NONFICTION

American Noir Film: From The Maltese Falcon to Gone Girl

Rowman & Littlefield. Nov. 2024. 240p. ISBN 9781538194096. $45. FILM
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This compact history of Hollywood noir films from the 1940s through today discusses the nature of the genre and how it’s changed over time, then moves to the analysis of specific movies. Movies are grouped into three subsets—detective films, lost-man films, and femme-fatale films—across the variant forms of noir, neo-noir, and revisionary noir. The earliest film discussed is The Maltese Falcon (1941); the most recent is 2020’s Promising Young Woman. Booker (“Mad Men”: A Cultural History) posits that classic noir’s shadowy style was indebted to German Expressionist films of the 1920s and ’30s and constrained by war economies and the restrictions imposed by a puritanical Production Code. With the mid-1950s came changes in audience tastes and the ascendancy of color over black and white film. Neo-noir emerged in the ’60s and ran through the ’90s, with many revisionary noir titles appearing in the 21st century, retaining classic noir’s unforgivingly pessimistic view of society but incorporating elements from other movie genres, playing games with them, and posing new questions.
VERDICT A well-written introduction to noir films and how the genre has continued to thrive as times changed.
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