 2007), Mang shan/Blind
Mountain (Li, China, 2007) and Flickan som lekte med elden/The Girl Who Played
with Fire (Alfredson, Sweden/Denmark/Germany, 2009).
240
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF
INTERNATIONAL FILM NOIR
Anderson, Joseph L. and Donald Richie (1982), The Japanese Film: Art and Industry
(expanded edition), Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Andrew, Dudley (1995), Mists of Regret: Culture and Sensibility in Classic French Film,
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
——. (ed.) (1987), Breathless, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Austin, Guy (1996), Contemporary French Cinema: An Introduction, Manchester:
Manchester University Press.
——. (1999), Claude Chabrol, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Babington, Bruce (ed.) (2001), British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean
Connery, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Badley, Linda (2011), Lars von Trier, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Barr, Charles (ed.) (1986), All Our Yesterdays: 90 Years of British Cinema, London:
British Film Institute.
Baskett, Michael (2008), The Attractive Empire: Transnational Film Culture in Imperial
Japan, Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press.
Bernardi, Joanne (2001), Writing in Light: The Silent Scenario and the Japanese Pure
Film Movement, Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.
Bordwell, David (1988), Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema, Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press.
Bould, Mark, Kathrina Glitre and Greg Tuck (eds) (2010), Neo-noir, New York:
Wallflower.
Browne, Nick, Paul G. Pickowicz, Vivian Sobchack and Esther Yau (eds) (1994), New
Chinese Cinemas: Forms, Identities, Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Brunette, Peter (2005), Wong Kar-wai, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Burch, Noël (1979), To the Distant Observer: Form and Meaning in the Japanese
Cinema, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Buss, Robin (1994), French Film Noir, New York: Marion Boyars.
241
international noir
Cheung, Esther M. K., Gina Marchetti and Tan See-Kam (eds) (2011), Hong Kong
Screenscapes: From the New Wave to the Digital Frontier, Hong Kong: Hong Kong
University Press.
Chibnall, Steve and Robert Murphy (eds) (1999), British Crime Cinema, London:
Routledge.
Choi, Jinhee (2010), The South Korean Film Renaissance: Local Hitmakers, Global
Provocateurs, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
Conard, Mark T. (ed.) (2007), The Philosophy of Neo-noir, Lexington, KT: University
Press of Kentucky.
Conway, Kelley (2004), Chanteuse in the City: The Realist Singer in French Film,
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Devlin, William J. and Shai Biderman (eds) (2011), The Philosophy of David Lynch,
Lexington, KN: University of Kentucky Press.
Dixon, Wheeler Winston (1997), The Films of Jean-Luc Godard, Albany, NY: State
University of New York Press.
Doom, Ryan P. (2009), The Coen Brothers, Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger.
Durham, Carolyn A. (1998), Double Takes: Culture and Gender in French Films and
their American Remakes, Hanover, NH: University Press of New England.
Dussere, Erik (2014), America is Elsewhere: The Noir Tradition in the Age of Consumer
Culture, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Fay, Jennifer and Justus Nieland (2010), Film Noir: Hard-Boiled Modernity and the
Cultures of Globalization, New York: Routledge.
Forbes, Jill (1992), The Cinema in France after the New Wave, London: British Film
Institute.
Forshaw, Barry (2012), British Crime Film: Subvertng the Social Order, New York:
Palgrave Macmillan.
Frodon, Jean-Michel (1995), L’Âge moderne du cinéma français: De la Nouvelle Vague
à nos jours, Paris: Flammarion.
Gates, Philippa and Lisa Funnell (2012), Transnational Asian Identities in Pan-Pacific
Cinemas: The Reel Asian Exchange, New York: Routledge.
Gateward, Frances (ed.) (2007), Seoul Searching: Culture and Identity in Contemporary
Korean Cinema, Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
Gerow, Andrew (2010), Visions of Japanese Modernity: Articulations of Cinema,
Nation, and Spectatorship, 1895–1925, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Giannopoulou, Zina (ed.) (2013), Mulholland Drive: Philosophers on Film, New York:
Routledge.
Gopalan, Lalitha (2002), Cinema of Interruptions: Action Genres in Contemporary
Indian Cinema, London: British Film Institute.
Greene, Naomi (1999), Landscapes of Loss: The National Past in Postwar French
Cinema, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Hall, Kenneth E. (2009), John Woo’s The Killer, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University
Press.
Hayward, Susan (1993), French National Cinema, London: Routledge.
——. (2004), Simone Signoret: The Star as Cultural Sign, New York: Continuum.
——. (2005), Les Diaboliques, London: I. B. Tauris.
——. (2010), Nikita, London: I. B. Tauris.
Hillier, Jim (ed.) (1985), Cahiers du cinéma: The 1950s, Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Hirsch, Foster (1999), Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir, New York:
Limelight Editions.
Hjort, Mette (2005), Small Nation, Global Cinema: The New Danish Cinema,
Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
242
selected bibliography
243
international noir
Nestingen, Andrew (2013), The Cinema of Aki Kaurismäki, New York: Columbia
University Press.
Nieland, Justus (2012), David Lynch, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Nolletti, Arthur Jr and David Desser (eds) (1992), Reframing Japanese Cinema:
Authorship, Genre, History, Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Oscherwitz, Dayna (2010), Past Forward: French Cinema and the Post-Colonial
Heritage, Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.
Palmer, R. Barton (2004), Joel and Ethan Coen, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Park, Jane Chi Hyun (2010), Yellow Future: Oriental Style in Hollywood Cinema,
Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Peacock, Steven (2013), Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy: Interdisciplinary
Approaches to Nordic Noir on Page and Screen, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Philippe, Olivier (1996), Le Film policier français contemporain, Paris: Cerf.
Phillips, Alastair (2004), City of Darkness, City of Light: Émigré Filmmakers in Paris
1929–1939, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
——. (2009), Rififi, London: I. B. Tauris.
Phillips, Alastair and Julian Stringers (eds) (2007), Japanese Cinema: Texts and
Contexts, London: Routledge.
