Oh, in posing my questions I wasn't suggesting that "film noir" as a title, trend or pseudo-genre is anything more than a label of convenience. It just makes looking back on a scattered collection of work which shares a number of traits--albeit those traits are certainly not exclusive to this collection--a little easier. I'm confident that Hathaway or whoever didn't approach the head of the studio "Look, Darryl, I've got this great idea for a film noir". It's an invention, but a useful invention. No?HerrSchreck wrote:I'll step aside for that discussion, because though there were trends here & there, I truly believe labels like "Noir" were invented by critics so that they can organize their viewing into a science to make it sound like serves some greater function than it actually does. I sincerely mean it when I say that. There is no contemporary evidence to indicate that directors of crime-dramas approx 1944-55 had any idea they were doing anything called "Noir", or that there was any qualifiying formula. Most practitioners never heard the term while they were making key films of the genre, and most of them wished they could have been making other pictures as these were mostly B-list pictures. Directors still alive are glad to sit and talk about those pictures today as though they were part of a revolutionary movement, but the fact is back then most of them cast an envious eye on directors of higher grade pictures and were just making the best of fading talent (whom they desperately didn't want to join) and variable-quality scripts. The formula most talk about ("femme fatales, etc") are usually carryovers from detective novel thrillers i e Chandler. What we call Noir represents a period crime melodramas went thru, but certainly shadowy, brutal crime melodramas had been around since the gangster flicks of Chaney in the 20's. Much of "noir" was just a snapshot of the natural progression of certain cinematic "chic"s & dark glamorizations of the street which had been around since the silent/early talkie era. The hats, the gowns, the hardboiled fatlistic men, prisons, the chiaroscuro-- all except the genuine obsession 45-55 with the 'private dick' which again was chandler-- they all have their dispositions in surrounding eras too. Our view today is very nostalgic ex-post facto isolation of what was an ongoing development of the b&w crime drama unconcerned with "feelgood".
So, Herrshrek, don't hold out on me, quit being a wise guy, give me the goods....or you'll gets whats comin' to ya.