Category: crime drama

  • Mark Stevens: his quartet of searing films noir still light up screens today

    Mark Stevens: his quartet of searing films noir still light up screens today

    Lucille Ball, Mark Stevens, ‘The Dark Corner’ (1946). By Paul Parcellin Mark Stevens made a string of taut crime dramas in the 1940s and ’50s that still resonate today. He acted in dozens of films, from westerns, war pictures to musicals and comedies, and directed two of his self-produced noirs as well as some hardboiled…

  • One Revealing Moment: Something that Happens in “The Night of the Hunter” Made Me Rethink My First Impression of the Film and See It in an Entirely New Light

    One Revealing Moment: Something that Happens in “The Night of the Hunter” Made Me Rethink My First Impression of the Film and See It in an Entirely New Light

    Robert Mitchum, “The Night of the Hunter” (1955). By Paul Parcellin I first saw “The Night of the Hunter” (1955) around 20 or so years ago and walked away impressed but not particularly in love with the movie, and having said that I know what many of you are thinking: Heresy!  I have no real…

  • The Man From Nowhere: Who is Larry Cravat and why do so many people want to do him harm?

    The Man From Nowhere: Who is Larry Cravat and why do so many people want to do him harm?

    John Hodiak, Nancy Guild, “Somewhere in the Night” (1946). Battle Fatigue on the Homefront: Two views of life after the big one By Paul Parcellin “Somewhere in the Night” (1946) George Taylor (John Hodiak) awakens in a military hospital, and to his horror discovers that his memory has been wiped clean by a serious wound…

  • ‘Nightmare Alley’ 2021: Guillermo Del Toro’s Noir Carnival of Horror

    ‘Nightmare Alley’ 2021: Guillermo Del Toro’s Noir Carnival of Horror

      I should have known better than to smuggle a chicken burrito into the theater from the taqueria next door to it. Why, you ask? Let’s just say I bit into it at an unappetizing moment in the film. If you saw the original “Nightmare Alley” (1947) with Tyrone Power, or if you know what…

  • ‘The Silent Partner’ : A Noir Bank Job, 1970s Style

    ‘The Silent Partner’ : A Noir Bank Job, 1970s Style

    Elliot Gould in ‘The Silent Partner.’ Elliot Gould is Miles Cullen, a Toronto bank teller whose chief companions are tropical fish that flutter about in an aquarium in his cramped apartment. To his female co-workers, Miles is a teddy bear nerd with as much sex appeal as one of his guppies. One day, he realizes…

  • A Touch of Orson: Venice Beach as Border Town

    A Touch of Orson: Venice Beach as Border Town

    Orson Welles prepares a crucial scene in “Touch of Evil” Downtown L.A.’s refurbished Million Dollar Theater recently screened the Orson Welles classic dark tale of corruption and murder, “Touch of Evil.” The film was originally released in 1958 after the studio took control of it from Welles. There’s a recut and redubbed version in circulation…

  • Tarantino’s Twists and Turns Add Up Perfectly

    Tarantino’s Twists and Turns Add Up Perfectly

    Vincent, left, and Jules settle a score. Some may quibble with “Pulp Fiction”’s herky jerky storyline. It dodges back and forth from the past to the present without warning. The trouble is, at first it’s challenging to figure out exactly what is happening in the present and what took place in the past. You have…

  • High Mass: Whitey Bulger, LSD and a Devil’s Deal

    High Mass: Whitey Bulger, LSD and a Devil’s Deal

    Johnny Depp as Whitey Bulger? Yup, the actor who played Dillinger in “Public Enemies” is going to play another crime icon, and the movie is slated for release next year. More about that later. Dick Lehr, a former Boston Globe reporter and co-author of a new book about the life of James “Whitey” Bulger was…

  • This Scarface is in Chicago, Not Miami

    This Scarface is in Chicago, Not Miami

    Living dangerously, Tony Camonte muscles in on his boss’s girlfriend. “Scarface” (1932) is one of the seminal American gangster films of the 1930s, along with “Little Caesar,” “The Roaring Twenties” and “The Public Enemy.” Each one tells the story of a gangster’s rise in the bootlegging business and his assent to the top of a powerful…