Powrie, Phil (1997), French Cinema in the 1980s: Nostalgia and the Crisis of
Masculinity, Oxford: Clarendon.
——. (2001), Jean-Jacques Beineix, Manchester & New York: Manchester University
Press.
Prakash, Gyan (ed.) (2010), Noir Urbanisms: Dystopic Images of the Modern City,
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Prince, Stephen (1991), The Warrior’s Cinema: The Cinema of Akira Kurosawa,
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Rafter, Nicole (2006), Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society, New York: Oxford
University Press.
Richards, Jeffrey (1997), Films and British National Identity: From Dickens to Dad’s
Army, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Raghavendra, M. K. (2008), Seduced by the Familiar: Narration and Meaning in Indian
Popular Cinema, New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Rolls, Alistair and Deborah Walker (2009), French and American Noir: Dark Crossings,
New York: Palgrave MacMillan.
San Miguel, Helio (ed.) (2012), World Film Locations: Mumbai, New York: Intellect.
Schilling, Mark (2007), No Borders, No Limits: Nikkastsu Action Cinema, Godalming:
FAB Press.
Schwartz, Ronald (2005), Neo-noir: The New Film Noir Style from Psycho to
Collateral, Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
Schwartz, Vanessa (2007), It’s So French! Hollywood, Paris, and the Making of
Contemporary Film Culture, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Sellier, Geneviève (2008), Masculine Singular: French New Wave Cinema, Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
Shin, Chi-Yun and Mark Gallagher (eds) (2014), East Asian Film Noir, New York:
I. B. Tauris.
Shin, Chi-Yun and Julian Stringer (eds) (2005), New Korean Cinema, Edinburgh:
Edinburgh University Press.
Sieglohr, Ulrike (ed.) (2001), Heroines without Heroes: Reconstructing Female and
National Identities in European Cinema, 1945–1951, London: Cassell.
Smith, Carrie Lee and Donna King (eds) (2012), Men Who Hate Women and Women
Who Kick Their Asses: Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy in Feminist Perspective,
Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press.
244
selected bibliography
Soila, Tytti, Astrid Söderbergh Widding and Gunnar Iversen (eds) (1998), Nordic
National Cinemas, London: Routledge.
Sorrento, Matthew (2013), The New American Crime Film, Jefferson, NC: McFarland.
Spicer, Andrew (ed.) (2007), European Film Noir, Manchester: Manchester University
Press.
Sterritt, David (1999), The Films of Jean-Luc Godard: Seeing the Invisible, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Stringer, Julian (2007), Blazing Passions: Contemporary Hong Kong Cinema, New
York: Wallflower.
Teo, Stephen (1997), Hong Kong Cinema: The Extra Dimension, London: British Film
Institute.
Vasudevan, Ravi S. (ed.) (2000), Making Meaning in Indian Cinema, New Delhi:
Oxford University Press.
Vincendeau, Ginnette (2003), Jean-Pierre Melville: An American in Paris, London:
British Film Institute.
Wada-Marciano, Mitsuyo (2008), Nippon Modern: Japanese Cinema of the 1920s and
1930s, Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press.
Washburn, Dennis and Carole Cavanaugh (eds) (2001), Word and Image in Japanese
Cinema, New York: Cambridge University Press.
Yoshimoto, Mitsuhiro (2000), Kurosawa: Film Studies and Japanese Cinema, Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
245
SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY OF
INTERNATIONAL FILM NOIR
246
selected filmography
247
international noir
248
selected filmography
British Neo-noir
The Big Sleep (Michael Winner, 1978)
The Criminal (Julian Simpson, 1999)
Croupier (Mike Hodges, 1997)
Dance with a Stranger (Mike Newell, 1985)
The Debt Collector (Anthony Neilson, 1999)
The Disappearance of Alice Creed (J. Blakeson, 2009)
Eastern Promises (David Cronenberg, 2007)
Following (Christopher Nolan, 1998)
Fragment of Fear (Richard C. Sarafian, 1970)
Get Carter (Mike Hodges, 1971)
The Hit (Stephen Frears, 1984)
I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead (Mike Hodges, 2003)
The Krays (Peter Medak, 1990)
The Long Good Friday (John Mackenzie, 1980)
Mona Lisa (Neil Jordan, 1986)
The Offense (Sidney Lumet, 1972)
Out of Depth (Simon Marshall, 2000)
The Silent Cry (Julian Richards, 2003)
The Squeeze (Michael Apted, 1977)
French noir
Silent Era
Fantômas (Louis Feuillade, serial, 1913)
Judex (Louis Feuillade, serial, 1916)
