What's new

*** 4th Annual HTF Noirvember Movie Challenge*** (1 Viewer)

dana martin

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
5,913
Location
Norfolk, VA
Real Name
Dana Martin
1730300058130.png



Same as last year

1. Watch as many Noir/ Western Noir/ Neo-Noir-Themed films, etc. from midnight Noirvember 1, 2024 through the month of Noirvember 2024 (the start of the Holiday Season) (use your own time zone to set the ending time).

2. Theatrically released films and short features count as 1 point each. Running times are irrelevant.

3. Two of the films, et. al. should be new discoveries, movies you've never seen before. The point of this is to see those few movies you've always meant to see, but never got around to. Please specify new discoveries in your film list by making them bold, adding asterisks, different colors, etc.

4. Come here and talk about 'em. ( this is the best part )

5. There is an uber-category, the Heavy Smoker/ Femme Fatale for those who wish to put all of the rest of us to shame. This is the heavyweight division. These people, if they choose to accept the challenge, must view 24 Noir/ Western Noir/ Neo-Noir themed movies before dawn on Dec. 1st. Ten new discoveries are recommended for this one. The rest of us will bow down in awed reverence to these HTF members. The bragging rights will be awesome and long lived. What movies qualify?



Film Critic, Roger Ebert’s A Guide to Film Noir Genre

Film noir is . . .

1. A French term meaning "black film," or film of the night, inspired by the Series Noir, a line of cheap paperbacks that translated hard-boiled American crime authors and found a popular audience in France.

2. A movie which at no time misleads you into thinking there is going to be a happy ending.

3. Locations that reek of the night, of shadows, of alleys, of the back doors of fancy places, of apartment buildings with a high turnover rate, of taxi drivers and bartenders who have seen it all.

4. Cigarettes. Everybody in film noir is always smoking, as if to say, "On top of everything else, I've been assigned to get through three packs today." The best smoking movie of all time is "Out of the Past," in which Robert Mitchum and Kirk Douglas smoke furiously at each other. At one point, Mitchum enters a room, Douglas extends a pack and says, "Cigarette?" and Mitchum, holding up his hand, says, "Smoking."

5. Women who would just as soon kill you as love you, and vice versa.

6. For women: low necklines, floppy hats, mascara, lipstick, dressing rooms, boudoirs, calling the doorman by his first name, high heels, red dresses, elbowlength gloves, mixing drinks, having gangsters as boyfriends, having soft spots for alcoholic private eyes, wanting a lot of someone else's women, sprawling dead on the floor with every limb meticulously arranged and every hair in place.

7. For men: fedoras, suits and ties, shabby residential hotels with a neon sign blinking through the window, buying yourself a drink out of the office bottle, cars with running boards, all-night diners, protecting kids who shouldn't be playing with the big guys, being on first-name terms with homicide cops, knowing a lot of people whose descriptions end in "ies," such as bookies, newsies, junkies, alkys, jockeys and cabbies.

8. Movies either shot in black and white, or feeling like they were.

9. Relationships in which love is only the final flop card in the poker game of death.

10. The most American film genre, because no society could have created a world so filled with doom, fate, fear and betrayal, unless it were essentially naive and optimistic.

Been a great year since the last, with lots of new releases all around to discuss,

And a link http://www.filmnoirfoundation.org/home.html

For more information



HTF Threads about Film Noir
 

Robert Crawford

Crawdaddy
Moderator
Patron
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 9, 1998
Messages
72,804
Location
Michigan
Real Name
Robert
2024 Noirvember Film Noir Movie Listing with titles in "Bold" designating first time viewings:

