kingrat wrote:
The intersection of noir and woman's melodrama is a sweet spot for me, though not, I think, for ChiO.
It can be a very sweet spot for me.
THE RECKLESS MOMENT,
CAUGHT,
MY NAME IS JULIA ROSS,
THE SECRET BEYOND THE DOOR,
CLASH BY NIGHT and, to escape the bounds of the classic era of noir,
WANDA. And more, I'm sure. (
A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE and
LOVE STREAMS, just to really push the envelope?)
And thank you for the heads up on the Morlock write-up. Therese is a marvelous instructor. We've become very good friends. Other classes I've taken from her include:
Ophuls,
Duvivier, and
Sirk.
RedRiver -- I'm with you. "Film noir", to me, is a flexible, fluid, and evolving short-hand term for a theme that is expressed by extensive use of one or more of the "conventional" film noir means (setting, lighting, camera angles, etc.). But every film noir is also something else -- a Western, a crime melodrama.... As do most movies, it crosses categories. That's why I try not to get hung up on "X is not a film noir." Rather than putting everything in a little box, I tend toward using either multiple or bigger boxes.
P.S.
CITIZEN KANE is a social commentary-political-psychological-melodrama-biopic-mystery-Western-musical noir.