Les Vampires (Louis Feuillade, serial, 1915)
Postwar
L’Ascenseur pour l’échafaud [Elevator to the Gallows] (Louis Malle, 1958)
Bob le flambeur (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1956)
Les Diaboliques [Diabolique] (Henri-Georges Clouzot, 1955)
Impasse des deux-anges [Dilemma of Two Angels] (Maurcie Tourneur, 1948)
La môme vert-de-gris [Poison Ivy] (Bernard Borderie, 1953)
Panique [Panic] (Julien Duvivier, 1947)
249
international noir
New Wave
Alphaville (Jean-Luc Godard, 1965)
À bout de souffle [Breathless] (Jean-Luc Godard, 1960)
Bande à part [Band of Outsiders] (Jean-Luc Godard, 1964)
Classe tous risques [The Big Risk] (Claude Sautet, 1960)
Deux hommes dans Manhattan [Two Men in Manhattan] [Jean-Pierre Melville, 1959]
Le Deuxième souffle [Second Breath] (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1963)
À double tour [Web of Passion] (Claude Chabrol, 1959)
Le Doulos [Finger Man] (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1963)
Pierre le fou (Jean-Luc Godard, 1965)
La Piscine [The Swimming Pool] (Jacques Deray, 1969)
Plein Soleil [Purple Noon] (René Clément, 1960)
Le Samouraï (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1967)
Tirez sur le pianiste [Shoot the Piano Player] (François Truffaut, 1960)
Le Trou [The Hole] (Jacques Becker, 1960)
Z (Constantin Costa-Gavras, 1969)
Neo-noir
La Balance [The Narc or The Informer] (Bob Swaim, 1982)
De battre mon cœur s’est arrêté [The Beat That My Heart Skipped] (Jacques Audiard,
2005)
Le Cercle rouge [The Red Circle] (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1970)
Comptes à rebours [Countdown] (Roger Pigaut, 1971)
Coup de Torchon (Bertrand Tavernier, 1981)
Le Cousin (Alain Corneau, 1998)
Détective (Jean-Luc Godard, 1985)
Diva (Jean-Jacques Beineix, 1981)
Garde à vue [Under Suspicion] (Claude Miller, 1981)
Un Flic [A Cop or Dirty Money] (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1971)
Mesrine [Killer Instinct/Public Enemy No. 1] (Jean-François Richet, 2008)
Nikita (Luc Besson, 1990)
Le petit lieutenant (Xavier Beauvois, 2005)
Place Vendôme (Nicole Garcia, 1998)
Police (Maurice Pialat, 1985)
Police Python 357 (Alain Corneau, 1976)
Un Prophet (Jacques Audiard, 2009)
Série noire (Alain Corneau, 1979)
Vivement dimanche! [Confidentially Yours] (François Truffaut, 1983)
Selected Japanese Films Noirs
Silent Noirs
A Page of Madness or A Crazy Page [Kurutta ippeiji] (Teinosuke Kinugasa, 1926)
Chuji’s Travel Diary [Chuji tabi nikki] (Daisuke Ito, 1927)
250
selected filmography
Early Noirs
Osaka Elegy [Naniwa Erejii] (Kenji Mizoguchi, 1936)
Sisters of Gion [Gion no shimai] (Kenji Mizoguchi, 1936)
Postwar Noirs
Drunken Angel [Yoidore tenshi] (Akira Kurosawa, 1948)
Women of the Night [Yoru no onnatachi] (Kenji Mizoguchi, 1948)
Stray Dog [Nora Inu] (Akira Kurosawa, 1949)
I Saw the Killer [Kyatsu o nigasu na] (Hideo Suzuki, 1956)
Street of Shame [Akasen chitai] (Kenji Mizoguchi, 1956)
I am Waiting [Ore wa matteiru ze] (Kurahara Kureyoshi, 1957)
Stake Out [Harikomi] (Yoshitaro Nomura, 1957)
The Lower Depths [Donzoko] (Akira Kurosawa, 1957)
Black River [Kuroi kawa] (Masaki Kobayashi, 1957)
The Guy Who Started a Storm [Arashi o yobu otoko] (Inoue Umetsuge, 1957)
Endless Desire [Hateshinaki yokubo] (Shohei Imamura, 1958)
Red Quay [Akai hatoba] (Masuda Toshio, 1958)
Conflagration [Enjo] (Kon Ichikawa, 1958)
Rusty Knife [Sabita knife] (Masuda Toshio, 1958)
1960s
Take Aim at the Police Van [Sono gosôsha wo nerae: ‘Jûsangô taihisen’ yori] (Suzuki
Seijun, 1960)
Afraid to die [Karakkaze yarô] (Yasuzo Masumura, 1960)
The Sun’s Burial [Taiyo No Hakaba] (Nagisa Oshima, 1960)
The Last Gunfight [Ankokugai no Taiketsu] (Kihachi Okamoto, 1960)
Kenji [Tales of a Gunman cycle] (Hiroshi Noguchi, 1960):
Ryuji the Gun Slinger [Kenjû buraichô: Nukiuchi no Ryû]
Man in Lightning [Kenjû buraichô: Denko sekka no otoko]
Man With a Hollow Laugh [Kenjû buraichô: Futeki ni warau otoko]
Man Without Tomorrow [Kenjû buraichô: Asunaki otoko]
Crimson Pistol [Kurenai no kenju] (Yoichi Ushihara, 1961)
Greed in Broad Daylight [Hakuchuu no Buraikan] (Kinji Fukasaku, 1961)
Pigs and Battleships [Buta to gunkan] (Shohei Imamura, 1961)
Zero Focus [Zero no shoten] (Yoshitaro Nomura, 1961)
High and Low [Tengoku to Jigoku] (Akira Kurosawa, 1963)
Theater Of Life: Hishakaku [Jinsei Gekijo – Hishakaku] (Tadashi Sawashima, 1963)
Youth of the Beast [Yaju no seishun] (Seijun Suzuki, 1963)
Cruel Gun Story [Kneju zankoku monogatari] (Takum Furukawa, 1964).