11-01-24:
"The Seventh Victim" (1943) (4K/UHD) 4/5 Stars
11-01-24: "The Mystery of Marie Roget" (1942) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-01-24:
"Journey into Fear" (1943) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-02-24: “99 River Street” (1953) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-02-24: “The Unknown” (1946) (iTunes) 3/5 Stars
11-03-24:
“Nobody Lives Forever” (1946) (DVD) 4/5 Stars
11-03-24: "Bluebeard" (1944) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-04-24: “Black Tuesday” (1954) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-04-24:
“Cause for Alarm” (1951) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-05-24: “Nightmare” (1956) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-05-24:
“Vice Squad” (1953) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-05-24: "Iron Man" (1951) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-06-24: "Breakdown" (1997) (4K/UHD) 4/5 Stars
11-06-24: "The Third Man" (1949) (4K/UHD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-07-24: "The Flame" (1947) (iTunes) 3/5 Stars
11-07-24: "Island of Doomed Men" (1940) (BD) 2/5 Stars
11-08-24: “Finger Man” (1955) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-08-24: “City of Shadows” (1955) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-08-24: “Short Cut to Hell” (1957) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-08-24:
“Shack Out on 101” (1955) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-09-24: “Cloak and Dagger” (1946) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-09-24: “Le deuxieme souffle” (Criterion Channel) 4/5 Stars
11-10-24: “The Looters” (1955) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-10-24: “The Face Behind the Mask” (1941) (Criterion Channel) 3/5 Stars
11-11-24:
“And Then There Were None” (1945) (iTunes) 4/5 Stars
11-11-24: “Bullets or Ballots” (1936) (iTunes) 4/5 Stars
11-12-24: "Crashout" (1955) (Blu-ray) 4/5 Stars
11-12-24:
“Lone Star” (1996) (4K/UHD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-12-24: "Captain Carey, U.S.A. (1950) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-13-24: “The Man I Love” (1947) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-13-24: “The Good Die Young” (1954) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-14-24:
“Plunder Road” (1957) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-14-24: “North by Northwest” (1959) (4K/UHD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-14-24: "Scarface" (1932) (4K/UHD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-15-24: "Seven Keys to Baldpate" (1935) (TCM) 2.5/5 Stars
11-16-24:
"The Big Combo" (1955) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-16-24: "This Gun for Hire" (1942) (BD) 5/5 Stars
11-16-24: "The Whistler" (1944) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-16-24: "Jennifer" (1953) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-16-24: "The Mark of the Whistler" (1944) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-16-24: "I Was a Shoplifter" (1950) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-16-24: "Behind the High Wall" (1956) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-16-24: "The Power of the Whistler" (1945) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-16-24: "World in My Corner" (1956) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-17-24: "Undertow" (1949) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-17-24: "Outside the Wall" (1950) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-17-24: “Voice of the Whistler” (1945) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-17-24:
“The Ladykillers” (1955) (4K/UHD) 4/5 Stars
11-18-24: “Body and Soul” (1947) (BD) 5/5 Stars
11-18-24: “Blast of Silence” (1961) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-19-24: "13 West Street" (1962) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-19-24: "The Burglar" (1957) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-19-24: "Killer's Kiss" (1955) (4K/UHD) 3/5 Stars
11-19-24: "Sorry, Wrong Number" (1948) (BD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-20-24: "Maigret: Season 1, Episode 1" (1960) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-20-24: "Maigret: Season 1, Episode 2" (1960) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-20-24: "Witness in the City" (1959) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-20-24: "Back to the Wall" (1958) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-20-24: "The Girl in the Kremlin" (1957) (BD) 2/5 Stars
11-20-24: "Man Afraid" (1957) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-21-24: “The Bride Wore Black” (1968) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-21-24: “Johnny Allegro” (1949) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-21-24: “The Miami Story” (1954) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-21-24: “Mysterious Intruder” (1946) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-22-24: “Secret of the Whistler” (1946) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-22-24: “Secret Beyond the Door…” (1948) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-23-24:
“The Conversation” (1974) (4K/UHD) 5/5 Stars
11-23-24: “Trapped” (1949) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-23-24: "The Driver" (1978) (4K/UHD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-23-24: “Conflict” (1945) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-24-24: “They Drive by Night” (1940) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-24-24: “Ladies in Retirement” (1941) (Criterion Channel) 4/5 Stars
11-24-24:
“Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye” (1950) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-25-24: “The Devil Thumbs a Ride” (1947) (DVD-R) 2.5/5 Stars
11-25-24: “Railroaded!” (1947) (DVD-R) 3/5 Stars
11-26-24:
“The Chase” (1946) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-26-24: “The Iron Curtain” (1948) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-26-24: “Hell’s Half Acre” (1954) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-27-24:
"Play Misty for Me" (1971) (4K/UHD) 4/5 Stars
11-27-24: "The Sniper" (1952) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-27-24: "Odds Against Tomorrow" (1959) (BD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-28-24: "The Night Runner" (1957) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-28-24: "Spy Hunt" (1950) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-28-24: "Step Down to Terror" (1958) (BD) 2/5 Stars
11-28-24: "The Thirteenth Hour" (1947) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-28-24: "The Return of the Whistler" (1948) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-29-24: "Counter-Espionage" (1942) (iTunes) 2.5/5 Stars
11-29-24:
"Naked Alibi" (1954) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-29-24: "A Simple Plan" (1998) (4K/UHD) 4.5/5 Stars
11-29-24: “Woman on the Run” (1950) (BD) 4/5 Stars
11-30-24: "You Only Live Once" (1937) (BD) 3.5/5 Stars
11-30-24: "The Price of Fear" (1956) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
11-30-24: “The Unguarded Moment” (1956) (BD) 3/5 Stars
11-30-24:
“Fallen Angel” (1945) (BD) 4/5 Stars
 
Last edited:

t1g3r5fan

Reviewer
Joined
Jul 1, 2012
Messages
1,948
Location
Salem, Oregon
Real Name
Mychal Bowden
I'm in. This is a placeholder.

