Whether it’s Double Indemnity, Kiss Me Deadly, or The Big Sleep, roam a screen world of dark and brooding elegance with this essential handbook to Film Noir. From private eyes and perfect crimes to corrupt cops and doomed affairs, editors Paul Duncan and Jürgen Müller examine noir’s key themes and their most representative movies from 1940 to 1960.
Copiously illustrated with film stills as well as original posters, this book offers page after page of noir’s masterful visual compositions while exploring the narrative paradigms of this cryptic, compelling, and evolving genre. If that weren’t enough to tickle your cinematic appetite, the volume concludes with TASCHEN’s top 50 pick of noir classics.
Brimming with the enigmatic dames, desperate gangsters, and psycho killers that continue to cast a long and captivating shadow over cinema, this is a must-have handbook for noir aficionados and amateurs alike.
A tip to anyone moving to a new apartment with little furniture, most of their belongings in storage (including books), and a few hundred euros of purchase power. Go to your nearest well assorted bookstore, look for the section with Taschen books. There will likely be a display of their series of “Bibliotheca Universalis” budget publications. Each book costs roughly €15, and there are about a hundred different books in the series, hardbound, and thick as bricks. Anyway, that is what I did at the beginning of last summer to brighten up and fill some of the empty space of my new apartment. I bought about a dozen of these books, and have been adding a few since. The books are of course gorgeous, as all of Taschen’s great coffee table books, even if these cannot quite measure up to the splendor of the usual larger formats that this particular publisher is famous for.
Film Noir is more than 600 pages long, and it seems to be a combination of two different books or projects: One being a kind of introduction to this particular style of filmmaking, and taking up the first 200 pages, the second being a “Taschen’s Top 50 Film Noirs.” The book was, as so often, curated by Paul Duncan and Jürgen Müller.
As would be expected from a Taschen book, Duncan and Müller have pulled out all the stops, when it comes to the literally thousands of film stills, production stills, publicity stills and reproductions of posters. The first rule of a book about films, in my humble opinion, is that it should be generously illustrated, and in this respect Film Noir is the poster child of all film books. I own a lot of books on film, and I love to slowly leave through them and study the stills, even if they are films I know well. And in this case, the editors have taken the high road of finding and securing a multitude of stills not normally seen. Even if the scenes depicted are familiar and often reproduced in stills, the captures here will be slightly different. And, of course, there are the many, many photographs of the directors at work on the set, and actors and actresses at ease between shots, and on and on.
As mentioned, the first third of the book is quite a thorough introduction to “film noir,” and I believe a lot of it was culled from various writings by Alain Silver and James Ursini, although it is never clearly stated who authored the various parts of the book. Silver and Ursini have made careers out of researching, discussing, commenting and popularizing “film noir” over at least the last twenty years. They can be found contributing to scores of DVD and Blu-ray releases of these films over the years, often as running commentary on the films. They are highly knowledgeable and passionate about their topic, and a lot of ground is covered in this section of the book; a lot of titles are name dropped, while the main discussions zero in on some of the films that have become more familiar to general viewers in the last decades thanks to the wonders of home video – “Double Indemnity,” “Touch of Evil,” “Kiss Me Deadly,” “Criss Cross,” “Detour,” and “Out of the Past.” This section works well, even if too much space is expended on lengthy plot synopses (be aware that plots are given away wholesale here) that could have been put to better use in expanding the brief discussions of key directors.
When all that is said, the book also has its shortcomings. The latter two thirds of the book is made up of a top 50. It is again richly illustrated with the original poster art fronting each entry in the list. However, it is a rather poor top 50 as far as “film noir” goes. No matter how good Hitchcock’s “Rebecca” and “Psycho” are, I have never seen them referred to as films noir before. The list also includes a number of non-American releases like Clouzot’s “Diabolique,” Ladislao Vajda’s “Es geschah am hellichten Tag” and Michael Powell’s “Peeping Tom,” which I also object to including in a film noir list. A case could be made for Visconti’s “Ossessione” (unofficially based on Cain’s “Postman Always Rings Twice”), but all of these films, aside from their obvious merits as films just do not qualify as film noir in any strict definition of the term. “Film Noir” was a term coined by French critics back in the late forties referring to a change in style, mood and thematic content of specifically American films at the time. The term was later appropriated by young American critics of the film school generation in the late sixties and early seventies. The first part of the book does a fine job at pinning down the hallmarks of this style (not genre!) A real top 50 of Film Noir would have been a great asset and supplement to the initial discussion, what Taschen provides is just another few hundred pages of great stills and artwork (as well as extended synopses).
Razvukao se ovaj poduhvat jer sam nailazila na reditelje i glumce koji su mi se dopadali pa sam gledala neke njihove druge filmove i onda odstupala od liste.