Pale Flower [Kawaita Hana] (Masahiro Shinoda, 1964)
Abashiri Prison or Man from Abashiri Jail [Abashiri bangaichi] (Teruo Ishii, 1965)
Tattooed Life [Irezumi ichidai] (Seijun Suzuki, 1965)
Brutal Tales of Chivalry [Showa Zankyoden] (Kiyoshi Saeki, 1965)
The 893 Gang [893 Gurentai] (Sadao Nakajima, 1966)
251
international noir
Neo-noirs
Shinjuku Mad [Shinjuku Maddo] (Koji Wakamatsu, 1970)
Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter [Nora-neko rokku: Sekkusu Hanta] (Yasuharu Hasebe,
1970)
Cherry Blossom Fire Gang [Junko intai kinen eiga: Kantô hizakura ikka] (Masahiro
Makino, 1972)
Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion [Joshuu 701-Go: sasori] (Shunya Ito, 1972)
Girl Boss: Escape from Reform School [Sukeban: Kankain dasso] (Nakajima Sadao,
1973)
Battles Without Honor and Humanity [Jingi naki tatakai] (Kinji Fukasaku, 1973)
Graveyard of Honor [Jingi no hakaba] (Kinji Fukasaku, 1975)
The Inugami Family [Inugamike no ichizoku] (Kon Ichikawa, 1976)
The Man Who Stole the Sun [Taiyo wo nusunda otoko] (Kazuhiko Hasegawa,
1979)
The Beast to Die [Yaju Shisubeshi] (Toru Murakawa, 1980)
The Yakuza Wives [Gokudo no onna-tachi] (Hideo Gosha, 1986)
Violent Cop [Sono otoko kyobo ni tsuki] (Takeshi Kitano, 1987)
The Most Terrible Time in My Life [Waga jinsei saiaku no toki] (Kaizo Hayashi,
1993)
Gonin [Gonin] (Takashi Ishii, 1995)
Shinjuku Triad Society cycle [Shinjuku kuroshakai] (Takashi Miike):
China Mafia War [Chaina mafia senso, 1995]
Rainy Dog [Gokudo kuroshakai, 1997]
Ley Lines [Nihon kuroshakai, 1999]
Another Lonely Hitman [Shin Kanashiku Hitman] (Rokuro Mochizuki, 1995)
XX cycle:
Beautiful Beast [XX: Utsukushiki kemono] (Toshiharu Ikeda, 1995)
Beautiful Killing Machine (XX: Utsukushiki kino] (Takahito Hara, 1996)
Beautiful Prey [XX: Utsukushiki emono] (Toshiharu Ikeda, 1996)
Onibi – The Fire Within [Onibi] (Rokuro Mochizuki, 1995)
The Stairway to the Distant Past [Harukana jidai no kaidan o] (Kaizo Hayashi, 1995)
The Trap [Wana] (Kaizo Hayashi, 1996)
Bullet Ballet [Baretto baree] (Shinya Tsukamoto, 1998)
Serpent’s Path [Hebi no michi] (Kiyoshi Kurosawa, 1998)
Jubaku: Spellbound (Kinyû fushoku rettô] (Masato Harada, 1999)
Film Noir [Koroshi] (Mashiro Kobayashi, 2000)
Pistol Opera (Seijun Suzuki, 2001)
Gun Crazy: A Woman from Nowhere (Atushi Muroga, 2002)
A Snake of June [Rokugatsu no hebi] (Shinya Tsukamoto, 2002)
252
selected filmography
Johnny To Neo-noirs
PTU (2003)
Breaking News (2004)
Election (2005)
Triad Election (2006)
Exiled (2006)
Mad Detective (2007)
Sparrow (2008)
Vengeance (2009)
Life without Principles (2011)
Drug War (2012).
253
international noir
Nordic Noir
Angst [Anguish] (Oddvar Bul Tuhus, N, 1976)
Ariel (Aki Kaurismäki, SF, 1988)
Besættelse [Obsession] (Bodil Ipsen, DK, 1944)
Bortreist på ubestemt tid [Away For an Indefinite Period] (Pål Bang Hansen, N,
1974)
Bron [The Bridge] (Måns Mårlind, Hans Rosenfeldt, Nikolaj Scherfig, DK, TV series,
2011–)
Calamari Unioni [Calamari Union] (Aki Kaurismäki, SF, 1985)
Døden er et kjærtegen [Death is a Caress] (Edith Carlmar, N, 1949)
The Element of Crime (Lars von Trier, DK, 1984)
En forbryder [A Criminal] (Arne Weel, DK, 1941)
Europa (Lars von Trier, DK, 1991)
Flammen og citronen [Flame and Citron] (Ole Christian Madsen, DK, 2008)
Flicka och hyacinter [Girl and Hyacinths] (Hasse Ekman, S, 1950)
Forbrydelsen [The Killing] (Søren Sveistrup, DK, TV series, 2007–12)
Hets [Torment] (Alf Sjöberg, S, 1944)
Hodejegerne [Headhunters] (Morten Tyldum, N, 2011)
Insomnia (Erik Skjoldbjærg, N, 1997)
Jeg mødte en morder [I Met a Murderer] (Lau Lauritzen, DK, 1943)
John og Irene [John and Irene] (Asbjørn Andersen, Anker Sørensen, DK, 1949)
Juha (Aki Kaurismäki, SF, 1999)
254
selected filmography
Neo-noirs (American)
1980s
Black Widow (Bob Rafelson, 1987)
Blood Simple (Joel Coen, 1984)
Blue Velvet (David Lynch, 1985)
Body Heat (Lawrence Kasdan, 1981)
Cop (James B. Harris, 1988)
D.O.A. (Annabel Jankel, Rocky Morton, 1988)
Eyewitness (Peter Yates, 1981)
The First Deadly Sin (Brian G. Hutton, 1980)
Hammett (Wim Wenders, 1982)
House of Games (David Mamet, 1987)
I, the Jury (Richard T. Heffron, 1982)
Manhunter (Michael Mann, 1986)
No Way Out (Roger Donaldson, 1987)
The Postman Always Rings Twice (Bob Rafelson, 1981)
Prince of the City (Sidney Lumet, 1981)
Sea of Love (Harold Becker, 1989)
