¶ … Big Sleep and Chinatown: Depictions of Noir in Hollywood
Film noir rose to prominence in the late 1940s and was initially described as "murder with a psychological twist" (Spicer, 1). Film noir helped to introduce audiences to a new genre that had distinct trademarks and themes. The Big Sleep, directed by Howard Hawkes and based upon the eponymous Raymond Chandler novel, helped to cement and define the genre. Similarly, Chinatown, directed by Roman Polanski, helped to redefine the genre, while at the same time, maintaining several aspects of classical film noir. The Big Sleep and Chinatown, though filmed nearly 30 years apart, are definitive films of the film noir genre, helping to establish the role of the hard-boiled detective in the genre, and adhering to the "murder with a psychological twist" trope.
The term film noir was first utilized by French film critic Nino Frank to describe four recently released crime thrillers including The Maltese Falcon (1941), Murder, My Sweet (1944), Double Indemnity (1944), and Laura (1944) (Spicer, 2). Crime films, and subsequently those films in the noir genre, shared a similar "iconography, visual style, narrative strategy, subject matter and characterization" (4). It is estimated that approximately 20% of noir films that were produced between 1941 and 1948 were direct adaptations novels written by "hard-boiled" authors such as Dashiell Hammet, Raymond Chandler, and James M. Cain. Within film noir, good and evil are intrinsically intertwined and often merge into one another (Borde and Chaumeton, 12).
The Big Sleep stars...
Film Noir / Cinema Architecture Perhaps one of the most fruitful ways in which to trace the evolution of Film Noir as a genre is to examine, from the genre's heyday to the present moment, the metamorphoses of one of film noir's most reliable tropes: the femme fatale. The notion of a woman who is fundamentally untrustworthy -- and possibly murderous -- is a constant within the genre, perhaps as a
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