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Touch Of Noir

Touch of Noir: The Caged Drifter in ‘Le Samouraï’

June 16, 2013 by Katherine Springer

    Born out of Jean-Pierre Melville’s love of 1930s Hollywood crime dramas, Le Samouraï (1967) is unquestionably one of the best homages to film noir. The film itself is a cross between classic film noir and Japanese yakuza samurai films, melding the principled noir anti-hero and the honor-bound, wandering warrior samurai figure into a rumination […]

Filed Under: Entertainment, Features, Movies, Touch Of Noir Tagged With: Classic Films, Classic Movies, Column, Film Noir, Opinion Piece, Touch Of Noir

Touch Of Noir: Stanley Kubrick’s Genre Changing Edgy Crime Noir ‘The Killing’

June 2, 2013 by Katherine Springer

Stanley Kubrick is best known for his films 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Lolita (1962), The Shining (1980) and A Clockwork Orange (1971), but he always considered his first mature feature film to be the elaborate film noir heist The Killing (1956). Clearly overshadowed by his later works, The Killing is generally viewed as a […]

Filed Under: Entertainment, Features, Movies, Touch Of Noir Tagged With: Classic Films, Classic Movies, Column, Film Noir, Opinion Piece, Stanley Kubrick, Touch Of Noir

Touch of Noir: The Victimized Femme Fatale in ‘Trance’

May 26, 2013 by Katherine Springer

Danny Boyle is no stranger to stylish thrillers. From Shallow Grave (1994) to 28 Days Later (2002), Boyle is a master of mystery and suspense. His latest film Trance (2013) takes many cues from film noir, incorporating a conflicted anti-hero, Simon, whose principles are rattled all the more by his memory loss. The psychological neo-noir […]

Filed Under: Entertainment, Features, Movies, Touch Of Noir Tagged With: Classic Films, Column, Danny Boyle, Film Noir, Neo-Noir, Opinion Piece, Touch Of Noir, Trance

Touch Of Noir: The Apathetic Noir Loser In ‘The Man Who Wasn’t There’

May 19, 2013 by Katherine Springer

There is no better film to finish our discussion of the noir loser in the Coen brothers’ films than The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001). With the film’s protagonist, Ed Crane, the Coens take the noir loser archetype to its extreme. Whereas previous Coen losers were anxious, unsure men who let people walk all over […]

Filed Under: Entertainment, Features, Movies, Touch Of Noir Tagged With: Classic Films, Classic Movies, Column, Film Noir, Opinion Piece, The Coen Brothers, Touch Of Noir

Touch of Noir: The Bumbling Noir Loser in ‘Fargo’

May 12, 2013 by Katherine Springer

The Coen brother’s films frequently share film noir’s basic philosophical assumptions: power corrupts all, evil is pervasive, and fate cannot be controlled or avoided. Their films illustrate this philosophy through stories of simple people with complex problems. These characters are tempted by greed and corruption and ultimately begin a downward spiral that can only result […]

Filed Under: Entertainment, Features, Movies, Touch Of Noir Tagged With: Classic Films, Classic Movies, Column, Film Noir, Opinion Piece, The Coen Brothers, Touch Of Noir

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