Thief (Michael Mann, 1981)
To Live and Die in L.A. (William Friedkin, 1985)
Trouble in Mind (Alan Rudolph, 1985)
255
international noir
1990s
After Dark, My Sweet (James Foley, 1990)
Blood and Wine (Bob Rafelson, 1996)
Bound (The Wachowskis, 1996)
Cape Fear (Martin Scorsese, 1991)
China Moon (John Bailey, 1994)
Dead Again (Kenneth Branagh, 1991)
Deep Cover (Bill Duke, 1992)
Devil in a Blue Dress (Carl Franklin, 1995)
Goodfellas (Martin Scorsese, 1990)
The Grifters (Stephen Frears, 1990)
Hard Eight (Paul Thomas Anderson, 1996)
The Hot Spot (Dennis Hopper, 1990)
The Kill-Off (Maggie Greenwald, 1990)
A Kiss Before Dying (James Dearden, 1991)
L.A. Confidential (Curtis Hanson, 1997)
The Last Seduction (John Dahl, 1994)
Lost Highway (David Lynch, 1997)
Miller’s Crossing (Joel Coen, 1990)
Mulholland Falls (Lee Tamahori, 1996)
Night and the City (Irwin Winkler, 1992)
Palmetto (Volker Schlondorff, 1998)
Payback (Brian Helgeland, 1999)
The Public Eye (Howard Franklin, 1992)
Red Rock West (John Dahl, 1993)
Romeo Lies Bleeding (Peter Medak, 1993)
Se7en (David Fincher, 1995)
State of Grace (Phil Joanou, 1990)
Twilight (Robert Benton, 1998)
The Usual Suspects (Bryan Singer, 1995)
White Sands (Roger Donaldson, 1992)
2000s
The Black Dahlia (Brian De Palma, 2006)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
The Departed (Martin Scorsese, 2006)
Femme Fatale (Brian De Palma, 2002)
Heist (David Mamet, 2001)
Insomnia (Christopher Nolan, 2002)
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (Shane Black, 2005)
Lonely Hearts (Todd Robinson, 2006)
The Man Who Wasn’t There (Joel and Ethan Coen, 2001)
Memento (Christopher Nolan, 2000)
Mulholland Drive (David Lynch, 2001)
The Salton Sea (D. J. Caruso, 2002)
Sin City (Frank Miller, Robert Rodriguez, 2005)
256
selected filmography
2010s
The Killer Inside Me (Michael Winterbottom, 2010)
Dead Man Down (Niels Arden Oplev, 2013)
Drive (Nicolas Winding Refn, 2011)
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (David Fincher, 2011)
Killer Joe (William Friedkin, 2011)
Killing Them Softly (Andrew Dominik, 2012)
Bombay Noir
Aag [Fire] (Raj Kapoor, 1948)
Barsaat [Rain] (Raj Kapoor, 1949)
Awara [The Vagabond] (Raj Kapoor, 1951)
Baazi [Wager] (Guru Dutt, 1951)
Taxi Driver (Chetan Anand, 1954)
House No. 44 (M. K. Burman, 1955)
C.I.D. (Raj Khosla, 1956)
Pyaasa [Thirst] (Guru Dutt, 1957)
Howrah Bridge (Shakti Samanta, 1958)
Kala Pani [Black Water] (Raj Khosla, 1958)
Madhumati (Bimal Roy, 1958)
Post Box 999 (Ravindra Dave, 1958)
Guest House (Ravindra Dave, 1959)
Kaagaz Ke Phool [Paper Flowers] (Guru Dutt, 1959)
Bambai Ka Babu [Gentleman from Bombay] (Raj Khosla, 1960)
Jaali Note [Counterfeit Bill] (Shakti Samantha, 1960)
Kala Bazar [Black Market] (Vijay Anand, 1960)
China Town (Shakti Samanta, 1962)
Mumbai Neo-noir
Johny Mera Naam [My Name is Johnny] (Vijay Anand, 1970)
Parwana [Moth] (Jyoit Swaroop, 1971)
Zanjeer [Chains] (Prakash Mehra, 1973)
Deewar [The Wall] (Yash Chopra, 1975)
Sholay [Flames] (Ramesh Sippy, 1975)
Don (Chandra Barot, 1978)
Nayakan [Hero] (Mani Ratnam, 1987)
Parinda [Bird] (Vidhu Vinod Chopra, 1989)
Satya (Ram Gopal Varma, 1998)
Company (Ram Gopal Varma, 2002)
Kaante [Thorns] (Sanjay Gupta, 2002)
Maqbool [Macbeth] (Vishal Bharadwaj, 2004)
D (Ram Gopal Varma, 2005)
Ram Gopal Varma’s Sarkar (Ram Gopal Varma, 2005)
Omkara [Othello] (Vishal Bharawaj, 2006)
Johnny Gaddaar [Johnny Traitor] (Sriram Raghavan, 2007)
Sarkar Raj (Ram Gopal Varma, 2008)
257
INDEX
258
index
259
international noir
Cain, James M., 80, 159, 194, 201, 204–6, Clouzot, Henri-Georges, 39–40, 60, 63, 73,
208–12, 214–18 249–50
Caine, Michael, 31 Clouzot, Vera, 44, 47
Calamari Union (1985), 172–3, 177, 254 Clowes, St John Legh, 22, 248
Calef, Noel, 40 Coen, Joel and Ethan, 133, 194–5, 205–6,
Caller, The (Varsleren), 168 209–11, 218, 221, 226, 237–8, 242, 244,
Cameron, Ian, 59 255–6
Camus, Albert, 42, 206, 209–10 Cold War, 2, 5, 9, 13, 20, 38, 138, 224, 253
Cannes Festival, 6, 154, 213 Cold War (2012), 138, 253
Carlmar, Edith, 158–9, 177, 254 Collier, Joelle, 144–5, 150, 154
Carmen (1875), 3 Collins, Jim, 201–4, 218
Carné, Marcel, 67, 114, 158, 178, 249 Colt is My Passport, A (Colt wa ore no
Carstairs, John Paddy, 20 passport, 1967), 112, 116, 134, 252
Case Closed (Meitante Conan/Detective Columbia Pictures, 5
