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Recent Posts
- Dishing up Pulp Curry in a new way: why I am starting a Substack newsletter
- Book reviews: Deadly dames, midcentury Brit pulp and 1970s science fiction
- Mackenna’s Gold (1969): Gold, Ghosts and Frontier Violence
- Orphan Road book launch
- Orphan Road now available
- Pre-orders open for my new novel, Orphan Road
- Cover reveal: Orphan Road, my follow up to Gunshine State
- Breakfast in the Ruins podcast: New English Library Bikermania
- Why 1973 was the year Sidney Lumet took on police corruption
- Men’s Adventure Quarterly: Gang Girls issue
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Nothing but noir
Recommended reading
The lurid world of pulp
- 20th century Danny Boy
- American Pulps
- Bear Alley
- Bloody, Spicy, Books
- Comics Down Under
- Everything second hand
- Existential Ennui
- Greenleaf Classic Books
- Irv O. Neil's Erotica is My Trade
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- Romance Fiction Has a History
- Rough Edges
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- Spy Guys and Gals
- The department of Afro American Research Arts & Culture
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- The Haunted World of Richard Sala
- The Moon Lens
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- The Pulp & Paperback Fiction Reader
- Too Much Horror Fiction
- True Pulp Fiction
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Author Archives: Andrew Nette
Book Review: We Are the Mutants – The Battle for Hollywood from Rosemary’s Baby to Lethal Weapon
Is there anything new left to say about the period of American film production from the late 1960s to the early 1980s?
This is the period that began with the so-called ‘New Hollywood’ and continued with its collapse under the weight of its own cinematic hubris and excess, bumped along considerably by the 1977 release of Star Wars, after which the blockbuster franchise, with its lucrative pre-sold merchandising deals, evolved into the majority of what now passes for the American film industry. Of course, this is just one facet of the story. Influencing this trajectory was Vietnam, the rise and fall of the counterculture, the election of Ronald Reagan and the rise of neoliberalism.
To say something different about all of this is a tough task. But it is is precisely the aim of We are the Mutants: The Battle for Hollywood from Rosemary’s Baby to Lethal Weapon. That the book largely succeeds in its mission is due to a quality I initially found hard to define until I hit on a way to do so by way of a comparison. The book reminds me of the work of British documentary maker Adam Curtis, particularly his most recent effort, I Can’t Get You Out of My Head: An Emotional History of the Modern World.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, 1980s American crime films, Book Reviews, Cinema culture, Dystopian cinema, Horror, Ira Levin, Neo Noir, Non-crime reviews, Science fiction and fantasy, True crime, War film, William Friedkin
Tagged Adam Curtis, Alien (1979), Harlan County USA (1976), Kelly Roberts, Michael Grasso, Phase IV (1974), Rosemary's Baby (1968), Silent running (1972), Sorcerer (1977), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), We Are the Mutants, We Are the Mutants The Battle for Hollywood from Rosemary's Baby to Lethal Weapon, Wild in the Streets (1968)
Video of launch of Horwitz Publications, Pulp Fiction & the Rise of the Australian Paperback
If you missed the recent launch of my monograph Horwitz Publications, Pulp Fiction and the Rise of the Australian Paperback, organised by the Australian National University’s Centre for Australian Literary Cultures, the video of the event is now on Youtube for your viewing pleasure. The book, published in hardback by Anthem Publications, is price for higher education institutions at present, but a cheaper paperback version will be available mid-2023.
… Read morePosted in Book cover design, British pulp fiction, Crime fiction, Horwitz Publications, Monarch Books, New English Library, Pan Books, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp fiction set in Asia, Pulp Friday, Pulp paperback cover art, Toni Johnson Woods, True crime, Vintage pulp paperback covers, Westerns
Tagged Anthem Press, Centre for Australian Literary Cultures, Horwitz Publication Pulp Fiction and the Rise of the Australian Paperback, Horwitz Publications
Register for on-line NoirCon 2022
Those of you who have been following my site for a while now may have seen me post about NoirCon previously. A celebration of all things noir in film, literature, art and anything else you care to mention, NoirCon was previously held as a face-to-face gathering in Philadelphia, but has been cancelled for the last few years, due to Covid and other problems.
