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Thread: Favorite British Noir Films!

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    Rookie Rififi's Avatar
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    Default British Noir

    Hi, nice to be here.

    First of all I'd like to ask for a little help.

    I'm a noir fan (obviously) but i'm also a student working on a project for an MA. It's on British Noir and what i'd really like to do is get a few opinions, general impression etc from what seems a knowledgeable community. First up, I'd like to post a short questionaire, as I'm new here it seems gentlemanly to ask admin if its ok to do that, is it (can't imagine why it wouldn't but thought I'd be polite)?

    In any case, if there's someone on here with a expertise in or a particluar interest in British noir, or in a specific british noir (or neo noir), it'd be great to discuss it in a laid back informal kind of way on this here thread.

    Anyway, good to be here. I hope I can contribute.

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    snitch Ian's Avatar
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    Keep an eye out for the wonderful "Yellow Ballon" I saw it at London's BFI last year...It is now available on DVD in The London Collection.......Ian

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    Rookie Rififi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ian View Post
    Keep an eye out for the wonderful "Yellow Ballon" I saw it at London's BFI last year...It is now available on DVD in The London Collection.......Ian
    Must admit that I wasn't aware of that one, but it sounds a good one. And, hey presto, The London Collection is in the university library so I'll be watching it tonight.

    Thanks for the referral!

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    snitch Ian's Avatar
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    Hi,
    I hope that you enjoy it.
    Let us know.

    Ian

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    snitch Ian's Avatar
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    Hi,
    Even though it is not a Noir....The Small World Of Sammy Lee (Anthony Newley) is also in The London Collection boxset it is a "must see" film.
    Set in Soho in 1960 it is a real gem.

    Ian

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    Gumshoe spress's Avatar
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    I like The October Man and The Clouded Yellow. My all time favorite film is The Third Man. On the other hand, check out my synopsis of Uneasy Terms at allmovie.com. I wasn't crazy about it.

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    Footsteps In The Fog(1955)
    Stewart Granger is an English gentleman everybody loves.What people dont know is hes a two faced murder.Only one that knows the truth is his trashy servent(Jean Simmons)
    Great Film Noir.
    http://www.movieposter.com/poster/MP...n_the_Fog.html

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    Rookie Rififi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ian View Post
    Hi,
    I hope that you enjoy it.
    Let us know.

    Ian
    I did. Ending brings the Third Man to mind.

    And more evidence to back up my theory that there was an unwritten rule in the '50's ensuring that Sid James had to be in every other film made in Britain.

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    snitch Ian's Avatar
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    Hi all,
    I have just seen this on Amazon.

    British Film Noir: Twilight Women/The Slasher [DVD] [US Import]

    "The Slasher" is AKA as "Cosh Boy" and I have a copy of it on DVD.
    I saw it recently at The BFI and it was the first ever x film here.

    A very young Joan Collins just has to be seen!

    Ian

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    Bon Vivant snitch Christina Delassalle's Avatar
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    Green For Danger is a fantastic movie. Perhaps just more of a damn good mystery, but does have a norish feel to it, but whichever, you can't find a much better movie than this! Alastair Sim is just briiliant.

    Green for Danger

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    Went on the hunt recently for the British noir ON THE NIGHT OF THE FIRE, a film released in 1938. Directed by Brian Desmond Hurst and starring Ralph Richardson and Diana Wynard (she was menaced by Anton Walbrook in the 1940 British version of GASLIGHT), the film is adapted from a novel by F L Green, who also wrote Odd Man Out. There are definite parallels to be found in the two film adaptations, as I learned from reading a comment on IMDB. The first DVD copy I acquired of the film was junk, but the second copy, recorded from British television, was quite good. Simply put, the film is outstanding. The story, performances, editing, set design, all are top-notch, and the cinematography by Gunther Krampf (cameraman for Pabst's PANDORA'S BOX) is everything one could hope for. In a nutshell, Richardson is a barber, barely making ends meet, who happens to spot a substantial sum of money on a table just inside an open window. He steals the money, and finds his life in a downward spiral from then on. I discussed it a few days ago with someone who was actually fortunate to have seen a nice print of it on the big screen just recently, and we both concurred that this one's Criterion-worthy, or Masters of Cinema for that matter. So glad to have finally caught up with this film.

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    snitch David Boxwell's Avatar
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    British film noir began with THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT in 1938, made at Teddington Studios by Warner Bros.' British offshoot. It's a crucially important and overlooked film, with one of Emlyn Williams' few starring roles. This film alone would give you much to chew on: how similar is to French poetic realism emerging the same year in Carne's QUAI DES BRUMES and Renoir's LA BETE HUMAINE? Is TDBN "British" or more Germanic in tone and style?

    The canon is pretty much established for you by New York's Film Forum Brit Noir series than ran last year. You can google the Forum's website and the full list of the program. You will have a very rich body of work to study. Good luck!

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    PAINT IT BLACK! Mob enforcer noirguru's Avatar
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    My favorite is, The Third Man (1949), I also like two films from 1960, The Criminal and Hell Is a City.

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    Outfit boss cigar joe's Avatar
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    Night And The City (1950) and They Made Me a Fugitive (I Became A Criminal) (1947) and The Third Man of course. I've seen some of the the Hammer Noirs but haven't liked them so far. I've heard that Brighton Rock is very good also.
    Last edited by cigar joe; 04-01-2012 at 04:21 PM.

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    PAINT IT BLACK! Mob enforcer noirguru's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cigar joe View Post
    Night And The City (1950) and They Made Me a Fugitive (I Became A Criminal) (1947) and The Third Man of course. I've seen some of the the Hammer Noirs but haven't liked them so far. I've heard that Brighton Rock is very good also.
    Night And The City (1950) is a great film but the American remake from 1992 is just mediocre!!

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    Form Hammer Studio's noir period, THE SNORKEL (1958). Clever crime, cold blooded killer and only his teenage step-daughter is on to him. Fantastic poetic justice ending. Dir Guy Green. Written by Jimmy Sangster and Peter Meyers. Story by Anthony Dawson.
    Click image for larger version. 

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    The Long Memory by Robert Hamer is real high quality stuff. I'm also a big fan of Carol Reed's Odd Man Out, which I think is actually superior to The Third Man. Another Reed movie that's of merit, though not up to the standard of those two, is The Man Between.
    Riding the High Country - My movie blog

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    Quote Originally Posted by cigar joe View Post
    I've seen some of the the Hammer Noirs but haven't liked them so far.
    Have you seen Heat Wave? I reckon it's about the best of Hammer's noir efforts.
    Riding the High Country - My movie blog

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    Thanks for the heads up on the Hamer Noir, like I said I just took basically a stab in the dark and the two I watched didn't impress me, so I'll look out for The Snorkel, Heat Wave, The Long Memory, and The Man Between.

    Odd Man Out is Great forgot to list that one.

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    Administrator City Editor Steve-O's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anne H View Post
    Form Hammer Studio's noir period, THE SNORKEL (1958). Clever crime, cold blooded killer and only his teenage step-daughter is on to him. Fantastic poetic justice ending. Dir Guy Green. Written by Jimmy Sangster and Peter Meyers. Story by Anthony Dawson.
    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	600full-the-snorkel-poster.jpg 
Views:	75 
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    A true noir fan! The Snorkel is very enjoyable.

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