Conan, 1994), 121 Combes, Marcel, 40
Castells, Manuel, 226, 236, 239 Comfort, Lance, 27–8, 246–7
Cat People (1982), 213 Company (2002), 190, 257
Cavalcanti, Alberto, 19 Comptes à rebours (1971), 40, 56, 250
Cavanaugh, Carol, 110, 134, 245 Conard, Mark T., 83, 242
Cercle Rouge, Le (The Red Circle) (1970), Confession of Murder (2012), 138–9, 254
40, 42, 55–7, 62, 64, 71, 250 Confession of Pain (2006), 137, 253
Chabat, Alain, 79–80 Confidentially Yours (1983), 74
Chains (Zanjeer, 1973), 189, 257 Conflagration (Enjo, 1958), 113, 251
Chambers, Marilyn, 217–19 Connelly, Michael, 194
Chanal, Pierre, 158 Conrad, Michael, 55
Chandler, Raymond, 30–1, 159, 175, 179, Conway, Kelley, 12, 242
194, 203 Cooke, Paul, 1, 12
Chang, Grace, 2–5, 12 Copjec, Joan, 150, 153–4, 166–8, 171,
Chartier, Jean-Pierre, 222, 236 176–7, 180
Chase, James Hadley, 14, 22, 31 Cops and Robbers (1979), 136, 252
Chaser, The (Chugyeogja, 2008), 138–9, Corman, Roger, 115
150, 254 Corneau, Alain, 37, 40, 55, 69, 79, 250
Chasseur (The Hunter, 1980), 76 Cosh Boy (1952), 27, 34, 247
Chaumeton, Étienne, 15–16, 31–3, 36, 59 Costner, Kevin, 201
Cheung, Alex, 136–7, 252–3 Cotillard, Marion, 202
Chi, Yingchi, 12 Cotten, Joseph, 16–17
Chibnall, Steve, 18, 29, 31, 33–5, 242 Counterfeit Bill (Jaali Note, 1960), 187,
Chihaya, Akiko, 90 257
China, 2, 5, 6, 12, 34, 48–9, 86, 97, 110, Court, Hazel, 27
148, 154, 227, 233, 235 Cousin, Le (1998), 73, 79, 80–1, 250
China Town (1962), 187, 257 Coutard, Raoul, 40, 53
Chinatown (1974), 34, 137, 142, 145–7, Cranes are Flying, The (Letyat Zhuravli,
150, 153–4, 202–3, 230, 239 1957), 6–7, 13
Chopra, Vidhu Vinod, 190, 257 Crank (2006), 240
Chopra, Yash, 189, 257 Crank 2: High Voltage (2009), 240
Christensen, Rune, 161–2, 167, 175–6, Crazed Fruit (Kurutta kajitsu) (1956), 114
180 Crazy Page, A (Kurutta Ippeiji, 1926), 88,
Chuji’s Travel Diary (Chuji tabi nikki, 110, 250
1927), 103, 250 Creekmur, Corey K., 182, 192
C.I.D. (1956), 183, 187, 192, 257 Crenna, Richard, 58, 72, 215
CinemaScope, 120 Crichton, Charles, 27, 247
Citizen Kane (1941), 17, 191 Crime and Punishment (Rikos ja rangaistus,
Classe tous risques (1960), 66, 73–4, 250 1983), 172, 177–8, 181, 255
Classification and Ratings Administration Criminal, A (En forbryder, 1941), 162, 177,
(CARA), 213 254–5
Clement, René, 63, 250 Crimson Pistol (Kurenai no kenju, 1961),
Cloudburst (1951), 20, 247 116, 251
260
index
261
international noir
Easy Money (Snabba Cash, 2011), 163, Flic, Un (Dirty Money, 1972), 40, 42, 55–6,
168–71, 178, 212, 255 58, 62, 72, 250
Eccleston, Christopher, 30 Fools’ Gold, 74
Edison Kinetoscope, 87 Forbes, Bryan, 34, 248
Egypt, 9 Forbes, Jill, 83, 242
Eiga (Descriptive Pictures; film), 87, 91, 102, Forbidden (1948), 27, 247
117, 127, 252 Force of Evil (1948), 228
Ekman, Hasse, 160–1, 177, 254 Forshaw, Barry, 176, 178, 181, 242
Ekyan, André, 55 Fossum, Karin, 168, 176, 181
Election (2004), 137, 253 Fox, Michael J., 201
Element of Crime, The (Forbrydelsens France, 15, 24, 38, 41–3, 48–9, 52–4,
element, 1984), 172–3, 177–8, 181, 254 59–60, 62, 64–5, 68–9, 72–3, 83–4, 112,
Enemy at the Dead End (2010), 138, 254 148, 184, 206, 222, 225–6, 232, 239–40,
Engelstad, Audun, 158–9, 162, 167, 175–6, 242–3
179–80 Frank, Nino, 166, 180
Eppu Normaali (Rock band), 173 Franklin, Carl, 225, 256
Épuration (TV Movie, 2007), 42, 44 Frears, Stephen, 240, 249, 256
Erickson, Glenn, 18, 32–4 Frederick, Sarah, 98, 111
Erickson, Todd, 29, 32, 34 French Connection, The (1971), 228
Europa (1994), 172, 177, 254 French Impressionism, 89
Evil Dead Trap (Shiryo no wana, 1988), French Resistance, 38, 42–3, 68
125 Fresson, Bernard, 81
Exiled (2006), 137, 253 Friedkin, William, 228, 255 257
Friendship that Started a Storm, The (Arashi
Fabbri, Jacques, 78 o yobu yujo), 114
Fabian of the Yard (TV Show, 1954–6), 23, Friis, Danes Agnete, 165
34 Frow, John, 237–8
Fabian, Robert, 23, 25, 27, 32, 34 Frozen River (2008), 232–3, 235
Fairbank, John K., 12 Fukami, Taizo, 99
Farewell My Lovely (1975) 30 Fukuyama, Francis, 224, 237–9
Farewell to Southern Tosa (Nangoku Tosa o Fuller, Samuel, 63, 199
atoni shite, 1959), 114 Fulton County, 213, 218
Far From Heaven (2002), 198 Furukawa, Takumi, 112, 251
Farr, Derek, 19–20 Futurism, 88
Fatal Attraction (1987), 213–14 Futurist Manifesto (1909), 88
Faubourg-Montmartre (1931), 4–5, 249