Uglavnom evo top 5 i još nekih filmova vrednih pomena (nisam ih rangirala po tome koji su mi se najviše svideli jer su bukvalno nijanse u pitanju)
1.Sunset Boulevard 2. In a lonely place 3. Diabolique 4. The Night of the hunter 5. Rear window
لطيف اوي عن أفلام الnoir اللي هي أفلام الجريمة والغموض اللي عادة كانت بالأبيض والأسود وتعتبر من الكلاسيكيات وكان ابرز مخرجيها هيتشكوك والكتاب كمان ذكر افضل ٥٠ فيلم منهم الصور تحفة وأحلى حاجه ف الفيلم ويعتبر فيه اقتراحات للأفلام لمحبي النوع ده
هصور الكتاب وهنزله ع قناة عن الفن ع اليوتيوب لو حد مهتم 👇 @3nelfn
This is much more a coffee table book than most books I read; the photographs are just gorgeous (movie posters, publicity stills, and scenes taken from some of the best noir). The essays were interesting, although the book's size and binding made it somewhat awkward to read in depth. When I did start reading, I had a hard time not getting distracted just flipping from photograph to photograph.
I think this is a volume I will want to peruse at liesure, perhaps after picking up a few more films for my library.
Very in-depth and informative, and not to mention presented in both an easy to understand and highly aesthetic manner. I would definitely recommend this to anyone looking to gain an understanding of film noir and the classic noir movies of the 40s-60s.
Świetna książka, szkoda że nie została wydana po polsku. Jak w przypadku każdej pozycji wydawnictwa Taschen - więcej tu fotografii niż treści. Niemniej, jest co czytać. Pierwsza część to omówienie cech charakterystycznych dla kina noir. Druga to omówienie pięćdziesięciu filmów z lat 1940 - 1960, stanowiących kanon gatunku. Nie znam wszystkich i pewnie nigdy nie zdołam obejrzeć całej pięćdziesiątki. Ale już w trakcie lektury tej książki obejrzałem „Sunset Boulevard” i cóż to była za uczta. Prawdziwe arcydzieło, hipnotyzujące i gorzkie. Jak blichtr Hollywood. Zapewne nie wszystkie filmy mają taką rangę. Ale coś czuję, że „Killing” Kubricka, czy „Vertigo” Hitchcocka mogą dorównać. O filmach z Bogartem nie wspominając, ale to oczywista oczywistość.
Książka dla kinomanów, bogato ilustrowana fotosami z filmów i starannie wydana. Ale to wydawnictwo Taschen więc to oczywiste.
After a thematic tour through film noir, Taschen's top 50 noir classics are each treated to several pages of overview and analysis, including a biographical and critical appraisal of a key figure from the production staff or the cast. Also includes complete production credits, movie posters, and photo stills from the movie and behind the scenes. The text, mostly by Silver and Ursini, appears excerpted from their four volume Film Noir Reader series and their Film Noir Encyclopedia, so some redundancy if you've read those. Typical Taschen quality, however, and a great compendium on film noir.
An absolutely gorgeous photography book full of amazing black and whites and a few full color posters. Lots of dense reading if you want to know about all kinds of film noir films from the 40s and 50s. Most folks will like this for the photos and maybe an occasional film or actor reference. It’s a very very long book with very small font, it was actually annoying to read the print was so small, definitely smaller than a paperback.
I found this to be a great introduction to the film noir genre. It starts with a general discussion of what film noir(and isn't), and then examines common themes like "The Perfect Crime", "The Burden of the Past", "Love on the Run", etc. There are lots and lots of photos.
The the latter 2/3 of the book is an examination of the publisher's top 50 noir films from 1940 to 1960. Each film lists the year, country(most are USA), studio, director, screenplay writer, stars, as well as any Academy Awards Won. The each film gets an examination and summary, lots of still from the movie as well as its production, and a spotlight on the director, or one of the actors/actresses in the film. There is also a poster from each film.
I really enjoyed it and learned a lot. Here are my 2 main criticisms:
1. As others have noted, the print is really, really small. 2. The section on the 50 greatest films is great....but lacks any sort of index to find the writeup for a given film. Not an issue as you read through the book, but a bummer if you want to go back and reread something, perhaps after having watched the film. I made an index, which I will share below, in hope that it helps some one else as well. Sorry for the loss of columns.
