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Category Archives: 1960s American crime films
Post traumatic noir – a note on the passing of Robert Stone
The death of US writer Robert Stone on the weekend has drawn me out of the break I planned on posting on this site over January.
Stone was the author of two tremendous works of neo-noir fiction, both of which I read when I was first getting into the genre.
The first, Stone’s debut novel, A Hall of Mirrors, was published in 1967 and partly set in New Orleans, where Stone lived briefly. It dealt with a dissolute, opportunistic right wing radio broadcaster and the desperate, doomed characters he associates with. It was turned into an excellent film called WUSA by Stuart Rosenberg in 1970 and starring Paul Newman, then in the throws of his battling his own alcoholism (I reviewed it on this site a couple of years ago here.
The second, the better known and probably more influential of Stone’s books, Dog Soldiers, was published in 1974. The 1978 film adaption, Who’ll Stop The Rain (reviewed on this site here), is also very good.
Dog Soldiers concerns a liberal war correspondent in Vietnam, Converse, who disillusioned with what he has seen, decides to traffic heroin back to the US. He enlists Hicks, his friend in the merchant marines, to take the drugs back to Converse’s wife, Marge, in Los Angeles.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, Crime fiction, Crime Fiction and film set in Vietnam, James Crumley, Newton Thornburg, Noir fiction, Robert Stone, Stuart Rosenberg
Tagged A Hall of Mirrors, Cutter and Bone, Dog Soldiers, Don Carpenter, George V Higgins, Neon Noir, Newton Thornburg, Robert Stone, Who'll Stop the Rain (1978), Woody Haut, WUSA
Warren Oates, Gloria Grahame & other subjects for fiction anthologies
The recent release of Crime Factory’s LEE, an anthology of crime fiction inspired by the life of iconic actor Lee Marvin, has got me thinking about who else would be a good subject for similar treatment.
There’s already been a bit of chatter on Twitter about other actors people would like to see as the subject of their own fictional anthology, and several authors have contacted me with ideas.
There are only two criteria involved I can think of in choosing a subject.
First, the subject concerned has got to be deceased, preferably passed a while ago. It’s just too complex, legally and other ways to do an anthology based on someone living.
Second, there’s got to be something about them. Not just an interesting body of cinematic work and an interesting life, but an ongoing cultural resonance or zeitgeist that sets them apart from other actors and allows crime writers discuss broader issues.
Here are my picks for actors I think would be good subjects. And I should stress, these are just my musings and in no way reflect what Crime Factory will do in the future.
That said, you never know….
Warren Oates
There’s already been a bit of social media chatter about the possibility of a Warren Oates inspired anthology.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, Film Noir, Gloria Grahame, Lee Marvin, Richard Burton, Stanley Baker, Sterling Hayden
Tagged 92 in the Shade (1975), Asphalt Jungle (1950), Badlands (1973), Bit Heat (1953), Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1969), Cockfighter (1975), Dillinger (1973), Hell Drivers (1957) The Criminal (1960), Hell is a City (1966), In a Lonely Place (1950), innocent Bystanders, Johnny Guitar (1954), LEE, Lee Marvin, Major Dundee (1965), Naked Alibi (1954), Odds Against Tomorrow (1959), Race with the Devil (1975), Sam Peckinpah, Stanley Baker, Stanley Kubrick, Sterling Hayden, Stripes (1981), The Godfather (1972), The Guns of Navarone (1961), The Killing (1956), The Wild Bunch (1969), Two Lane Black Top, Warren Oates
The heist always goes wrong, part 2: reader picks and other favourite heist movies
My recent post The heist always goes wrong – ten of the best heist movies ever made, generated some great reader feedback. The best thing about the response was that it pointed me in the direction of a number heist films I hadn’t seen or that I need to revisit.
Based on your comments and the thoughts I’ve had on the subject since the original post, here are follow up list of other films that could be included in a best of heist films list (and my shameless editorialising regarding what I think about the merits of not of them).
Straight Time (1978)
A huge thanks to West Australian crime writer David Whish Wilson for alerting me to Straight Time, which I’d seen previously but forgotten. Dustin Hoffman plays a career criminal just out of prison, trying to stay on the right side of his ball breaking parole officer, masterfully played by one of my screen heroes, M. Emmet Walsh, and avoid the temptation of re-offending.
