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Tag Archives: Jules Dassin’s Night and the City (1950)
Not so black & white: the exhibition of classical film noir in Melbourne
Today I’m celebrating Noirvember with a terrific guest post by my friend Dean Brandum, film scholar and the man behind the wonderful site, Technicolour Yawn: Melbourne cinemas of the happening years: 1960 – 84. Dean looks at the myths and realities around the exhibition of classical film noir in forties and fifties Melbourne. Film noir is often seen as mainly comprising B-movies that would never have graced the screens of reputable Melbourne cinemas. But, as Dean makes clear, for the most part this was not the case.
“You could always find me in the theatre round the corner. People like me liked our pictures dark and mysterious. Most were B-movies made on the cheap, others were classy models with A-talent, but they all had one thing in common, they lived on the edge. They told stories about life on the streets, shady characters, crooked cops, twisted love and bad luck. The French invented a name for these pictures – Film Noir.”
Richard Widmark narrating The American Cinema’s episode ‘Film Noir’
Whilst this TV overview of film noir was an excellent production and was immeasurably aided by the gravitas of the (then otherwise retired) voice of Richard Widmark’s narration, his opening introduction has always rankled with me, for it perpetuates a myth about film noir, one which has been developed to be shoe-horned into a narrative – that film noir was not a mainstream commodity.… Read more
Posted in Australian popular culture, Film Noir, Forgotten Melbourne, Robert Aldrich
Tagged Classic film noir in Melbourne, Dean Brandum, Gilda (1946), Gun Crazy (1950), Jules Dassin, Jules Dassin’s Night and the City (1950), Kiss Me Deadly (1955), Kiss of Death (1947), Liberty Theatre Bourke Stree, Night and the City (1950), Richard Widmark, The Lyceum