Sofar...
Sweet Smell Of Success (1957)
Murder By Contract (1958)
Killer's Kiss (1955)
Type: Posts; User: rftbotb
Sofar...
Sweet Smell Of Success (1957)
Murder By Contract (1958)
Killer's Kiss (1955)
Night Editor (1946): Nice little movie, great femme fatale.
The Narrow Margin (1952): Highly enjoyable. Charles McGraw and Marie Windsor are excellent in this one.
The Dark Corner (1946): The under-appreciated Mark Stevens does a mighty fine Alan Ladd impression here. Well above average movie.
Decoy (1946): Pure noir greatness. Margot laughing in Jo Jo's face at the end, damn, that's one cold b*tch.
Hangover Square (1945): Really good turn-of-the-century noir. The finale with the concerto is stunning.
Fallen Angel (1945): Enjoyed this one, the casual manner in which Charles Bickford 'interviewed' a suspect was... interesting, and unexpected.
Alias Nick Beal (1949): A noir Faust. Loved every...
The Bribe (1949): Pretty decent noir that's a tad bit too long, with second person narration (like 'Blast Of Silence'). Robert Taylor feels out of place as the tough undercover cop, but Ava Gardner,...
Haha indeed, and even one I am interested in, The Ringmaster (with Vincent Price)... Hadn't checked there because I don't like watching entire movies or TV episodes using YT. Looks like there are...
Are any of the episodes of Robert Montgomery Presents available on DVD or online, does anybody know? There are a bunch of episodes I would love to see, such as Zachary Scott as Philip Marlowe in The...
Wings Of Danger (1952): Hammer noir with Zachary Scott trying to uncover a counterfeiting/smuggling racket. Pretty entertaining and good looking. Some great usage of shadows at times.
Saw 2 noirs last night & tonight, both dealing with people crossing the US border illegally, Border Incident (1949) and A Lady Without Passport (1950). Both enjoyable, with some good performances.
Deception (1946): Bette Davis and Claude Rains battling it out verbally, with Davis losing for once. More of a psychological melodrama/noir. Thoroughly enjoyable.
Thanxxx for the information, I'll have to try and find it.
I can understand why it's one of your favorites! The movie had me grinning almost from start to finish, from the posh British dialogue to the twists and everything inbetween. Definitely one I'll...
The Unholy Four aka The Stranger Came Home (1954): A Hammer noir-but-not-really-noir. Maybe a bit too talky and static, but I thought it was above-average (unlike most reviews I've found of it)....
Nightfall (1957): Enjoyable movie, unoriginal story. Really nice visually.
Double Indemnity (1944): Suppose you should never trust a woman with a silverblonde wig.
Dear Murderer (1947): British noir-ish crime movie. How delightful, as they would say. Very clever and...
Kiss Of Death (1947): Richard Widmark/Tommy Udo's chuckle/laugh will probably haunt for me a while, what a squirt.
The Black Glove aka Face The Music (1955, UK): Hammer noir. Hammer noirs seem to be very light on the noir side. But this one was entertaining still, Alex Nicol as a famous trumpet player (the way he...
Johnny O'Clock (1947): Quite liked it, solid movie all around.
Pi (1998)
2083
The Unsuspected (1947): Nice, really really nice! Audrey Totter is quite the sexy vamp here...
Terror Street (aka 36 Hours) (1953): A British film noir, altho very light noir. Fairly entertaining with Dan Duryea trying to clear his name and find the murderer of his wife in under 36 hours...
Call Northside 777 (1948): A real stretch by Fox to release this in their Film Noir series. Enjoyable nonetheless tho, nice 'journalism procedural'/semi-documentary.
Nightmare Alley (1947): Loved every second of it. Great story and great performances all around.