Fay, Jennifer, 179, 184, 191–2, 221, 225, Gabin, Jean, 40, 49, 51, 63
227, 238, 242 Gallagher, Mark, 133–5, 237, 239, 244
Female Convict Scorpion: Beast Stable Gallagher, Tag, 220, 226, 237–9
(Joshuu sasori: Kemono-beya, 1973), 115 Galt, Rosalind, 1, 12
Female Convict 701: Scorpion (Joshuu Gandhi, Indira, 189
70-1-go: Sasori, 1972), 115 Gandolfini, James, 206
Field, Simon, 133–4 Gangster No. 1 (2000), 29
Fifth Republic, 41 Garcia, Nicole, 81, 82, 250
Figgis, Mike, 30 Gardner, William O., 110
Filmen og det Moderne, 161, 180 Garnett, Tay, 178, 194, 204, 209
Film Noir (Koroshi, 2000), 128, 252 GATT, 1
Fincher, David, 171, 256–7 Geller, Theresa L., 133, 135
Fingers (1978), 82 Gentleman from Bombay (Bambai Ka Babu,
Finland, 156–8, 164–5 1960), 183, 187, 257
Fiorentino, Linda, 226 Gerard, Jerry, 213
Fire (Aag, 1948), 185, 257 Gere, Richard, 214
Fisher, Terence, 26, 247–8 Gerhart, Karen M., 110
Fistful of Dollars, A (1964), 128 German Expressionism, 89–90, 158, 210
Flame and Citron (Flammen og citronen, Germany, 38, 158, 184, 206, 226–7, 232–3,
2008), 163, 177, 254 239–40
Flames (Sholay, 1975), 189 Gerow, Aaron, 110, 133–4, 242
262
index
263
international noir
Hirsch, Foster, 113, 134, 214, 217–19, 242 Insdorf, Annette, 59–60, 243
Hitchcock, Alfred, 81, 198, 214 I Saw the Devil (2010), 138–9, 150, 254
Hitchens, Dolores, 74, 250 Ishibashi, Ryo, 122, 128
Hjort, Mette, 176, 180, 242 Ishihara, Yujiro, 114–16, 134
Hodges, Mike, 31, 249 Ishii, Takashi, 125, 251–2
Hokkaido, 113, 128 Indiana Jones (Films), 198
Hollywood Renaissance, The, 193, 199, 202, Insomnia (1997), 163, 167, 178, 254, 256
223 International, The (2009), 227–9, 239
Hong Kong, 2, 5–6, 11–13, 136–9, 141–2, International Monetary Fund, 227
144–6, 148, 152–4, 233, 242–3, 245, 252 Itatsu, Yuko, 110
Hoskins, Bob, 29 Ito, Shunya, 115, 252
Hotel du Nord (1938), 222, 249 Iversen, Gunnar, 159, 176, 179–80, 237–8,
House No. 44 (1955), 187, 257 245
House of Light, 100–1 Iwama, Sakurako, 99
Howard, Trevor, 19 Izewska, Teresa, 7
Howrah Bridge (1958), 187, 257
Ho, Yim, 137, 253 Jameson, Frederic, 79, 83, 195, 201, 217,
Hughes, Alex, 83, 243 223, 226, 237–9
Hughes, Ken, 22, 25, 27, 246–8 Janczar, Tadeusz, 7
Hui, Ann, 136, 253 Jansen, Marius R., 110
Human Beast, The (La bête humaine, 1938), Japan, 22, 85–135, 240–5, 250
174, 178, 249 Jarvenhelmi, Maria, 174
Hundred Flowers Campaign, The, 5 Jidai-geki (Period Film), 102, 118
Hungarian Revolution, The, 9 Jingfei pian (cops and robbers), 137
Hungary, 9, 13 Jinming, Song, 233
Hunt, Courtney, 232 Ji-woo, 138, 253
Hunt, Leon, 133, 135, 232, 243 Joe Macbeth (1955), 22, 247
Hunted (1952), 27–8, 247 John and Irene (John og Irene, 1949), 162,
Huntington, Lawrence, 20 178, 254
Hurt, William, 214 Johnny Traitor (Johnny Gaddaar, 2007),
Huston, John, 14, 239 191, 257
Hyangjin, Lee, 139, 153 Johnson, Edward, 12
Hypnotized (2002), 138–9, 254 Jones, Griffith, 24
Hyytiäinen, Janne, 174 Jorholt, Eva, 161–2, 180
Jour se lève, Le (1939), 67, 249
I am Waiting (Ora wa matteru ze, 1957), Juha (1999), 174–5, 180, 254
112, 114, 251 Jurassic Park (1993), 198
Ibsen, Henrik, 158–9, 162 Just as You Wanted Me (Sellaisena kuin sinä
Ibsen, Tancred, 159, 178, 255 minut halusit, 1944), 158, 178, 255
Ichikawa, Kon, 113, 251–2
Ichi the Killer (2001), 132 Kaaberbøl, Lene, 165
Ijima, Ayako, 89 Kalatozov, Mikhail, 6–7
Ikeda, Toshiharu, 125, 252 Kanal (1956), 6–8, 13
Ikiru (1952), 123, 129, 133, 135 Kaplan, David E., 110
Iles, Timothy, 133 Kapoor, Raj, 185–6, 257
Imamura, Shoehei, 107, 251 Kasdan, Lawrence, 34, 194, 215–16, 225,
I Met a Murderer (Jeg mødte en morder, 255
1943), 162, 178, 254 Kassila, Matti, 157, 178, 255
Impasse des deux-anges (1948), 40–1, 43, Kassovitz, Mathieu, 67
45–6, 249 Katsudo shashin (Moving Pictures), 87
In a Lonely Place (1950), 113 Kaurismäki, Aki, 156, 170–8, 181, 244,
Indochina, 48–9, 52–3 254–5
Indridason, Arnaldur, 165 Kawabata, Yasunari, 89, 91, 111
Infernal Affairs (Mou gaan dou, 2002), 11, Kawajiri, Yoshiaki, 121
137, 243, 253 Keaney, Michael F., 15, 18, 25, 27–8, 32–4,
Inoue, Masao, 89 243
Inoue, Umetsugu, 114, 251 Keene, Ann T., 13
264
index
265
international noir
266
index
Murder My Sweet (1944), 4, 158, 161, 178, No Orchids for Miss Blandish (1948), 22,
203, 222 248
Murnau, F. W., 89 Nordisk, 163
Muroga, Atsushi, 128, 130, 252 Normandy, 67, 72
