Showing posts with label I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2009

I Wake Up Dreaming Redux

I caught two additional films from the encore week of films from I Wake Up Dreaming at the Roxie.

The series was a tremendous success in terms of audience size. None of the screenings that I attended were sold out but the crowds were big. The crowds at the two redux screenings were much smaller.

Private Hell 36 starring Ida Lupino, Steve Cochran & Howard Duff; directed by Don Siegel; (1954)
The Port of Forty Thieves; directed by Don Siegel; (1944)

Several of the films featured John Alton as cinematographer. I think all the films were on 16 mm and some of them were in pretty bad shape. I believe The Devil Thumbs a Ride and New York Confidential were screened on 35 mm.

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My favorite films from the festival were:

Private Hell 36 was by far my favorite film of the festival. I'm glad that I was able to catch it during the redux week. I missed the original screening to see Ms. 45.

Ida Lupino and her husband Collier Young had screenwriting credits for Private Hell 36. At the time of the film's release he was her ex-husband. Don Siegel was the director. He would go on to direct Clint Eastwood in several popular films in the 1970's (Dirty Harry, Two Mules for Sister Sara, Coogan's Bluff and Escape from Alcatraz).

The plot involved two cops that are investigating $300,000 in stolen cash. After finding the money, they make a fateful decision to pocket some of the cash. One partner, Howard Duff, is wracked with guilt and fear of getting caught. The other partner, Steve Cochran, who instigated the filching is driven by greed and the need to impress his girlfriend (Ida Lupino). Eventually, Cochran loses his morals and plans to kill his partner to keep 100% of the cash.

If the plot seems deceptively simple, it's not...there's no deception about it. The film telegraphs the plot to anyone with a casual knowledge of noir. What makes the film engaging are the performances of Duff and Cochran (and to a lesser extent Lupino). Right from the start, you can see that Cochran is the type of person that takes risks when he investigates a burglary without calling for backup. Duff seems like the type of person that would have lived his life in quiet desperation but once he goes along with the theft, he becomes irritable and miserable. Lupino vacillates between a wise cracking, tough cookie out to make a buck to a supportive girlfriend looking for the white picket fence.

There is something about Lupino that makes you feel she was born to play the bitch. Her character isn't particularly bitchy compared to While the City Sleeps, Road House or The Hard Way but I kept expecting her to take a devious turn or spit out a catty remark.

So like many great noirs, Private Hell 36 combines a character study with elements of the police procedural. Throughout the film, you can feel the characters suffocating from the after effects of their crime as well as the tightening vise of their captain's suspicions.

The title refers to camper 36 where the cops stash their stolen loot.

A close second to Private Hell 36 was New York Confidential which features the fabulous raspy staccato of Broderick Crawford's voice. Crawford seems to deliver his lines as if he was late for an appointment. Crawford plays a mob boss who fashions himself as a modern CEO but never extricates himself from the messy business of La Cosa Nostra. Richard Conte plays his protégé and Anne Bancroft (unrecognizable to me) plays his dissatisfied daughter.

Again, this films focuses on the complex relationships Crawford has with Conte and Bancroft but has enough crime capers to keep you interested. Conte kills a man by hiding his pistol in a folded newspaper. Mike Mazurki has a small role as a hitman and they film skillfully builds suspense as he tries to escape a highrise in an elevator. Having just committed a murder, the elevator excruciating stops at every floor on the way down.

The key to the film is the poisoning effect the Mafia has on its own. Crawford drives his daughter to suicide even though he only wants the best for her. Conte who is the smartest of the bunch has to kill his mentor and still can't escape his fate. For all their faux business professionalism, the gangsters in this film are misguided and violent men who can only look forward to a violent death.

The film was based on various Mafia incidents in the 1950's. Crawford's character must have been partially patterned on Frank Costello. There is a meeting of "the Commission" like the Apalachin Meeting two years after the film was released. Another character was clearly patterned on Senator Estes Kefauver. For it's time, it must have had that "rippped from the headlines" feel.

A funny piece of trivia is that Conte plays the son Crawford never had but in real life, Conte was 8 months older than Crawford. Despite having romantic intentions towards Conte, Bancroft was 20 years his junior.

