Thursday 4 April 2013

HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF FILM NOIR



“Film noir” is a cinematic term given by French film critics to describe stylish Hollywood thriller and gangster dark films which indicates power relations, cynical attitudes and sexual motivations. The style of film noir is rather being known as a movement than a genre since it emerged during 1941 to 1958, an era where American suffered insecurity and political instability of World War II and Cold War. It was an awkward situation to question the masculinity identity after men have returned from war while women have expended themselves beyond merely doing house chores. According to Susan Haywood, film noir is more than just a genre or movement. It is above all a visual style which came about as a result of political circumstances and cross-fertilisation to express despair, fear, and guardedness of the particular period of time. Film noir usually deal with a seductive femme fatal that lured the protagonists to fall into a deadly situation to achieve her goals, merely to portray the male fears of feminism.

The 1940s and 1950s were the booming era of American film noir. The themes of the films were very dark and involved a lot of crimes, detectives and gangsters. However, it was not widely known in America until 1970s because film noirs was also referred to melodramas, western and other genres. The arguably first dark film produced was Marcel Carne’s Le Jour se Leve in 1939, a high contrast lighting film which full of sense of dread and anxiety. Besides that, there are other films created by Julien Duvivier and Jean Renoir which also managed to show the deep pessimism of French poetic realist visual code. The films are deeply influenced by German Expressionism, an artistic movement in the beginning of 20th century that involved in theatre, photography, painting, sculpture and cinema as well. High contrast lighting, the usage of shadow and alienated setting are the characteristics of German Expressionism that adopted by film noir.

In the late 1930s until the beginning of 1940s, a lot of European filmmakers moved to Hollywood due to the rising of anti-Semitic pogroms and the threat of war. Taking advantage of the post-war ambience of instability, these political events have completed the cross-fertilization of shaping the style of film noir. This movement of film experts and technicians to American have greatly impacted the characteristics of film noir where most of these people have associated with German Expressionism before. Some good film-makers involved are Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder and Max Ophuls.

In the 1960s come 1970s, a new style emerged, and it is known as neo-noir. It is a style often seen having the same elements and characteristics as film noir, however the themes and ideas that are used in the stories are very much more adventurous than those film noirs of the 1940s and 1950s. “Neo-noir tackles stories and themes not attempted by its stylistic predecessor, film noir: deeply corrupt cops, serial killers, psychopaths, and young fugitive couples running from the law, among other themes” (Schwartz, 2005)

Neo-noir, which can be known as “new noir” often incorporates modern feel, situations and circumstances that was quite absent during the glory days of the original film noir. Unlike the classic film noir, neo-normal films are made in a way that constantly makes it aware to the audience that they are not part of the film, but merely watching it and this is achieved by unconventional camera movements and the way the plot moves from one point to the other.

The Neo-noir style is very much with time and technology also, for movies such as Bladerunner which stars Harrison Ford, the film shows a time and place that is very futuristic. Flying cars and killing targets that turn out to be robots, this film is a good example of Neo-noir as it brings the sensibilities of Noir into the futuristic imaginative timeline plot of the story. The normal essence found in the classic film noir movies such as slow moving plot line, slow music that follows the scene, dark and specific lightings, etc., many are seen in this movie.


Ever since the 1970s onwards, we have had Neo-Noir films which had brought back the essence of Film Noir. And this style is now still being ventured into other genres due to many films these days being products of overlapping genres, therefore the style is still developing as it moves through the ages thought the essence of the classic version of the style remains.

CHARACTERISTICS OF FILM NOIR


In the characteristics of film noir film movement they are quite similar to the German Expressionistic styles which were mostly shot in low-key lighting, distortion, dark shadows, deep focus, disorienting visual schemes, jarring editing or juxtaposition of elements, skewed camera angles which usually is vertical or diagonal rather than horizontal, circling cigarette smoke, existential sensibilities, and unbalanced compositions.

Examples of: circling cigarette smoke
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:42:15
Examples of: dark shadows
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:34:36
Examples of: distortion angles & unbalanced compositions
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:02:28 
Examples of : Low key lighting
Sunset Boulevard (Willy.B, 1950) Retrieved on 4th April 2013 from
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/ee/SunsetBoulevardGloriaSwansonprofile.jpg
Examples of: Low key lighting
Sunset Boulevard (Willy.B, 1950) Retrieved on 4th April 2013 from http://www.movieposter.com/posters/archive/main/128/MPW-64394



