Just Finished Reading :
Unless the Threat of Death is Behind Them – Hard-Boiled Fiction and Film Noir
by John T Irwin
As some of you will already know I’m a big fan of Noir both
in movies and in literature, so it was nice to find a book that examined both.
In this largely well written and often fascinating book the author (who is a
professor of Humanities at Johns
Hopkins University )
compares a handful of early written works and then discusses them in relation
to each other and to the movies they spawned.
As you might be able to tell one of the books/movies
discussed (illustrated and quoted on the front page) is the brilliant Maltese
Falcon penned by Dashell Hammett. This, along with Raymond Chandler’s The Big
Sleep, James Cain’s Double Indemnity, W R Burnett’s High Sierra and Cornell
Woolrich’s Night Has a Thousand Eyes makes for a rich and detailed
investigation of the history, cultural placement and raw power of Noir fiction
as it burst onto the scene in the 1930’s 40’s and 50’s. I do think that some of
the analysis would have gone over my head if I hadn’t read Hammett, Chandler or Cain or
hadn’t seen any of the movies. So maybe some prep-work is needed to get the
full use out of this text. But I suppose if you’re going to be reading this
you’d be a fan already and have at least seen some of the movies listed!
Probably the thing I found most interesting in this book was
the discussion of how the movie version of The Big Sleep varied from the book.
This revolved around Humphey Bogart who was, at that time, getting a divorce
from his then wife whilst having an affair with his co-star Lauren Bacall. To
play this down and to make the film more marketable by playing up the romance
between the two leads some heavy editing of the script took place – to such an
extent that parts of the film clearly make little or no sense.
The main thrust of the author’s thesis regarding the Noir
genre was the idea of the detective/protagonist as an independent contractor
who saw everything other than his independence to be of secondary importance –
which leads to the rejection of both bribes and brides. A case in point is the
Sam Spade rejection of his ‘girlfriends’ idea that they cover up his partners
murder because they’re in love. Spade, played by Bogart on top form, gives her
up to the police – not only for his business partners murder but also because
if he gave into her suggestion she would have something to hold over him for
the rest of his life.
Just about the only thing I didn’t like about this book –
and through which I more than happily skimmed – was a Freudian analysis of
Cornell Woolrich. I mean FREUD? Please don’t make me laugh! If this had been at
the beginning of the book or if the author has persisted in his
‘interpretations of the Noir author’s motives using this outdated and frankly
ridiculous methodology I would have quite happily have consigned it to the
unreadable pile. Fortunately he only used it in this one instance (why I
wondered).
Anyway, apart from that particular wobble, this was a very
interesting and often insightful study of some of the classic Noir stories that
I, for one, know and love. If you’re a Noir fan (and I know that some of my
regulars are) I think you’ll enjoy this – even with the Freud bit (shakes
head).
2 comments:
Those first three you mention--The Maltese Flacon, The Big Sleep, and Double Indemnity--are all on my top movies list. Love 'em all!
Like you, I'd be drawn automatically to any book covering this subject. And like you, I'd have to laugh derisively at any attempt to "make sense" of the movement by way of psychoanalysis!
wunelle said: Those first three you mention--The Maltese Flacon, The Big Sleep, and Double Indemnity--are all on my top movies list. Love 'em all!
Most definitely!
wunelle said: And like you, I'd have to laugh derisively at any attempt to "make sense" of the movement by way of psychoanalysis!
Enjoy your belly laugh! I did (mostly).
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