The Pretender was notable for Albert Dekker's descent into madness. I would say paranoia but how does the saying go? It isn't paranoia when they really are out to get you. Dekker has his eye's on Catherine Craig's fortune. He wants to marry her but she hints of a fiancé. The problem is that Craig has so many guys hanging around and is so private that she won't identify her betrothed. No problem, Dekker hire a hit man (through a middle man) to kill her fiancé. Dekker says to look for the engagement photo in the society pages of the newspaper.

You guessed it, Craig cancels the engagement and eventually marries Dekker. Their photo is in the paper but Dekker cancels the hit. The only problem is the cutout man gets whacked and Dekker isn't sure if the hit man got the cancel order. So he becomes a recluse and highly suspicious of his wfie's household staff. Unable to tell her the true reason for his bizarre behavior, she begins to suspect he is going insane. I won't give away the ending but Dekker (who is usually relegated to supporting roles) nailed this role and made for a highly entertaining movie.

City of Fear was a police procedural involving the improbable story of a container of radioactive Cobalt-60 in Los Angeles. An escaped prisoner grabs a metal cannister of what he thinks is heroin. It turns out the government is performing experiments involving exposing Coblalt-60 to prisoners. The rest of the film is a cat and mouse game as the cops look for the con and the con avoids the police. All the while, Vince Edwards, as the escaped convict, develops a hacking cough and extreme fatigue. The casual handling of such highly radioactive material was quaintly amusing but the dragnet aspect of the film was above average and kept me interested.

The two Lawrence Tierney films were notable for the amoral gusto that he brought to each role. I thought he was more menacing in The Devil Thumbs a Ride but I liked the plot of The Hoodlum better. Neither film was particularly noteworthy except for Tierney's textbook portrayals of hardened killers.

Framed which I saw at the 2008 Noir City was also entertaining. Glenn Ford plays a stubborn hot-head but Janis Carter steals the film as the femme fatale. She kills her married boyfriend (Barry Sullivan) and comes within a skosh of getting Ford to drink coffee laced with rat poison.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir

The final tally is in at I Wake Up Dreaming at the Roxie.

They screened 29 features and one short film over 15 days. I previously had seen five of the features - Raw Deal, Framed, The Story of Molly X, The Burglar and Repeat Performance. I re-watched Framed which features a great performance by the alluring Janis Carer. I also watched Raw Deal again which wasn't as enjoyable as a I recalled.

Of the 29 features, I caught 23 of them. I missed four films because I opted to see some films at Women on the Verge at the Castro. The other two that I missed were The Burglar and Repeat Performance where I caught only half of the double bill.

Two films that I missed which are screening as part of the six day encore, Redux: The Best of I Wake Up Dreaming, are The Port of Forty Thieves and Private Hell 36. I'm not sure if I'll catch them. Frankly, I'm burnt out on noir, the Roxie and the Mission District. Festival programmer Elliot Lavine did mention that the $100 festival pass was good for the Redux screenings so I may be tempted.

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I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir
All Night Long with Patrick McGoohan and Richard Attenborough; on-screen performances by Dave Brubeck and Charles Mingus; (1961)
The Guilty with Bonita Granville; (1947)
The Devil Thumbs a Ride with Lawrence Tierney; (1947)
Raw Deal with Raymond Burr; directed by Anthony Mann; (1948)
Railroaded! with Hugh Beaumont; directed by Anthony Mann; (1947)
Canon City; (1948)
Framed with Glenn Ford, Janis Carter and Barry Sullivan; (1947)
The Madonna's Secret; (1946)
The Specter of the Rose written and directed by Ben Hecht; (1946)
Violence; (1947)
The Last Crooked Mile; (1946)
The Hoodlumn with Lawrence Tierney; (1951)
New York Confidential with Broderick Crawford, Richard Conte & Anne Bancroft; (1955)
Witness to Murder with Barbara Stanwyck; (1954)
Hollow Triumph (aka The Scar) with Paul Henreid and Joan Bennett; (1948)
Under Age; (1941)
Women in the Night; (1948)
The Pretender with Albert Dekker; (1947)
Suspense with Barry Sullivan, Belita, Albert Dekker & Bonita Granville; (1946)
Wife Wanted with Kay Francis; directed by Phil Karlson; (1946)
Allotment Wives with Kay Francis; (1945)
Shack Out on 101 with Keenan Wynn and Lee Marvin; (1955)
City of Fear; (1959)
Blind Alley; short film; directed by Elliot Lavine; (1981)

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June looks to be even busier than May for me.