The primary moods in movement of film noir are normally melancholy, alienation, bleakness, disillusionment, disenchantment, pessimism, ambiguity, moral corruption, evil, guilt, desperation and paranoia. Film noir films were also mostly shot in gloomy greys to show the dark and inhumane side of human nature with cynicism and doomed love that emphasized the brutal, unhealthy, seamy, shadowy, dark and sadistic sides of the human experience. A harsh atmosphere of danger, doubt, anxiety, and suspicion that anything can go wrong, gray area of realism, hopelessness, and defeat are the characteristics of film noir. For examples, in the film of Sunset Boulevard by Billy Wilder (1950), the evilness and the guilt was a scene where Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson) found out that Joe (William Holden) went out very frequently at night which she also found out that he is seeing another woman who is Betty (Nancy Olsen). Immediately, she plotted a scheme, gave a call to Betty and tells her about Joe. She never knew that Joe is back and when she knew that is too late because Joe already know her scheme then she cut herself and act in pain in order to win a sympathy from Joe. Nevertheless, Joe decided to leave her and she shot him to death. In this scene, it shows  how evil she is in plotting a scheme to break up Joe's and Betty's relationship and  killing him in the end for leaving her, and also the guiltiness for what she had done in cutting herself to win his attention.


Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:28:12

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:28:24


 Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:28:34

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:38:31

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:39:15


The essential ingredients of film noir cinematography and mise-en-scene are its specific location which were often in murky and dark streets, dimly-lit apartments and hotel rooms of big cities, or abandoned warehouses. Besides than that the setting of in the interior scene is always seen with low-key lighting, venetian-blinded windows and rooms, tightly framed shots often with extreme camera angles and also dark, claustrophobic, gloomy appearances whereas urban night scenes with deep shadows, wet asphalt, dark alleyways, rain-slicked or mean streets, and low key lighting in the exterior setting of the scene in the film. As for the setting of the lighting for the characters, in the way their bodies are fragmented with lit and were framed half in the shadows. Flashback and flash-forward are also used a lot in Noir films to provide background on current scene, sometimes voice over narration is used.  

Examples of: flashback
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:02:34-00:02:45

Examples of: dimly-lit apartment (interior)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:20:32

Examples of: low-key lighting (interior)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:26:31


Examples of: a scene of big cities 
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:02:46


Examples of: apartment house in big cities
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:03:10


Examples ofnight scenes with deep shadows (exterior)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:25:16

In terms of characteristics of character wise in the film, most Noir films always portray a male protagonist. The male protagonists in this movement were normally driven by their past or by human weakness to repeat their former mistakes. Usually, the male protagonist in film noir wished to elude his mysterious past, and had to choose which path to take or have the fateful choice already made for him. Invariably, the choice would be an overly ambitious one. Often, it would be to follow the goading of a traitorous femme fatale who destructively would lead the struggling hero into committing murder or some other crime of passion. Therefore, the setting of the protagonist is always about his desires, obsessions and anxieties. The shots usually are the viewpoint of the protagonist and his psychological state of mind.
 
Images ofJoe Gillis (William Holden)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:22:22

The characteristics of a male protagonist can be seen at this scene when Joe said “I am pretty expensive” to Norma where he is trying to get advantages from her since he has financial problems. In order to get what he wants, he is willing to do anything for her, include writing the script, which offer by Norma. There is usually a twist in the narrative for example the victim might be the hunter or vice versa. There is no happy ending in most noir films. The protagonist of a film lacks the usual characteristics of a typical hero, but is someone whom the audience identifies. The character is often confused or conflicted with ambiguous morals, and lacks courage, honesty, or grace. The anti-hero can be tough yet sympathetic, or display vulnerable and weak traits. For example in the film Sunset Boulevard by Billy Wilder(1950), Joe ended being killed by Norma Desmond because he tends to leave Norma and Norma found out there is another girl behind the story. 

Examples ofJoe dead body is in the pool 
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:39:20

Besides than male protagonist, the main noir element in this movement is the female fatal, who is the female representative being in a contradiction with the ideological construct of women. During the war years the number of women that join the labour force was unsettling to many Americans, it showed that women are capable to have a powerful image, most noir films portrayed that in the beginning the women took on murderous roles.


Images ofNorma Desmond (Gloria Swanson)
Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 01:43:23

The films portrayed the predatory sexuality or psychological strength of the female but male dominance was always restored by the film's climax. The females representative in film noir were either of two types, classical Hollywood cinema' representation of woman which being portrait as dutiful, reliable, trustworthy and loving women; or femme fatales which being portrait as mysterious, duplicitous, double-crossing, gorgeous, unloving, predatory, tough-sweet, unreliable, irresponsible, manipulative and desperate women in the film noir which they are portrayed to weaken the male protagonist.

Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:19:11


In Sunset Boulevard (1950), Norma Desmond is a retired star which has been forgotten by audiences. She forces Joe Gillis to read the script and complete it in her house with reason that the script cannot be exposed within her house area. In fact, she just wanted a man to stay with him as she willing to spend anything for him. In another explanation, Joe has been bribed by her wealth and power.


Retrieved from Sunset Boulevard (Wilder.B, 1950), Scene at 00:53:45


She has the power and able to make Joe Gillis to continue stay beside her. She tried to commit suicide after she knows that Joe is planning to leave her. The characteristic of femme fatale is hereby applied in this scene as well where obviously we can see Norma is trying to seduce Joe.