In the dual portraits of film noir couples, the tension is not just sexual but existential. Fate was in command, and the film titles said it all: Detour; Kiss of Death; Cornered; Criss-Cross; D.O.A; Fallen Angel: Out of the Past; Possessed. In film noir, the games were played for keeps. These photos of film noir lovers convey that brooding quality, that moment of tenderness or passion, that brief moment before fate comes calling.
This post from the Silver Screen Modiste is part of the Film Noir blogathon, which will benefit the Film Noir Foundation's film preservation effort - just hit the Donate link to make a donation. PLEASE DONATE NOW.https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=LAWFPAB4XLHAW
Film noir twisted the normal expectations of movie plots. A happy ending was not in the cards, and everyone had an angle. The couples danced around each other's schemes, or lost themselves to an obsession with the other.
The foundation of the film noir point of view was forged by the Great Depression, and tempered by the horrors of World War II. Women had learned to be independent and tough. Men had lived their lives knowing that at any random moment a bullet or missile could snuff them out. Free choice had lost to cruel fate - such is the world view that pervades film noir.
Whereas cars and trains used to represent escape and freedom, in film noir they became metaphors for confined spaces and one-way tracks to destiny. As the character Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) says to Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) in Double Indemnity, "They're stuck with each other and they've got to ride all the way to the end of the line."
The black and white film and still photography, perfected in the 1930s, was ideal for film noir atmospherics. Deep shadows and strong contrasts of light and dark became a signature film noir technique. These settings were perfectly represented by light streaming through venetian blinds, the patterns of prison bars and staircases, and criss-crossed railroad tracks. The settings were mostly urban nightscapes. During and after WWII, soldiers, marines, and sailors from all over the country passed through big cities like New York and Los Angeles. After the war ended, tens of thousands returned and were cast adrift there, looking for an illusive normalcy.
This post from the Silver Screen Modiste is part of the Film Noir blogathon, which will benefit the Film Noir Foundation's film preservation effort - just hit the Donate link to make a donation. PLEASE DONATE NOW.https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=LAWFPAB4XLHAW
| Gene Tierney and Cornel Wilde in "Leave Her to Heaven" a film noir in vivid Technicolor. |
Film noir twisted the normal expectations of movie plots. A happy ending was not in the cards, and everyone had an angle. The couples danced around each other's schemes, or lost themselves to an obsession with the other.
| Burt Lancaster in his first film, "The Killers" with Ava Gardner, 1946. The film made stars of both of them. |
The foundation of the film noir point of view was forged by the Great Depression, and tempered by the horrors of World War II. Women had learned to be independent and tough. Men had lived their lives knowing that at any random moment a bullet or missile could snuff them out. Free choice had lost to cruel fate - such is the world view that pervades film noir.
| Susan Hayward and Bill Williams in "Deadline at Dawn," 1946. |
| Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd in "The Blue Dahlia," 1946. |
Whereas cars and trains used to represent escape and freedom, in film noir they became metaphors for confined spaces and one-way tracks to destiny. As the character Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) says to Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) in Double Indemnity, "They're stuck with each other and they've got to ride all the way to the end of the line."
| Ann Blyth and Burt Lancaster in "Brute Force," 1947 |
The black and white film and still photography, perfected in the 1930s, was ideal for film noir atmospherics. Deep shadows and strong contrasts of light and dark became a signature film noir technique. These settings were perfectly represented by light streaming through venetian blinds, the patterns of prison bars and staircases, and criss-crossed railroad tracks. The settings were mostly urban nightscapes. During and after WWII, soldiers, marines, and sailors from all over the country passed through big cities like New York and Los Angeles. After the war ended, tens of thousands returned and were cast adrift there, looking for an illusive normalcy.
| Jane Greer and Robert Mitchum in "Out of the Past," 1947 |
Noir films often start at the end, their story played out in flashbacks. There is no mistake that destiny rules over the protagonists. The only question is, what road will get them there. And whatever the road, they're always looking back in the rear-view mirror. In Out of the Past, even returning to normal life in a small town provides no escape for Robert Mitchum from the clutches of his big city past. And a similar fate traps Burt Lancaster in its spider-web in The Killers.
For film noir couples, an intensity radiates from their portraits. Whatever force consumes them burns like white heat. Though their past chases them and their destiny beckons, they live in the moment.
| Gene Tierney and Richard Widmark in "Night and the City," 1950 |
| Coleen Gray and Victor Mature in "Kiss of Death," 1947 |
| Cathy O'Donnell and Farley Granger in "They Live by Night," 1949. |
Film noir combined great acting talent with great stories and screenplays. Outstanding film directors were also responsible for the classics of film noir. It seemed that the European directors working in the U.S. appear to have best captured the film noir aesthetic. They seemed to have understood the malaise of the post-war years. They included Robert Siodmak, Jules Dassin, Jacques Tourneur, Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder, and Otto Preminger. But film noir lives on, not only in these classics, but in more recent and stylish hits such as Body Heat and L.A. Confidential. We could hope for some more - but bad endings are never very popular. This much is certain - there was no bad ending for Film Noir itself - it lives on in its masterly films and in it's influence on filmaking through today.
5 comments:
Great images. Peggy Cummins and John Dall in 'Gun Crazy' are awesome too! So many great Noir couples.
Yes! So many great photos and couples- these are just some of my favorites. Thanks for the comment.
OOH--they do look so very noirish. Fun!
A great selection of images.
They are very captivating - I never grow tired of seeing these wonderful photos'
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