Another Hole in the Head runs from June 5 to 19. The Oshima Retrospective at the PFA runs a double feature every Thursday and Saturday night in June. On Friday nights in June, the PFA screens a Phil Karlson double feature.

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Somehow, I want to squeeze in Psych-Out at the Red Vic on Friday, June 5 or Saturday, June 6.

Filmed in the Haight in 1968, Psych-Out is possibly “(t)he best Haight-Ashbury drug film. Susan Strasberg as a deaf 17-year-old runaway looking for her missing brother is `helped’ by the hippie team of Dean Stockwell, Jack Nicholson (as Stoney), Adam Rourke and Max Julien. They get her beads and a mini to replace her square clothes and give her some STP, which sends her wandering in the traffic. The lost brother turns out to be a long-haired Bruce Dern walking around like a mysterious Christ figure.” -- Michael Weldon, Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film

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The Burning Fuse Film Festival screens concurrently with Hole in the Head at the Roxie on June 5, 7 and 8. The Burning Fuse Films get the Little Roxie when the Hole in the Head films play at the same time. Two films from the festival look interesting.

Pussycat Preacher - A lapsed stripper becomes an evangelical minister, but her ministry outreach to sex workers stirs her congregation’s prejudice and doubt. The film presents a mesmerizing and at times hilarious portrait. I've seen the ex-stripper, Heather Vietch, on the news - FoxNews or MSNBC. It screens June 5 (Friday), June 7 (Sunday) and June 8 (Monday); 7:45 PM showtime each night.

Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans - The untold history of Black New Orleans. Not a Katrina film, but a love letter to a city, revealed when a newspaperman rebuilds a historic house in what may be the oldest black neighborhood in America, and the birthplace of jazz. Produced by Wynton Marsalis. It screens June 5 (Friday) at 6 PM and June 7 (Sunday) at 2 PM.

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With the $100 I Wake Up Dreaming Festival Pass, I've pushed my average cost down to $7.23/screening. It was at $7.75 immediately before the festival began. Please no wagering on the number.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Taking Inventory as of May 23

I've been so busy going to the movies, I haven't had time to write about them or the movies I'm planning on seeing. I've been to the theater 15 out of the last 19 days and have seen 30 films during that period.

I will postpone cataloging the films from I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir at the Roxie since that series is still in progress. However, I will say that they passed out a flyer today for Noir Redux: The Best of I Wake Up Dreaming from May 29 to June 3. The crowds have been fairly large (by Roxie standards) for the screenings I've been to so encore performances are certainly justified.

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2009 San Francisco International Film Festival
The Lost World starring Wallace Beery; silent with intertitles; live accompaniment by Dengue Fever; (1925)

Coming Apart: Two Views of 1972 at the YBCA
F.T.A. (aka Free the Army or Fuck the Army); documentary with Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland; (1972)
Last House on the Left directed by Wes Craven; (1972)

First Stabs: Formative Works by Stanley Kubrick and Robert Altman presented by the Film on Film Foundation at the Roxie
Flying Padre; documentary directed by Stanley Kubrick; (1951)
Day of the Fight; documentary directed by Stanley Kubrick; (1951)
Fear and Desire directed by Stanley Kubrick; (1953)
The Delinquents starring Tom Laughlin; directed by Robert Altman; (1957)

Landmark Theater Midnight Movies Series at the Clay
Cannibal Holocaust directed by Ruggero Deodato; (1980)

Women on the Verge at the Castro
Black Narcissus starring Deborah Kerr; (1947)
Suddenly, Last Summer starring Katharine Hepburn, Montgomery Clift and and Elizabeth Taylor; directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz; screenplay by Gore Vidal based on a play by Tennessee Williams; (1959)
Possession starring Isabelle Adjani and Sam Neill; (1981)
Remember My Name starring Geraldine Chaplin and Anthony Perkins; (1978)
Ms. 45 starring Zoë Lund; directed by Abel Ferrara; (1981)

Z starring Yves Montand and Irene Papas; directed by Costa-Gavras; French with subtitles; (1969)
Gomorrah; Italian with subtitles; (2008) - Official Website
The Beast Stalker starring Nicholas Tse and Nick Cheung; directed by Dante Lam; Cantonese with subtitles; (2008) - Official Website
Fighting starring Terrence Howard; (2009) - Official Website
Serbis directed by Brillante Mendoza; Tagalog with subtitles; (2008) - Offical Website

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Women on the Verge

The Castro Theater recently announced a week long film series that I find full of potential. It's called Women on the Verge - 12 tales of madness, lust, terror, and vengeance showcasing some of cinema’s most indelible performances from the female cannon.