New viewings/discoveries are in bold.
Max rating is out of 5.

November 1: The Killing (1956; Stanley Kubrick): 5 out of 5 (UHD)
November 2: The Killers (1946; Robert Siodmak): 5 out of 5 (TCM)
November 3: 2 Days in the Valley (1996; John Herzfeld): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 4: The Mystery of Marie Roget (1942; Phil Rosen): 3.25 out of 5 (Blu)
November 5: A Simple Plan (1998; Sam Raimi): 4.5 out of 5 (UHD)
November 6: Chicago Deadline (1949; Lewis Allen): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 7: Sorry, Wrong Number (1948; Anatole Litvak): 4.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 8: Iron Man (1951; Joseph Pevney): 3.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 9: Killer's Kiss (1955; Stanley Kubrick): 3.25 out of 5 (UHD)
November 10: Cry of the City (1948; Robert Siodmak): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 11: The Enforcer (1951; Bretaigne Windust & Raoul Walsh): 4 out of 5 (Blu) + The Scarlet Hour (1956; Michael Curtiz): 3.5 out of 5 (Blu) & Plunder Road (1957; Hubert Cornfield): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 12: Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982; Carl Reiner): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 13: The Killers (1964; Don Siegel): 3.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 14: Narc (2002; Joe Carnahan): 4 out of 5 (UHD)
November 15: Pickup on South Street (1953; Samuel Fuller): 4.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 16: Farewell, My Lovely (1975; Dick Richards): 4.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 17: The Big Sleep (1978; Michael Winner): 3.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 18: Night and the City (1950; Jules Dassin): 4.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 19: Woman on the Run (1950; Norman Foster): 4.5 out of 5 (TCM)
November 20: Odd Man Out (1947; Carol Reed): 5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 21: The Hitch-Hiker (1953; Ida Lupino): 4.5 out of 5 (DVD)
November 22: Double Indemnity (1944; Billy Wilder): 5 out of 5 (TCM)
November 23: Deadline - U.S.A. (1952; Richard Brooks): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 24: They Made Me a Fugitive (1947; Alberto Cavalcanti): 5 out of 5 (DVD)
November 25: Odds Against Tomorrow (1959; Robert Wise): 4.5 out of 5 (Blu)
November 26: The Unholy Wife (1957; John Farrow): 2.5 out of 5 (TCM)
November 27: Union Station (1950; Rudolph Maté): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 28: Contraband AKA Blackout (1940; Michael Powell): 3.5 out of 5 (DVD)
November 29: Rope of Sand (1949; William Dieterle): 4 out of 5 (Blu)
November 30: Chinatown (1974; Roman Polanski): 5 out of 5 (Blu)
 
Last edited:

John Stell

Screenwriter
Joined
Jun 12, 2002
Messages
1,403
Location
Columbia, MD
Real Name
John Stell
B - Blu Ray Viewing
D - DVD Viewing
R - DVD-R Viewing
S - Streaming

Bold - Denotes first ever viewing

Rating - Out of a possible 4 1730751685432.png

01) 11/03/2024 S Marlowe (2022) 1730751685432.png1730751685432.png1/2
 
Last edited:

Robert Crawford

Crawdaddy
Moderator
Patron
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 9, 1998
Messages
72,804
Location
Michigan
Real Name
Robert
See my summary for film grades with the movies in "Bold" being first time viewings:

1730457622158.png

01) 11-01-24 "The Seventh Victim" (1943) (4K/UHD) 4/5 Stars
Some people might consider this Val Lewton film a horror movie. To me, it has always been more of a film noir than horror movie. The basic plot is about a young woman going to NYC to search for her missing sister. Unbeknownst to her, the missing sister became involved in a secretive group of Devil Worshippers. The movie has a heavy lesbian theme that I didn't pick up on when I first watched the movie in my youth. However, the homoeroticism is quite evident when watching the film today. This was Mark Robson's directing debut at 29 years old while 21-year-old Kim Hunter makes her film debut as the young woman searching for her alluring sister, Jean Brooks in a cheap brunette wig. A good movie with some excellent sequences.

