Street with No Name
A History of the Classic American Film Noir
By Andrew Dickos.
Published by The University Press of Kentucky.
Published 2021.
Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0813152194
ISBN-13: 978-0813152196
Description:
"The best book available on the genre of movies set in
the dark, wet streets of the urban US." – Choice.
"A concrete, concise study of noir against an
impressive historical vista that brings to light the complex relation between
alienation and obsession that makes up these films." – Rain Taxi Review.
"Dickos provides a sharp critical and psychological
evaluation of a genre that continues to mutate long after many pronounced it
dead." – Shepherd Express.
Andrew Dickos's Street with No Name traces the film
noir genre back to its roots in German expressionist cinema and the French
cinema of the interwar years. Dickos describes the development of the film noir
in America from 1941 through the 1970s and examines how this development
expresses a modern cinema. He argues that, in its most satisfying form, the
film noir exists as a series of conventions with an iconography and characters
of distinctive significance. Featuring stylized lighting and urban settings,
these films tell melodramatic narratives involving characters who commit crimes
predicated on destructive passions, corruption, and a submission to human
weakness and fate.
Unlike other studies of the noir, Street with No Name
follows its development in a loosely historical style that associates certain
noir directors with those features in their films that helped define the scope
of the genre. Dickos examines notable directors such as Orson Welles, Fritz
Lang, Otto Preminger, and Robert Siodmak. He also charts the genre's influence
on such celebrated postwar French filmmakers as Jean-Pierre Melville, Francois
Truffaut, and Jean-Luc Godard.
Addressing the aesthetic, cultural, political,
and social concerns depicted in the genre, Street with No Name
demonstrates how the film noir generates a highly expressive, raw, and violent
mood as it exposes the ambiguities of modern postwar society.
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