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Showing posts with the label neonoir

Ghost Dog-Neonoir hot take

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  Ghost Dog (1999 US) starring Forest Whitaker. A mafia hit man in New York lives by the code of the samurai. The film sits on the edge of Neo Noir and some are calling it a Crime/Thriller. It had quite a few Neonoir shots with high contrast and German Expressionism. Unlike, most neonoir it had some quirky and humorous moments that could be seen as not neonoir but I think the dark story throws it back. Whitaker is awesome as a modern urban samurai complete with a code of conduct. Some critics are saying that this was an homage to the French film Le Samourai. I hated that movie so I would rather watch Battlefield Earth than something so pointless. Cool hat though. Needless to say, Ghost Dog was far, far better. For quite awhile I could not find this film except a used DVD. Thankfully its back. Its on Criterion, HBO and Amazon. Loved it. Go see it.

Bound- Noir Hot Take

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  Bound (1996 US) Todays second entry for #FemaleFilmmakerFriday is this Wachowski sisters neo-noir masterpiece. Jennifer Tilly and Gina Gershon concoct a scheme to steal money from Tilly's mob boyfriend. Tilly rocks as the femme fatale. It just felt like she was loving this role. Gershon plays the sap and she knocks it out if the park. It’s really hard to shoot noir style in color. The Wachowskis pulled it off with muted color production design and black to get the proper contrast and shadow. I'm not a big fan of the current trend of having bright colors and crushed blacks to get the contrast. Happy colors don't scream noir. It screams Teletubbies. Wikipedia says the budget was 6 million but I heard 3. Why is that important? Lower budgets are really going to cut down on so many things including locations. There was limited locations in this. Either way audiences liked it and it made money at the Box Office. It’s on Tubi and Pluto for free and rentable on other streaming pl

Stray Dog -Noir Hot Take

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  Stray Dog (1949 Japan) written and directed by Kurosawa. This film is beautiful. Kurosawa was the master of Mis en scene. And not only of sight but of sound too. Directors often forget that sound is half the film experience. Kurosawa does not disappoint. Like Raymond Chandler, Kurosawa takes us on a journey to the seedy underbelly of the city creating a thriving character not human in form but human in fu nction. Hell even the weather was it’s own character. The film is led by a hard boiled detective and a soft boiled detective trying to come to terms with post WWII Tokyo in their own way. It’s as if Phillip Marlowe was split into two characters, the dark and the light each having a mutual respect for each other. I could write a long essay on this for a film theory class. But that would be boring. Just watch it and take in Kurosawas brilliance. You won’t regret it. Find it free on Tubi.

Brick-Noir Hot Take

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  Brick (2005) This Neo-noir stars Joseph Gordon Levitt and was written and directed by then first time feature filmmaker Rian Johnson (Star Wars, Knives Out) and had a whopping budget of 450k (I have also heard 800k). This film was basically a Chandler story... in high school and Levitt was Marlowe. If you think that sounds weird. Well it is kind of but Johnson and Levitt made it work. Getting traditionally noir shots is hard and audiences and fans know their stuff. What I loved about this gem is that Johnson adds to the vocabulary of noir or neo-noir. How? New ways to get high contrast, deep shadow and the incongruent lines of German Expressionism. Johnson did his absolute best to get those lovely noir shots and he did quite often and with a budget of 450k. That's really hard. Johnson is one of my favorite directors. He just keeps surprising me. Like many low budget films this was all about natural light and locations. worth a watch. Rentable on most streaming.

Nightmare Alley-Hot Take

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 Nightmare Alley (2021 US) A grifter steals a "magic" act and makes money off of it. Based on the novel of the same name from 1946. Guillermo Del Toro writes and directs this Best Picture nominee. It is classified as neo-noir and that would be fair since the 1947 film is solidly noir. I liked it but...I'm a noir fan and prefer the 1947 version. Don't get me wrong the 2021 version is very well shot, the color is lovely. It has the traditional high contrast and deep shadows of noir but I really saw little of the German Expressionism typical of noir. German Expressionism cares little of lovely aesthetic and more about expressing anxiety. The lines are incongruent and misaligned. Where is the order? There is none and that's the point. The lines in this film for the most part were too symmetrical for that and even the color wheel De Toro used was too symmetrical harkening back to Wes Anderson films that are so symmetrical its like ASMR.  Yeah it had contrast but overal