1730529720668.png

02) 11-01-24 "The Mystery of Marie Roget" (1942) (BD) 2.5/5 Stars
This 1942 gothic noir is the film adaptation of a story from Edgar Allan Poe. It takes place in France in the 1800s involving the police investigation about the disappearance of a cabaret singer and a couple of unsolved murders. This was a first time I ever watched this movie. The 2024 Blu-ray has a couple of audio commentaries that I will listen to the next time I watch this "B" movie again. It's fairly entertaining but nothing ground-breaking that kind of copies the formula of "Sherlock Holmes" movies being made at Universal during the 1940s starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce.

1730530321739.png

03) 11-01-24 "Journey into Fear" (1943) (BD) 3/5 Stars
Finally, a good-looking home video presentation of this "Mercury Theater" produced WWII film noir. The movie's cast is full of Mercury Theater actors such as Joseph Cotten, Ruth Warrick, Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane and of course, Orson Welles. Reportedly, the screenplay was written by Welles and Cotten. Anyhow, the basic plot is about an American armaments engineer played by Cotten that is targeted for assassination by a Nazi agent and his rotund hitman. The movie takes place in Turkey during WWII. The movie has always been kind of disjointed that left you with a feeling that something was missing or cut from it. It's an okay film noir that would've been better served with another 10-15 minutes added to the storyline. Anyhow, I'm happy with the 2024 Warner Archive Blu-ray's video presentation. Some people might feel this is a "B" movie and perhaps it is, but to me, "Journey into Fear" is a solid movie that probably deserved better from its filmmakers and RKO Studios.
 

Robert Crawford

Crawdaddy
Moderator
Patron
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 9, 1998
Messages
72,804
Location
Michigan
Real Name
Robert
I still haven’t gone to bed yet. I watched two more movies this morning. I’ll write about all three movies this evening.:)
 

t1g3r5fan

Reviewer
Joined
Jul 1, 2012
Messages
1,948
Location
Salem, Oregon
Real Name
Mychal Bowden
And they're off! Noir-vember 2024 kicks off with a breakthrough film from one of cinema's greatest auteurs:

November 1: The Killing (1956; Stanley Kubrick): 5 out of 5 (Kino UHD Blu-ray)

Fresh out of prison Johnny Clay (Sterling Hayden) has no plans to go straight. He instead has plans to knock off the Lansdowne Park racetrack's $2 million stashed for race payouts and payroll for the seventh race of the day. The well organized plan has everything in place except for one thing: Sherry Peatty (Marie Windsor), the money grubbing wife of racetrack cashier George (Elisha Cook Jr.). And if the love of money is the root of all evil, Sherry's love for the Almighty Dollar may just unravel everything that Johnny has planned for!

The third feature film from Stanley Kubrick is about as quintessential of a film noir as you can get. Shot in documentary style by the great Lucien Ballard, this thrilling heist noir has even been a major influence on Quentin Tarantino's directoral debut Reservoir Dogs.
 

Malcolm R

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Feb 8, 2002
Messages
26,733
Real Name
Malcolm
1730518414019.png


🍸 The Big Heat (1953) 🚬 🚬 🚬 🚬

Sgt. David Bannion is called upon to investigate the suicide of a fellow police officer. At first, this seems like an obvious suicide, but the man's mistress contacts Bannion and claims he'd never kill himself. As Bannion continues to pluck at the strings holding together the story, his tenacity begins to raise concern with many around him, from his bosses, Lt. Wilks and Commissioner Higgins, to the city's most notorious gangster, Mike Laguna. Unfortunately, tragedy strikes, sending Bannion down a path of unstoppable vengeance as he unravels the mass of corruption plaguing the city.

Starting off this year with a good one. Beautifully filmed, great cast, and rather unexpectedly violent for the time period, IMO. All of the female cast are especially wonderful, playing strong and mostly noble characters willing to put their own well-being on the line for the greater good. Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
 

Robert Crawford

Crawdaddy
Moderator
Patron
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 9, 1998
Messages
72,804
Location
Michigan
Real Name
Robert
If any of you have TCM then the following 1946 film noir is playing tonight and again on Sunday morning. Eddie Muller hosts it on "Noir Alley". Garfield playing a con man that is trying to fleece a rich woman but ends up falling in love with her.

