one film noir is even shot as if the camera were the eyes of the main character (memfaulting on the title)
Also the first half of Dark Passage, before the main character has plastic surgery and ends up looking like Humphrey Bogart. Which is a good thing, because the main character was played by Bogart.
Also the first half of Dark Passage, before the main character has plastic surgery and ends up looking like Humphrey Bogart. Which is a good thing, because the main character was played by Bogart.
That one actually worked better than LitL, probably because they only kept the style up for a portion of the movie. A movie I just picked up, coincidentally, in a BOGIE & BACALL boxed set (it also has TO HAVE & HAVE NOT, THE BIG SLEEP [both versions] and KEY LARGO).
That one actually worked better than LitL
It's also hard to go wrong when you have Bogie, Bacall, and Agnes Moorhead.
well, this kinda fits in with the current discussion; there's a new film version of "the Scottish play" aka
Macbeth
about to come out. It's by Geoffrey Wright, the bloke who made
Romper Stomper
with Russell Crowe, and sets the story in modern Melbourne, where it incorporates the "underworld war" that's plagued the city for the last few years. No idea how good it will be but reports indicate it has a "noirish" feel to it, so might be worth a look.
Macbeth
If there's ever been a movie that wasn't good just from having Bogie & Bacall in it, I'm blissfully unaware.
And I have a strange fangirl love for Agnes Moorehead.
And I have a strange fangirl love for Agnes Moorehead.
Pssst! AmyLiz is hot for Endora!
That happens in Sondheim's "Into the Woods."
Dang, Dana beat me to it.
Yup. It happens. Narrator gets killed. It's awesome.
Oh,
Lady in the Lake.
One of the few Chandlers I haven't read (I haven't read Westlake either).
If there's ever been a movie that wasn't good just from having Bogie & Bacall in it, I'm blissfully unaware.
Matt, have you seen
Key Largo?
It's actually kind of crappy. For one thing, the script is terrible; and for another, it's as contrived as contrived can be. It's notable that the woman you've never heard of, who plays the blond floozy, is the only person in that cast who got an Oscar for her role.
It's Michael Caine narrating The Quiet American, right? Not Brenden Fraser.
Right. I think the first line of the book explicitly states something like, "So-and-so came to see me the day after I killed the quiet American." And since the stupid book is under copyright, I canna google it! Grrr.