| I’m of the opinion, serious consideration has to be given to Fritz Lang as a/the leading influence. |
I think this is an excellent observation, though I have to plead ignorance on key parts. I certainly would agree that Lang was a major influence, but I'm not in a good position to judge his most important work in this regard. I've seen Metropolis, M, and Fury, which certainly are important predecessors to film noir, though I wouldn't personally call any of them film noir. Unfortunately, the next Lang film I've seen after Fury (1936) is The Big Heat (1953), which is certainly film noir, but I'm in no position to make any judgments about his films between those two.
Obviously, I've got some serious film noir gaps.

I know we've got a thread listing every film noir (and depending on your pov, then some), but maybe at some point we can try to come up with a shorter list of the 'essential' film noir, to help those of us who want to, to fill in our gaps. I know at some point I need to see Possessed (a western that
might qualify as a noir) and others, but with all the other films on my to see list, I really need to narrow this down.
Hell, the more I think about this, the more I think I'm going to start another thread for an 'essential film noir' challenge, part of which will be trying to decide on a list of 'essential' film noirs, which will probably be as contentious to define as film noir itself.

Robert,
I assume it makes sense to start such a challenge in a separate thread, but if you think it would fit in better as part of this thread, let me know. I don't want to hijack this thread, nor do I want to start a thread that some mod would decide to merge back into this one.