1730533384419.png
 

Michael Elliott

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Messages
8,126
Location
KY
Real Name
Michael Elliott
I'm going to try and do at least 15. Bold means first time viewing.

Amazon rated both of these 13+ due to "violence and smoking." Jeez....

The Racket (1951) *** 1/2

Plotwise, there's really nothing new or ground-breaking done here but I thought the film itself was a lot of fun thanks to the wonderful cast. You've got Robert Mitchum playing an honest Captain trying to keep his section clean. Robert Ryan plays the scumbag crime boss who wants to corrupt the entire system. Lizabeth Scott plays the nightclub singer who gets mixed up with the bad guys. There are several other nice supporting actors. What I really enjoyed about this film was the cast as everyone is pretty much doing what they do best. I spent most of 2024 going through Mitchum's filmography and man, he never got the credit he deserved. Sure, he plays the tough guy over and over but he's so damn good at it. I did like how the film showed how corruption starts at the streets and then works itself up through the system.

Shed No Tears (1948) ** 1/2

Wallace Ford plays a husband whose new wife (June Vincent) talks him into faking his own death so that she can collect the life insurance. The only kick is she has another man she wants to spend the money with.

I doubt Ford or Vincent wanted to be on Poverty Row at this point in their careers but both delivered pretty good performances here. The screenplay is actually pretty good as it offers up several nice characters as well as a few good twists. The problem is that Jean Yarbrough was a master at getting stuff done cheap and without too much time. The cheapness and the rush is right there on the screen and it certainly holds the movie back but it was still fun to watch. At just 68-minutes it moves rather quickly.
 

dana martin

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
5,913
Location
Norfolk, VA
Real Name
Dana Martin
1. Act of Violence (Warner Archive Collection) First Time Viewing :emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:1/2
2. Bluebeard (KL Studio Classics) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
3. Escape in the Fog (Indicator Columbia Noir Collection) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
4. Cause for Alarm! (ClassicFlix) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
5. A Woman’s Devotion (KL Studio Classics) First Time Viewing :emoji_star: :emoji_star: :emoji_star:
6
. Blonde Ice (ClassicFlix) First Time Viewing :emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
7. Underworld (Criterion Collection) First Time Viewing :emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
8. They Drive by Night (Warner Archive Collection) First Time Viewing :emoji_star: :emoji_star: :emoji_star: 1/2
9. Angel Face (Warner Archive Collection) First Time Viewing :emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:1/2
10
. Piccadilly (Milestone Cinematheque) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:
11. The Furies (Criterion Collection) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:1/2
12. Storm Warning (Warner Archive Collection) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:1/2
13
. Border Incident (Warner Archive Collection) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:1/2
14
. The Whistler (Indicator Columbia Noir Collection 6) First Time Viewing:emoji_star::emoji_star::emoji_star:

I'll do write ups later trying to get a little more in, finally got some time off.
 
Last edited:

Michael Elliott

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Messages
8,126
Location
KY
Real Name
Michael Elliott
Normally, on Saturday's I'll start off watching a football game, then watch a movie and then go back to watch the end of the noon, 3:30 and 7 football games. Most were boring today so I stuck with the movies.

Nightfall (1956) *** 1/2

Intelligent and suspenseful noir has Aldo Ray playing an innocent man on the run from a couple hoods (Brian Keith, Rudy Bond) after some missing money.

I will admit that I think I missed something regarding Ray not being able to remember where he put the money yet he was able to remember everything else? Either way, this was a nice little gem that really worked well. The entire "loss of memory" thing had been played to death but it actually worked very well here and director Jacques Tourneur managed to build some nice suspense (especially the ending). Ray is wonderful in the lead role and Anne Bancroft was also fun. However, the film belongs to Keith and Bond who are simply terrific if roles that you just love to hate. The Utah settings weren't used much but when they were they looked terrific.

Too Late for Tears (1949) ***

Lizabeth Scott and Arthur Kennedy play a couple who has $60,000 cash fall into their lap. The husband wants to do the right thing and give it back but the wife will keep it at all costs and that includes when the owner (Dan Duryea) shows up.

I will say that I thought the film went on a bit too long but there was still plenty of entertainment to be found here and especially the cast. I thought Scott was wonderful in the lead role and this might be my favorite performance from her. I really loved how she played everyone that got involved with her and her chemistry with Duryea was terrific. I also really loved Duryea's performance and character and especially since he was crazy yet he knew he wasn't as crazy as Scott. Kennedy is perhaps the most annoying husband in the history of noir films!