I've only seen two of the films on the program (Carrie and Johnny Guitar). The line-up includes Katherine Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, Deborah Kerr, Catherine Deneuve, Faye Dunaway, Isebelle Adjani and Joan Crawford. Directors include Brian DePalma, John Waters, Joseph Mankiewicz, Roman Polanski, Pedro Almodovar, Nicholas Ray and Abel Ferrara. The Ferrara film, Ms. 45, is an exploitation classic.

The only downside is that it coincides with the first week of I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir at the Roxie. I'll have to make some hard choices that week.

In addition, the Castro is screening a new 40th anniversary print of Costa-Gavras’s Z from May 8 to 14. I've seen this political thriller before but it's been a few years. I'll probably swing by to catch it.

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Women on the Verge - May 16 to 21 at the Castro Theater

Saturday, May 16
Carrie
High school is a snake pit as Sissy Spacek ignites her telekinetic powers to thwart that special brand of cruelty unique to teenage girls. This melding of minds between Stephen King and director Brian DePalma created one of the horror genre’s true classics. Piper Laurie, Betty Buckley, and Amy Irving co-star. (1976, 98 min, 35mm)

Female Trouble
This sick bad-taste epic from John Waters stars Divine as obese criminal Dawn Davenport, and charts her depraved life trajectory from waitress to go-go dancer to cat burglar to media freak to her big day in court. Mink Stole, Mary Vivian Pearce, David Lochary and Edith Massey co-star. (1974, 97 min, 35mm)

Sunday, May 17
Suddenly, Last Summer
In this lush, lurid adaptation of Tennessee Williams one-act, Elizabeth Taylor and Katharine Hepburn play a seemingly insane, young New Orleans debutante and the wealthy aunt who wants surgeon Montgomery Clift to lobotomize her. Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, screenplay by Gore Vidal. (1959, 114 min, 35mm)

Black Narcissus
Widely hailed as one of the most visually stunning films ever made, Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger’s sensual, evocative drama of repressed nuns in the Himalayas took Technicolor to new heights. Deborah Kerr’s awesome performance illuminates this haunting, powerful study of the effects of loneliness and isolation. With Flora Robson, David Farrar, Jean Simmons and Sabu. (1947, 99 min, 35mm)

Monday, May 18
Puzzle of a Downfall Child
The stunning beauty of Faye Dunaway is showcased in her tour-de-force performance as a fashion model looking back over her career after a nervous breakdown. Directed in a fragmented Euro-style by former fashion photographer Jerry Schatzberg. With Barry Primus, Viveca Lindfors and Roy Scheider (1970, 105 min, 35mm) Rare; Never on VHS or DVD.

Play It As It Lays
Tuesday Weld takes an extraordinary turn as an actress rapidly unraveling in the meaningless void of Hollywood existence. Frank Perry (Mommie Dearest) directed this terse adaptation of Joan Didion’s disturbing novel. Anthony Perkins and Adam Roarke co-star. (1972, 99 min, 35mm) Rare; Never on VHS or DVD.

Tuesday, May 19
Repulsion
Left alone by her sister for the weekend, repressed Catherine Deneuve is haunted by surreal erotic hallucinations and is slowly driven to madness. Roman Polanski’s chilling horror tale is a masterpiece of psycho-sexual delirium! (1965, 104 min, 35mm)

Possession
West Berlin, it is day. In Andrzej Zulawski’s film you will not see the night - for in the forces of night, horror such as this could not exist without damaging humanity beyond rehabilitation. As the most unhappily married couple ever, Isebelle Adjani’s completely ajar performance easily puts convention to shame, with equally deranged Sam Neill not far behind. (1981, 81 min, 35mm) Rare U.S. Version – Not on DVD.