Call Northside 777 408 Detour 326 Double Indemnity 270 Du Rififi Chez Les Hommes (Refifi) 528 Es Geschah Am Hellichten Tag (It Happened in Broad Daylight) 588 Force of Evil 426 Gaslight 278 Gilda 344 Gun Crazy 452 Hangover Square 310 High Sierra 226 In a Lonely Place 468 Kiss Me Deadly 536 Laura 286 Leave Her To Heaven 334 Les Diaboliques (Diabolique) 512 Mildred Pierce 318 Murder by Contract 594 Murder, My Sweet 302 Night and the City 458 Nightmare Alley 374 Obsession 250 Odds Against Tomorrow 602 Out of the Past 382 Peeping Tom 608 Phantom Lady 258 Pickup on South Street 496 Psycho 614 Rear Window 504 Rebecca 217 Shadow of a Doubt 242 Sunset Boulevard 486 Sweet Smell of Success 560 The Asphalt Jungle 476 The Big Combo 520 The Big Sleep 358 The Killers 366 The Killing 550 The Lady from Shanghai 400 The Maltese Falcon 234 The Night of the Hunter 542 The Postman Always Rings Twice 350 The Third Man 436 The Woman in the Window 294 They Live by Night 416 Tirex Sur Le Pianiste (Shoot the Piano Player) 622 T-Men 392 Touch of Evil 568 Vertigo 576 White Heat 444
A huge collection of great movie stills (with some interesting commentary) of noir films from the 1940s and 50s. There is no neo-noir here. The second half contains an analysis of 50 movies, with excellently produced stills, from 1940 (Rebecca) two 1960 (psycho and shoot piano player). Most of the top noir films are contained here.
This book is encyclopedic. You're not going to read it cover-to-cover. It's for reading here-and-there as it sits on your coffee table. It's not so easy to find a particular movie in this tome, but it has nice pictures, and if you have a magnifying glass, you can even read a bit.
A great introduction to film noir, looking into it’s various themes and tropes. And has reviews on 50 noir classics (according to the editors) from 1940-1960. A book to wet your appetite to watch more noir and seek out other books on this most fascinating of movie genres.
Another excellent volume from Taschen, Full of stills and plot synopsis, bios of some stars and crew, and background into the writing and filming. A worthy add to any film lover's library.
Muy interesante. Un libro a detalle del cine noir. Si bien es cierto ya conocía de algunos de estos filmes, la mayoría fueron nuevos para mí. Super recomendado
Voi începe prin a spune că pentru mine acesta este un manual excepțional de util pentru cei pasionați de cinematografie.
Cuprinde în primele aproximativ 200 de pagini ABC-ul filmelor Noir, prezentând definiții, istoric, aspecte culturale ale mijlocului de secolul XX, metodă regizorală și tehnică actoricească.
Apoi, în următoarele 400 de pagini, avem o selecție a 50 de filme Noir alese de către Paul Duncan și Jürgen Müller. Eu am un altfel de top 50, ușor modificat, însă evident că sunt subiectiv. Țin să precizez că am vizionat toate cele 50 de filme triate de cei doi editori, dar și altele. Iar amănuntele și mondenitățile din această carte mi-au completat experiența și cunoștințele.
Selecția lor se axează mai mult pe perioada Noir clasică (1940-1960) și nu pe cea Neo-noir (începând din 1960). Însă după toată această amplă incursiune în această nișă, pot să spun că eu voi rămâne la filmele Neo-noir. ☺️ Mă simt mult mai confortabil în contemporaneitate.
Blockbuster. Masterfully edited resource commemorating the American genre which essentially reached full flower in Hollywood in the 1930's & 40's--propelled in large part by all the tragedy & rough patches the depression brought. Those difficulties had massive effects on creative cinematic expression, giving birth to some incredible films. 50 of those--essentially a hall of fame-- are selected by the editors for detailed analysis. This book would make a tremendously authoritative text for a college film studies course.
ini buku keren baget dah ...bahas lengkap tentang film itemmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Wonderful illustrated book on the classic period of film noir. Good reference material and lavish photos. Captures all the elements of noir and their Top 50 essential noirs is a good list for a novice to start with.
Stunning trove of visuals and well focused outline of key genre tropes and stylistics. Not heavy on text or analysis, but a great volume for newbies or veterans
Being hooked on watching weekly Film Noir offerings from Eddie Muller on TCM, we found this book to be a helpful resource.
Our personal favorite so far is Asphalt Jungle. But we have identified more films to be viewed, thanks to this book. Enjoy your own exploration of this rich, mostly-American film sub-culture!
What would compel me to issue a 5-star rating for this book? An index: Sorely lacking in the copy I purchased.
Every once in a while I revisit these classics, when Hollywood produced good stuff. I miss the black and white days, though I'm way too young to have experienced them first hand. Good reminder of what was.
I falsely assumed a 640 page book of film history on film Noir would have an index that I could use as a reference. I am unable to look up movies, directors, actors or anything else . .