Well, now it is back, this year as an online gathering.
NoirCon will take place Friday-Saturday, October 21-23, EST. Virtual NoirCon 2022 will be held on the Accelevents platform. An all-access pass covering the entire conference is $36. Registration includes access to the Accelevents platform for 30 days after the event, so attendees can re-watch events or catch up on panels they missed.
NoirCon is hands down the best literary/arts festival I have attended. The exact program is not live yet but whatever the fevered mind of NoirCon organiser Lou Boxer has dreamt up in terms of a program, I have no doubt it’ll be good, including new events and events that would have been held in previous cancelled versions of the program. So if you have any interest in noir at all and are able to make the time zone work for you, you should definitely register at this link.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, 1980s American crime films, 1990s American crime films, Asian noir, Australian noir, Crime fiction, Crime film, David Goodis, Femme fatale, Film Noir, French cinema, Heist films, Neo Noir, Noir Con, Noir fiction, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp fiction set in Asia, Pulp paperback cover art, Tart noir, Tartan Noir, True crime
Tagged Halley Sutton, Lou Boxer, Nikki Dolson, noir art, Noir Con 2022, noir fiction, noir film, NoirCon, Richie Narvaez, Scott Adlerberg
Book Review: Australian crime anthology and First Nations science fiction
Is it just me or is there definitely a renewed local interest in short story collections? There seems to be a few more of them being published than is normally the case and I am particularly interested in two that have come across my radar: Dark Deeds Down Under, an anthology of crime fiction edited by Craig Sisterson and This All Come Back Now, a new anthology of first nations speculative fiction, edited by Mykaela Saunders.
First up, Dark Deeds Down Under. The interesting selling point of this book is that it contains 19 crime fiction stories from Australian and New Zealand authors, some well-known, others not so much. As is the case with every anthology not every tale did it for me but there were far more hits than misses, which is unusual. I just want to briefly note the highlights in the collection for me.
Aoife Clifford’s ‘Summer of the Seventeenth Poll’ felt very much in the spirit of TV shows such as In the Thick of It, in its depiction of a political spinner who job sees them stumble across a murder, and the story has a real sting in the tail. No surprises that ‘The Cook’ by possibly my favourite Australian crime writer, David Whish-Wilson, was a terrific yarn about an ex-con speed cook and the troubled relationship he has with his son.… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Australian noir, Black pulp fiction, Book Reviews, Crime fiction, David Whish-Wilson, Garry Disher, Horror, Science fiction and fantasy
Tagged Aoife Clifford, Archie Weller, Clandestine Press, Craig Sisterson, Dark Deeds Down Under, David Whish-Wilson, Garry Disher, Lisa Fuller, Mykaela Saunders, Nikki Crutchley, Samuel William Watson, Stephen Ross, This All Come Back Now
Pulp on the big screen
This month sees the 50th anniversary of the Mike Hodges film, Pulp.
I feel like Pulp, which I reviewed on this site here back in 2016, does not get a lot of love from people, but I am a fan of its bizarre, at times almost campy noir vibe. Most of all, I like the fact that it is an ode to the era of mass produced literature and to a time when pulp, in all its forms, could still be dangerous.
The lead character is a sleazy expat British expat pulp writer called Mickey King, played by Michael Caine, a nod to the prolific writer Earl Stanley Gardner. King’s dialogue drips with sleazy pulp cadence and the film is full of images of pulp in its many forms.
Ever since watching this film, I have been on the look-out for signs of pulp in the movies. As a 50th anniversary tribute to the Hodges film, below are the screenshots of what I have managed to find so far. I am sure there are many others and I would love readers to alert me to ones I have missed or to help me identify the ones below that I have not been able to identify.
… Read morePosted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, 1990s American crime films, Beat culture, British crime cinema, British pulp fiction, Crime fiction, Crime film, Film Noir, Horror, Men's Adventure Magazines, Michael Caine, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp Friday, Pulp paperback cover art, Vintage pulp paperback covers, Westerns
Tagged Michael Caine, Mike Hodges, Pulp (1972), Pulp in movies, Pulp on the screen