Wednesday, May 20
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Pedro Almodovar’s quintessential doorslamming farce about a gaggle of women and their various problems with men, be they married lovers, cheating husbands, fiancés, or terrorists. Carmen Maura is positively unhinged as the actress/spurned lover desperately seeking confrontation. With Maria Barranco, Julieta Serrano and Antonio Banderas. (1988, 88 min, 35mm, in Spanish with English subtitles)

Johnny Guitar
Nicholas Ray’s flamboyant western pits tough-as-nails gambling den proprietor Joan Crawford against shrill firebrand Mercedes McCambridge in a two-fisted cat fight for control of a frontier boomtown. With Sterling Hayden and Scott Brady (1954, 110 min, 35mm) Never on DVD.

Thursday, May 21
Remember My Name
Just out of jail for murder, psychotic Geraldine Chaplin stalks ex-husband Anthony Perkins and his new wife Berry Berenson in happy suburbia. Robert Altman produced Alan Rudolph’s moody, disquieting drama which features Alfre Woodard and Jeff Goldblum in early roles, and the smoky songs of Alberta Hunter. (1978, 94 min, 35mm) Rare; Never on VHS or DVD.

Ms. 45
After two brutal attacks, mute Zoe Tamerlis not only reeks vengeance on her violators but goes full-blown vigilante, seeking out men then pumping ‘em full of lead in glorious whacked-out style. Abel Ferrara’s imaginative, razor-sharp shocker is lean and mean exploitation at its finest! (1981, 80 min, ultra-rare 35mm print)

Thursday, March 26, 2009

April Showers Bring May Noirs

The Roxie has announced a film program in May called I Wake Up Dreaming: The Haunted World of the B Film Noir. Double features run from May 15 to 28.

From 1990 until 2003, San Francisco’s Roxie Theater enjoyed a reputation as being the foremost venue in the entire Bay Area for the absolute best in quality, esoteric film noir. The guiding hand behind the film noir programming at the Roxie was Elliot Lavine, who left the theater in early 2003 to pursue other interests, among them teaching courses in film studies at Stanford and San Francisco State University. He has also completed work on a fascinating new book called “TV Noir: I Wake Up Dreaming.” To help celebrate the appearance of his soon to be published book, Lavine has been invited to curate this film noir series at the Roxie. The focus of this series is the shadowy and gritty world of the B noir. These are not the glitzy and glamorous classics most filmgoers are familiar with. Rather, they are the doomed and forgotten, rough and ready step-children of Hollywood’s lower depths; poverty row gems that, in many ways, capture the true, brutal essence of noir far better than many of their upper-crust cousins.

28 films are screening over 14 days at the Big Roxie. I have to check my records but I am only aware of having seen two of the films.

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Friday, May 15

The Devil Thumbs a Ride (1940)
An innocent young dupe gives a ride to a vicious criminal and unleashes a nightmare of violence and depravity! One of the most blatantly nasty B films of all time, with a singularly fierce central performance from its legendary dark star, Lawrence Tierney.

The Guilty (1947)
Twin sisters—one good, the other bad—dangerously hold a man’s fate in their hands. But which one is which? This rare poverty row gem is one of the eeriest and most disturbing of the many fine films adapted from the obsessively demented Cornell Woolrich’s provocative pulp fiction.

Saturday, May 16

Raw Deal (1948)
A desperate man breaks out of prison and begins a relentless and bloody pursuit of those who framed him. Beautifully photographed by John Alton, arguably the premier noir cinematographer of the 1940s and 50s. A classic noir on every level. Starring Dennis O’Keefe, Claire Trevor, Marsha Hunt, Raymond Burr, John Ireland.
Directed by Anthony Mann.


Railroaded! (1947)
A tightly wound, high impact tale of criminal brutality: after a ruthless gangster pins a cop’s murder on an innocent young punk, he sets his sights on the kid’s sister. Erotically charged and loaded with the kind of violence only found at the depths of Hollywood’s poverty row. Starring John Ireland, Sheila Ryan, Hugh Beaumont. Directed by Anthony Mann.

Sunday, May 17

Canon City (1948)
A brutally realistic prison escape film with brilliant cinematography by John Alton. Based on actual events and filmed on location, this fast-paced and thrilling epic is as ruthlessly hard-boiled as anything produced in its time. A rarely seen classic that should not be missed under any circumstances!

