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Imogen Sara Smith

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Imogen Sara Smith


Born
The United States
Genre


Imogen Sara Smith is the author of In Lonely Places: Film Noir Beyond the City (McFarland, 2011) and Buster Keaton: The Persistence of Comedy (Gambit Publishing, 2008). She has written on topics ranging from photography and painting to cinema history. For the latter she has written articles for various publications, including Bright Lights Film, Criterion, Noir City Magazine, moving Image Source, etc.

Imogen Sara Smith is also a performing arts librarian and lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Articles:

http://brightlightsfilm.com/author/im...

http://www.movingimagesource.us/artic...

http://www.examiner.com/indie-movie-i...

http://chiseler.org/tagged/imogen%20s...

https://www.criterion.com/current/aut...

http://www.filmnoirfoundation.org/noi...

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Average rating: 4.28 · 172 ratings · 27 reviews · 13 distinct worksSimilar authors
Buster Keaton: The Persiste...

4.26 avg rating — 97 ratings — published 2008
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In Lonely Places: Film Noir...

4.38 avg rating — 65 ratings — published 2011 — 5 editions
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NOIR CITY Magazine #38

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NOIR CITY Magazine 39

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NOIR CITY Magazine 43

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NOIR CITY Magazine 40

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NOIR CITY Magazine 41

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NOIR CITY Magazine 42

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The Common Object

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Ida Lupino, Director, 2nd e...

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Quotes by Imogen Sara Smith  (?)
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“Below the surface, the force driving noir stories is the urge to escape: from the past, from the law, from the ordinary, from poverty, from constricting relationships, from the limitations of the self. Noir found its fullest expression in America because the American psyche harbors a passion for independence . . . With this desire for autonomy comes a corresponding fear of loneliness and exile. The more we crave success, the more we dread failure; the more we crave freedom, the more we dread confinement. This is the shadow that spawns all of noir’s shadows: the anxiety imposed by living in a country that elevates opportunity above security; one that instills the compulsion to “make it big," but offers little sympathy to those who fall short. Film noir is about people who break the rules, pursuing their own interests outside the boundaries of decent society, and about how they are destroyed by society - or by themselves. Noir springs from a fundamental conflict between the values of individual freedom and communal safety: a fundamental doubt that the two can coexist. . . . Noir stories are powered by the need to escape, but they are structured around the impossibility of escape: their fierce, thwarted energy turns inward. The ultimate noir landscape, immeasurable as the ocean and confining as a jail cell, is the mind - the darkest city of all.”
Imogen Sara Smith, In Lonely Places: Film Noir Beyond the City

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