It was fascinating to learn that the early production was meant to be an "A" picture with Joan Crawford and Kirk Douglas but they couldn't get the proper funding so it went to a "B" movie. As a fan of both Crawford and Douglas, it certainly would have been great to see them together but this cast handled the material well.

A Lady Without Passport (1950) **

Ummm... this was noir? Eddie Muller says it was so I won't argue with him. Hedy Lamarr plays an immigrant trying to get out of her country but an immigration agent (John Hodiak) is following her.

I really thought this was a complete misfire and it's a real shame since the director was coming off GUN CRAZY. I'm not exactly sure what they were trying to do with this film but I found it to be a complete bore and the 74-minute running time seemed to go on forever. The photography was terrific and it was almost good enough to recommend the film but I found the characters to be bland and the situation to be downright boring. Plus, the entire "drama" of the story just never really worked because it seems like there was never a real threat of anything.
 

Robert Crawford

Crawdaddy
Moderator
Patron
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 9, 1998
Messages
72,804
Location
Michigan
Real Name
Robert
See my summary for film grades with the movies in "Bold" being first time viewings:

1730649895931.png

04) 11-02-24: “99 River Street” (1953) (BD) 4/5 Stars
Yesterday, I watched the 2024 BD release of "99 River Street" (1953). This was Kino re-release of a previously released BD back in 2016. The differences between the two Blu-rays are a higher bit rate on the 2024 release along with being on BD-50 instead of a BD-25. Long considered, one of the best film noirs coming of the 1950s. It's not quite there for me personally but it's a really good hard-hitting noir with an excellent cast of actors. The basic storyline is about a former boxer, now driving a NYC cab that has the inability to move forward in life with an unhappy and unfaithful wife. Furthermore, he is later framed for murder by a murderous jewel thief but is helped by a struggling actress in his endeavor to prove his innocence. The director of this film is a favorite of mine, Phil Karlson, a veteran director of many hard-hitting crime dramas. Some of his films are 5 Against the House, Tight Spot, The Phenix City Story, Kansas City Confidential, The Brothers Rico and Walking Tall. I've seen this movie quite a few times but this time with Eddie Muller's excellent audio commentary.

1730650648742.png

05) 11-02-24: “The Unknown” (1946) (iTunes) 3/5 Stars
Until August, I never heard of this "B" movie from Columbia Pictures. I caught the HD digital on sale for $4.99 and decided to purchase it then and watched it later during this "Noirvember Challenge". Watching it yesterday afternoon, I was pleasantly surprised how much I enjoyed the movie. I always been a fan of Jeff Donnell, a fine actress that never achieved stardom but someone I always enjoyed watching in films. This is a murder mystery taking place in a southern plantation mansion in which several family members have gathered for a reading of the matriarch's will. Donnell plays the granddaughter that comes back to claim her inheritance and to interact with family members, she never knew beforehand including her own mentally ill mother and unstable uncles. Needless to say, a family secret is finally being reveal along with a murder or two. A pretty good movie!

1730651444491.png

06) 11-03-24: “Nobody Lives Forever” (1946) (DVD) 4/5 Stars
This morning, I watched the 2012 DVD or Nobody Lives Forever which played on TCM's "Noir Alley" this weekend. John Garfield has always been a top ten favorite actor of mine going back to my childhood, when my father constantly talked him up as an actor. I considered him one of the best natural actors I have seen in movies. With little doubt, he was the inspiration for several great actors and directors that came after him. Anyhow, Nobody Lives Forever is a fine film in which a grifter just out of the army tries to swindle a rich widow out of her money. The only problem is that the one-time grifter isn't the same person he was before the war and is slowed to realize that change. His war experiences and serving alongside other soldiers in his platoon have altered his outlook on life. Furthermore, he falls in love with the beautiful, rich widow, he is trying to swindle which complicates his business arrangement with his partners in crime, some of them being rather impatient. Geraldine Fitzgerald is a standout as the widow along with Walter Brennan, George Tobias and George Coulouris as Garfield's partners in crime. Directed by Jean Negulesco with a screenplay by the great W.R. Burnett, this fine movie is one of Garfield's best. 1946 was a good year for Garfield with The Postman Always Rings Twice, Humoresque and this film. I hope next year Nobody Lives Forever joins those other two films on Blu-ray. Hopefully, Warner Archive will make that happen.
 

dana martin

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
5,913
Location
Norfolk, VA
Real Name
Dana Martin
See my summary for film grades with the movies in "Bold" being first time viewings:

View attachment 236820
04) 11-02-24: “99 River Street” (1953) (BD) 4/5 Stars
Yesterday, I watched the 2024 BD release of "99 River Street" (1953). This was Kino re-release of a previously released BD back in 2016. The differences between the two Blu-rays are a higher bit rate on the 2024 release along with being on BD-50 instead of a BD-25. Long considered, one of the best film noirs coming of the 1950s. It's not quite there for me personally but it's a really good hard-hitting noir with an excellent cast of actors. The basic storyline is about a former boxer, now driving a NYC cab that has the inability to move forward in life with an unhappy and unfaithful wife. Furthermore, he is later framed for murder by a murderous jewel thief but is helped by a struggling actress in his endeavor to prove his innocence. The director of this film is a favorite of mine, Phil Karlson, a veteran director of many hard-hitting crime dramas. Some of his films are 5 Against the House, Tight Spot, The Phenix City Story, Kansas City Confidential, The Brothers Rico and Walking Tall. I've seen this movie quite a few times but this time with Eddie Muller's excellent audio commentary.

View attachment 236821
05) 11-02-24: “The Unknown” (1946) (iTunes) 3/5 Stars
Until August, I never heard of this "B" movie from Columbia Pictures. I caught the HD digital on sale for $4.99 and decided to purchase it then and watched it later during this "Noirvember Challenge". Watching it yesterday afternoon, I was pleasantly surprised how much I enjoyed the movie. I always been a fan of Jeff Donnell, a fine actress that never achieved stardom but someone I always enjoyed watching in films. This is a murder mystery taking place in a southern plantation mansion in which several family members have gathered for a reading of the matriarch's will. Donnell plays the granddaughter that comes back to claim her inheritance and to interact with family members, she never knew beforehand including her own mentally ill mother and unstable uncles. Needless to say, a family secret is finally being reveal along with a murder or two. A pretty good movie!

View attachment 236822
06) 11-03-24: “Nobody Lives Forever” (1946) (DVD) 4/5 Stars
This morning, I watched the 2012 DVD or Nobody Lives Forever which played on TCM's "Noir Alley" this weekend. John Garfield has always been a top ten favorite actor of mine going back to my childhood, when my father constantly talked him up as an actor. I considered him one of the best natural actors I have seen in movies. With little doubt, he was the inspiration for several great actors and directors that came after him. Anyhow, Nobody Lives Forever is a fine film in which a grifter just out of the army tries to swindle a rich widow out of her money. The only problem is that the one-time grifter isn't the same person he was before the war and is slowed to realize that change. His war experiences and serving alongside other soldiers in his platoon have altered his outlook on life. Furthermore, he falls in love with the beautiful, rich widow, he is trying to swindle which complicates his business arrangement with his partners in crime, some of them being rather impatient. Geraldine Fitzgerald is a standout as the widow along with Walter Brennan, George Tobias and George Coulouris as Garfield's partners in crime. Directed by Jean Negulesco with a screenplay by the great W.R. Burnett, this fine movie is one of Garfield's best. 1946 was a good year for Garfield with The Postman Always Rings Twice, Humoresque and this film. I hope next year Nobody Lives Forever joins those other two films on Blu-ray. Hopefully, Warner Archive will make that happen.
I have 99 River Street sitting on my shelf for years and never gotten around to watching it I might have to throw that into the mix now, that's one of the things I love I read and come up with hey this is just sitting here let's watch that.
 

t1g3r5fan

Reviewer
Joined
Jul 1, 2012
Messages
1,948
Location
Salem, Oregon
Real Name
Mychal Bowden
November 2: The Killers (1946; Robert Siodmak): 5 out of 5 (Criterion Blu-ray)

After two hitmen gun down The Swede (Burt Lancaster in his film debut), insurance investigator Reardon (Edmond O'Brien) wants to know why a man would passively welcome his own death. The investigation leads Reardon to cross paths with those involved in the Swede's life, including a sultry lounge singer (Ava Gardner) and a gangster (Albert Dekker), with each encounter either getting him closer to the truth or closer to his own demise.

Another quintessential noir, Robert Siodmak takes Ernest Hemingway's short story (faithfully depicted in the opening 15 minutes of the movie) and creates a Citizen Kane styled thriller in which why the death of the ill-fated Swede is not in question, but what and who are responsible is. Lancaster and Gardner shot to stardom here and Miklos Rozsa's propulsive music score - one of his best - has even inspired the theme music for Jack Webb's Dragnet (listen carefully to the main theme during the opening credits and you'll see).