Promising Young Woman-Review

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 Promising Young Woman (2020 US) Its #femaleFilmmakerFriday and todays film is from Emerald Fennell. Cool Name.  Cassie lives out her trauma trolling night club  pred ators. There is a lot going on in this film so the logline doesn't really cut it. However, one of the takeaways here is don't mess with Cassie. This film had some neonoir vibes but in style it did not reach that level. I know the trend is to use bright colors to create the contrast for noir style in film. I don't like it. My opinion is that bright colors are too "happy" for noir. However, the color grading was great and production design was fabulous. At it's heart, Promising Young Woman is a revenge story, a very clever revenge story. Fennell should make a vengeance trilogy like Park Chan-Wook. It was really on that level. Young Woman won an Oscar for the writing (Fennell) and was nominated in other categories including Best Picture and Best Director which lost to Nomadland and Chloe Zaou. Fenne

The March of Oscar

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Raging Bull (1980 US) Robert DeNiro stars as boxer Jake LaMotta. This Biopic from Martin Scorsese tells the story of a man and his brother (Joe Pesci) who have no idea what to do with their emotions. It works for them for a bit until it doesn't. Scorsese is a smart guy and the film is an in depth study of what we now call toxic masculinity. The film had an awful lot to say about the subject and Scorsese literally pulls no punches. Unfortunately, graduates of the school of "you missed the fucking point" have used the film as a how to manual. Criterion is saying stylistically this film was informed by film noir. To that I say sometimes. It was too uneven to label it a Noir throwback. Black and white does not make film noir. Remember that kids. The film was nominated for best picture and lost to Ordinary People, the film not actual ordinary people. Robert DeNiro won Best Actor. That was pretty spot on as DeNiro really dives into Assholeness and he convinces you to not like h

The March of Oscar

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 Fargo (1996 US UK) Joel an Ethan Cohen brought us all this fantastic Neo Noir/Black comedy that has been chosen to be preserved by the Library of Congress. Thank God for that! Frances McDormand stars as a pregnant cop assigned to investigate a murder. This film oh this film is still one of my favorites. A cop investigating a murder is nothing new but a pregnant cop with morning sickness in the Midwest winter is quite unique. The jokes, and there were many, were so understated that you may have missed them so watch it again. The Cohen Bros had made an earlier neo noir with McDormand (Blood Simple) so they knew the drill with Noir. Some call this straight up Black Comedy but I say its a blend. How do you blend comedy and noir? Well like this silly. Now here is the kicker, this film that inspired so many filmmakers, was well done, unique and memorable LOST to the English Patient for best picture. Respect to the English Patient but I could only watch half of it before I was done. I still

The March of Oscar

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 Parasite (2019 S KR) An impoverished family schemes to work for a wealthy family. Things don't go well.  Director writer Bong Joon Ho had a lot to say about South Korean society with this very dark "comedy". This is a brilliant film and I'm glad it was recognized by the Academy with a best picture award. Bong is a genius when it comes to framing. I heard the term awhile ago Sacred Geometry. I know it does not apply here but I'm just going to pretend it does and say that Bong incorporated Sacred Geometry to inform his audience. Watch the film and pause it. Look at the geometry of the shot. It makes a huge difference in your sub conscious and emotional responses to the film. Its a lot of work and planning. I can assure you the process was daunting. Bong is known for tone changes and wow this one had a doozy of a tone change so beware. I'm a fan of his work and if you are interested he did an outstanding Kaiju film called The Host (2006). The thought was the Bon

Love Fest February

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  Decision to Leave (2022 S. Korea) written and directed by the insanely talented Park Chan-Wook. If you are like me and watched Parks “Old Boy” and now need serious therapy because you didn’t get a warning, thanks Josh, then you will be happy to know that he’s done traumatizing the world. The president of S. Korea had a little chat with him and he will now be using his powers for good instead of evil. Decision to Leave is good old fashion neo-noir complete with a helluva femme fatale for the romance aspect. Wow she was good. Park does not need high contrast and German Expressionism to make his noir. He has his own rules. The buzz last year was that Park would clean up like Parasite did at the Oscars. But nope! snubbed. WTF Oscar? We need to talk. You can rent this masterpiece on most streaming and free on Mubi.