The Noir City LA (they like to call it "Noir City Hollywood") festival schedule for 2018 is out--20 films over ten days. It's more of a kitchen sink approach, looser (and better) than the rather contrived "Noir from A to B" gimmick that the Film Noir Foundation has employed of late.
The films skew into the 50s (thirteen of them were released in 1950 or later, including another Muller-Ellroy noir conjunction built around L.A. Confidential) and present two interesting Paramount titles that the FNF boys have finally turned their attention to after churning out so many mediocrities from Universal--The Turning Point (1952), one of the first (and arguably the best) of the Kefauver "organized crime noirs," and The Scarlet Hour (1956), Michael Curtiz' quirky remake of Double Indemnity, where the difference in tone and attitude between the 40s and 50s noir is summed up perfectly by the character played by Elaine Stritch.
Better late than never, at any rate. And add to that turn of phrase the fact that the FNF is following in the footsteps of Elliot Lavine and at last screening noirs with some actual social relevance, as evidenced by their Joseph Losey triple bill (The Prowler, M, and The Big Night, all made in 1951).
As noted, this is a bit of a step up from recent efforts, and continues the FNF's retrenchment into American noir.
With the schedule announced, we are once again in the position of being able to graphically present the films on the "hard-boiled to melo" scale that we've been employing in recent posts. We don't think you'll be surprised to see that NC LA 2018 skews toward the hard-boiled side of things:
The films with the high "hard-boiled to melodrama" character element ratios (those in the upper left quadrant of the chart) are He Walked by Night, Kiss Me Deadly, Dragnet, and Armored Car Robbery. The films with a high "MELO RATE" (those in the lower right quadrant) are Jealousy, The Turning Point, and Night Has A Thousand Eyes. The rest of the films in the series are reasonably close to the overall average for these measures, though the graph shows that there is still a significant skew toward the hard-boiled.
The series plays at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood from Friday, April 13 through Sunday, April 22.
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
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