Fun fact: this - along with the 1964 remake - was my very first ever Criterion Collection DVD I ever bought, so this holds a special place in my collection.
 

compson

Supporting Actor
Joined
Sep 4, 2006
Messages
633
Real Name
Robert
Early noir

1. Stranger on the Third Floor, 1940*
2. The Letter, 1940
3. The Maltese Falcon, 1941 (4K)
4. I Wake Up Screaming, 1941
5. This Gun For Hire, 1942*
6. The Glass Key, 1942*

*first time viewing

I watched Stranger on the Third Floor on DVD and the others on Blu-ray. My comments:

At a trial with an inattentive judge and a sleeping juror, covered by cynical reporters who smoke and pop out to a nearby bar for a drink, Elisha Cook, Jr. is convicted on the testimony of a reporter who saw Cook leaning over the body of a murdered man. That reporter and his fiancé have doubts about Cook’s guilt, and things soon take a dramatic turn. Stranger on the Third Floor (1940) has been labeled “the first true film noir,” and it certainly looks and feels like noir, offering a shadowy world of conflict and paranoia. Peter Lorre gets top billing in a supporting role. A long dream sequence has striking imagery recalling German expressionism, though it does feel like padding to fill the B movie’s 63-minute run time. The movie wraps up dramatically but conveniently. It’s a fun picture and the start of something big.

William Wyler’s The Letter (1940) opens on a rubber plantation with Bette Davis shooting and killing a man. She claims she was defending herself from his physical advances, and it appears the matter will be resolved to her satisfaction until a letter she had written to the dead man surfaces. Davis commands the screen, as always, playing a self-possessed and calculating woman. The movie’s a wonderful melodrama and includes a hypnotic encounter and a dramatic scene of revelation.

Since I’m surveying early noir, I watched The Maltese Falcon (1941) once again. John Huston directed from his wonderfully cynical screenplay based on Dashiell Hammett’s pulp novel. If you want an example of the difference a talented director can make, try wasting 80 minutes of your life watching the 1931 version. I’ve never found Bogart a convincing actor, if you’ll pardon the sacrilege, but his stilted delivery suits his role here. And what a supporting cast: not only Astor and Greenstreet, but Lee Patrick as Bogart’s loyal secretary, Peter Lorre hilarious in pursuit of the falcon, Elisha Cook, Jr. again. Lorre’s calling card smells of gardenia in case there were any doubt in the audience about his sexual orientation, but the other characters accept him well enough. Cook is referred to repeatedly as “young,” even though he was 37, only four years younger than Bogart and older than Lorre.

If I Wake Up Screaming (1941), released (by 20th Century Fox) over a year after Stranger on the Third Floor and four weeks after The Maltese Falcon, wasn’t the first film noir, it was the first movie that looked like a parody of film noir. Except there was nothing yet to parody; it was helping to create the tropes. A beautiful model is murdered, and Victor Mature, a promoter who promised to make her a celebrity, is the main suspect. He receives the third degree in a smoky room surrounded by shadowed detectives. The cast of characters includes the victim’s sister (Betty Grable), who may be in love with Mature; a hulking and persistent police inspector (Laird Cregar) who thinks nothing of obtaining evidence illegally; and a switchboard operator played by—who else?—Elisha Cook, Jr. The movie is an exciting cat-and-mouse game with an effective ending.

Alan Ladd is a cold-blooded hitman who feeds a stray cat and retrieves a disabled child’s ball in This Gun For Hire (1942). Veronica Lake is an undercover government agent investigating people providing wartime enemies with industrial secrets. They’re both after the same heel (Laird Cregar again), and her fiancé (Robert Preston) is on Ladd’s trail. Accepting the remarkable coincidences is challenging, even in a film this old, but the movie is strong. Ladd is good (the role made him a star) and our sympathies are with him even though the movie opens with his murder of two people.

Five months after This Gun For Hire, Ladd and Lake were reunited in The Glass Key (1942). Ladd plays top lieutenant to a political boss, both of whom are attracted to Lake, daughter of a gubernatorial candidate the boss agrees to support. Throw in Lake’s wayward brother who’s murdered early on, a gangster the boss refuses to do business with, a goon (William Bendix) whose interest in beating up Ladd is so intense it begins to feel like a fetish, a corrupt newspaper publisher, and the murdered man’s girlfriend, who’s also the boss’s sister. A lot of threads in this one. Based on a novel by Dashiell Hammett.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top