Murphet, Julian, 144, 154 Norsk Film, 163
Murphy, Robert, 18, 23–4, 26–8, 31–4, Norway, 156, 163–4, 167, 232, 239
242–3 Nouvelle Vague (New Wave), 41, 73, 84,
My Brother’s Keeper (1948), 19, 248 120, 137, 173, 199, 203, 242, 244
My Name is Johnny (Johnny Mera Naam, Novak, Phillip, 142, 146–7, 153–4
1970), 191, 257 Nowhere to Hide (1999), 138, 253
Myth of Sisyphus, The (1942), 210 Nummi, Rami, 157–8, 177, 179
267
international noir
Paper Flowers (Kaagaz Ke Phool, 1959), Prakash, Gyan, 189, 192, 244, 257
186, 257 Preston, Robert, 20
Parallel Life (2010), 138, 254 Prince, Stephen, 105, 111
Paris, 12, 32, 34, 37, 45–7, 50–1, 53, 59–60, Production Code, 94, 198, 211–12
63, 67–78, 80–2, 84, 158, 160, 174, 220, ProKino (Proletariat Cinema), 94
242–5 Prophet, A (2008), 11, 83, 250
Paris Commune, 174 Protégé (2007), 137, 253
Park, Chan-wook, 138, 253 Psycho (1960), 214
Patrick, Nigil, 24 PTU (2003), 137, 253
Payback (1999), 11, 256 Public Enemies (2009), 202
Peacock, Steven, 177, 181, 244 Public Enemy (2002), 138–9, 250, 253
Pearson, Lester, 9 Puccini, Giacomo, 3
Pease, Donald, 141, 153 Punished (2011), 138, 253
Pellegrin, Raymond, 55 Pure Film Movement, The (jun’eigageki
Pellonpää, Matti, 173 undo), 87–8, 110, 241
Penn, Arthur, 199, 202 Pusher (1996), 163, 178, 255
People’s Republic of China, 5, 12 Pusher 2 (2004), 163, 178, 255
Pépé le Moko (1937), 114, 249 Pusher 3 (2005), 163, 178, 255
Perec, Georges, 79 Puzzle (2006), 138, 254
Perry, Matthew, 85–6
Persson, Magnus, 177, 180 Quai des Orfèvres (1947), 39–41, 43–6, 56,
Peterson, Lowell, 15 73, 250
Petley, Julian, 18, 32–3 Quick Draw Kid, The (Hayauchi yaro,
Pfeil, Fred, 177, 180 1961), 117
Phillips, Alastair, 12, 59–60, 111, 133–4,
244 Rabinowitz, Paula, 141, 153
Pickup (1951), 222 Radio Breaks In, The (Radio tekee murron,
Pickup on South Street (1953), 63 1951), 157–8, 178–9, 255
Pietà (2012), 138–9, 254 Rage in Harlem, A (1991), 225
Pigalle, 63–4 Raghavan, Sriram, 191, 257
Pigaut, Roger, 40, 250 Raghavendra, M. K., 187, 192, 244
Pinto, Jerry, 184, 192 Raid (2003), 163, 178, 255
Pistol Opera (2001), 131, 252 Raine, Michael, 134
Pitfall (1948), 214 Rainy Dog (Gokudo Kuroshakai, 1997),
Place, Janey, 15, 171, 181 123–4, 252
Place Vendôme (1998), 73, 81, 250 Rajakaruna, R. A., 110
Point of No Return, The (1993), 125 Rambling Guitarist (Guitar o motta
Polanski, Roman, 34, 137, 142, 146–7, 150, wataridori, 1959), 114
202, 230 Rapace, Noomi, 155
Polars, 37–8 Rashomon (1950), 22, 106
Politique de Redressement, 42 Ratnam, Mani, 190, 257
Police Python 357 (1976), 40, 42, 55, 56, Rayns, Tony, 133–4
250 Razzia sur la chnouff (Razzia, 1955), 40–1
Polonsky, Abraham, 228 Reagan, Ronald, 30
Pompidou, Georges, 54 Realisme Noir, 37, 39, 42
Porter, Gregory, 212, 218 Rear Window (1954), 213
Port of Shadows (Le Quai des brumes, Rebhorn, James, 228
1938), 114, 174, 178, 222, 249 Red Harvest, 106, 128
Post Box 999 (1958), 187, 257 Red Quay (Akai hatoba, 1958), 114, 116,
Postman Always Rings Twice, The (1946), 251
80, 113, 158–9, 178, 194, 204, 207, 218, Red Rock West (1993), 226, 256
222, 225 Redvall, Eva, 177, 180
Postman Blues (1997), 126–7 Reed, Carol, 8, 16, 247–8
Postmodernism, 74, 140, 172, 195, 202, Refn, Nicholas Winding, 178, 240, 255, 257
224, 236–9 Reggiani, Serge, 55, 65
Poujoly, Georges, 51 Règlement de comptes, Un, 68
Powrie, Phil, 38, 59–60, 62, 84, 244 Reilly, James, 232
268
index
269
international noir
270
index
271
international noir
Vernet, Marc, 141, 152–4, 177, 180 Williams, James S., 83, 243
Vertigo (1958), 214 Window, The (1949), 27
Vierikko, Vesa, 173 Wire, The (2002–8, TV series), 232
Villain (Akunin, 2010), 132 Wise, Robert, 9
Vincendeau, Ginette, 29, 32, 34, 37, 39, Woll, Josephine, 13
58–60, 63, 65–6, 84, 222, 238, 245 Wollen, Peter, 24, 32, 34
Vint, Sherryl, 236, 238 Woman and Eros (Kvinnen og eros), 159,
Violent Cop (Sono otoko, kyobo ni tsuki, 176, 179
1989), 119, 252 Woman in Question, The (1950), 22
Virdi, Jyotika, 183, 192 Women in Cages (1971), 115
Virilio, Paul, 55, 59–60 Women in the Night (1948), 94, 99–101,
Voice of a Murderer (2007), 138, 254 251
Volonte, Gian-Maria, 57 Women of the Night (Yoru no onnatchi,
von Trier, Lars, 156, 171–8, 181, 241, 243, 1948), 110–11
254 World Bank, 227
V2: Dead Angel (V2: Jäästynyt enkeli, 2007), World Trade Organization, 1, 227
163, 178, 255 Wottitz, Walter, 40
272