Straight Time is based on the book No Best So Fierce, by real life con Edward Bunker (who has a small role in the film). Everything about this film works, the script, the down at heel late seventies feel, the cast, which includes Theresa Russell, Gary Busey, Kathy Bates and Harry Dean Stanton.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Fernando Di Leo, Film Noir, French cinema, Heist films, James Woods, Jim Thompson, M Emmet Walsh, Robert Ryan, Sterling Hayden, Steve McQueen, Yaphet Kotto
Tagged Ali McGraw, Ben Johnson, Best Seller (1987), Blue Collar (1978), Clint Eastwood, Coleen Grey, Don Rickles, Donald Sutherland, Dustin Hoffman, Elisha Cook Jr, Elke Sommer, Faye Dunaway, Fernando Di Leo, Gary Busey, Gary Lockwood, Gavin MacLeod, Harry Dean Stanton, Harvey Keitel, heist films, Jack Palance, Jules Dassin, Karen Black, Kelly’s Heroes (1970), Lee J Cobb, Milano Calibre 9 (1972), oe Don Baker, Paul Schrader, Plunder Road (1957), Richard Pryor, Rififi (1955), Robert Ryan, Sam Peckinpah, Set It Off (1996), Slim Pickens, Sterling Hayden, Steve McQueen, Straight Time (1978), Telly Savalas, The Anderson Tapes (1971), The Getaway (1972), The Killing (1956), The Outfit (1973), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), Theresa Russell, They Came to Rob Las Vegas (1968), Timothy Carey, Vince Edwards, Yaphet Kotto
The heist always goes wrong, part 1: ten of the best heist movies ever made
I love the genius and intricacy of their plots and the variations they come in, whether it be the all star team assembled for a job or the desperate ex-cons trying for one last score.
But most of all I love them because of the golden rule of all good heist films – for whatever reason, the heist always goes wrong.
What do you need for a good heist?
You need a plan for actual heist itself, the getaway, and moving, storing and fencing whatever it is you’ve stolen. The more complicated the plan, the more likely it is that something will go wrong.
You need a crew of people; one man or woman alone cannot do a heist. This introduces the human element and all the problems that come with it, the greed, suspicions, jealousies and uncertainties.
I’ve been thinking for a while now about what my top ten-heist films would be and the following list, in no particular order, is it.
The robbery itself is almost immaterial to how I rate a good heist film. What I like is the context and atmosphere in which the heist takes place and inevitable problems that arise after it’s been pulled off. And the darker and more broken things get, the better the film is in my book.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, 1980s American crime films, Angie Dickinson, Charles Durning, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Ernest Borgnine, Film Noir, French cinema, Gene Hackman, Heist films, James Caan, Jim Brown, Peter Boyle, Peter Yates, Robert Mitchum, Sidney Lumet, Stanley Baker, Sterling Hayden, Yaphet Kotto
Tagged A Cop (1972), Across 110th Street (1972), Al Pacino, Alain Delon, Angie Dickinson, Anthony Quinn, Armoured Car Robbery (1950), Basil Dearden, Catherine Deneuve, Charles Durning, Crime Wave (1954), Criss Cross (1949), Diahann Carroll, Dog Day Afternoon (1975), Don Siegel, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Ernest Borgnine, Gene Hackman, Heat (1995), heist films, Jack Klugman, James Booth, James Caan, James Whitmore, Jim Brown, Joanna Pettel, John Cazale, Joseph Loosey, Money Movers (1979), Peter Boyle, Peter Yates, Richard Jordan, Richard Stark, Robbery (1967), Robert De Niro, Robert Mitchum, Robert Prosky, Ronald Reagan, Sexy Beast (2000), Stanley Baker, Sterling Hayden, Sydney Lumet, The Asphalt Jungle (1950), The Bank job (2008), The Criminal (1960), The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973), The Killers (1964), The League of Gentlemen (1960), The Red Circle (1970), Tuesday Weld, Warren Oates, Yaphet Kotto
The Killers 1964 & 1946
The following is posted as part of Furious Cinema’s Scenes of the Crime Blog-a-Thon. It originally appeared in the Fall 2012 edition of Noir City.
One short story, Ernest Hemingway’s The Killers, which appeared in 1927, two film versions. Robert Siodmak directed the first in 1946. Don Siegel helmed the later in 1964. Both films begin with the premise of Hemingway’s 2951 word piece; two anonymous professional killers hired to murder a man, but in most other respects are completely different.
Siodmak’s movie opens, to the accompaniment of Miklos Rozsa’s brassy jazz score, with the arrival of the killers in a small town. It’s night and all we see are their silhouettes backlit by streetlights. First they check the filling station. Finding it closed, they cross the road, go into Henry’s Diner. You can tell they’re professionals, each enters a different way, cutting off any possibility of their quarry escaping.
In the space of a few minutes, Al (Charles McGraw) and Max (William Conrad), establish a sense of menace and disorientation as good as any classic noir cinema has to offer. After rubbishing the diner’s food and the customer’s small town ways, they tell George, the man behind the counter:
“I tell you what we’re going to do, we’re going to kill the Swede.”
Posted in 1960s American crime films, Albert Dekker, Angie Dickinson, Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster, Film Noir, Lee Marvin, Parker
Tagged Albert Dekker, Angie Dickinson, Armoured Care Robbery (1950), Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster, Charles McGraw, Clu Gulager, Don Siegel, Edmund O’Brien, John Boorman, John Cassevetes, Lee Marvin, M Squad, Miklos Rozsa, Norman Fell, Point Blank (1967), Pulp Fiction (1994), Quentin Tarantino, Richard Fleisher, Robert Siodmak, Ronald Reagan, Sam Levene