Framed (1947)
A down-on-his-luck drifter falls into the clutches of a scheming woman who has constructed an elaborate frame designed to net her and her bank robber boyfriend a cool quarter million in cash. All they need to do is put the drifter in the frame. Excellent unsung B noir! Starring Glenn Ford, Janis Carter, Barry Sullivan.

Monday, May 18

The Specter of the Rose (1946)
A fascinating foray into the darkly demented world of dancers, in which at least one of whom might (or might not) be a psychotic murderer! Very strange, this is a noir of an entirely different stripe; all on a B budget! Excellent cinematography by Lee Garmes. Written and directed by Ben Hecht.

The Madonna's Secret (1946)
The masterful John Alton provides some astonishing camerawork for this strangely hypnotic noir mystery about a famous painter who can’t seem to get the image of his dead fiancée out of his mind. When his models, one by one, start turning up dead, he becomes Prime Suspect #1.


Tuesday, May 19

The Story of Molly X (1949)
The beautiful widow of a slain gangster takes over control of his mob. Thrown into the state pen, she is given the opportunity to unravel the tragic circumstances that have led her to this strange and sordid life. In many ways this terrific noir film was years ahead of its time. Starring June Havoc, Charles McGraw, John Russell, Dorothy Hart.

The Port of Forty Thieves (1944)
A cunning femme fatale with a penchant for murder has devised a foolproof scheme that could net her a fabulous fortune! Or has she? A sublimely perverse and very rarely seen poverty row noir with a mind-boggling myriad of twists and turns!

Wednesday, May 20

The Last Crooked Mile (1946)
Even though she’ll always be best remembered as the demonic Vera in “Detour,” Ann Savage turns in a great performance as a slinky cabaret singer in this energetic B noir about the frantic chase for $300,000 in stolen loot, culminating in a wild scene at a sleazy carnival.

Violence (1947)
From the director of the cult fave “Decoy” comes this swiftly paced poverty row noir about a pseudo-patriotic scam organization—in reality an odious Fascist hate group—trying to recruit disillusioned war vets into its fold! A girl reporter and an undercover agent try to bust it up!

Thursday, May 21

Private Hell 36 (1954)
From the director of the mind-blowing “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” comes this sharply drawn crime drama about a pair of cops who abscond with a cache of stolen loot. In typical noir fashion, the gravity of their deed drives them to the edge of panic! Starring Ida Lupino, Steve Cochran, Howard Duff, Dorothy Malone, Dean Jagger. Directed by Don Siegel.

No Man’s Woman (1955)
The mighty Marie Windsor stars in this quirky B classic as a conniving femme fatale who everyone else in the movie would love to see dead. When she finally turns up that way, the line of suspects winds around the block. Cheap, tawdry and very, very noir!

Friday, May 22

New York Confidential (1955)
Organized crime gets the film noir treatment in this sensational expose of the murderous racketeers who once held a mighty metropolis in its evil iron-clad grip! B noir seldom got as heady as this rarely seen exciting opus! Starring Broderick Crawford, Richard Conte, Anne Bancroft, Marilyn Maxwell, J. Carroll Naish.

The Hoodlum (1951)
Lawrence Tierney returns as the eponymous title character of this unheralded poverty row noir about an unrepentant sociopath, bent on bringing doom and destruction to everyone in his path! Rarely have an actor and his role meshed so perfectly. Also starring Allene Roberts, Marjorie Riordan, Edward Tierney (the star’s real-life brother).

Saturday, May 23

The Burglar (1957)
From the psychologically dark imagination of pulp paperback novelist David Goodis comes this peculiarly twisted tale of love between thieves. Resembling nothing less than the French New Wave films it would soon inspire, this is a film that once seen is never forgotten! Starring Dan Duryea, Jayne Mansfield, Martha Vickers, Mickey O’Shaughnessy.

Witness to Murder (1954)
A woman awakens in the middle of the night and witnesses a grisly murder through her bedroom window. Somehow the only person who believes her is the killer himself! A tension-filled noir thriller photographed by John Alton with an eye for incredible detail. Starring Barbara Stanwyck, Garry Merrill, George Sanders.

Sunday, May 24

Repeat Performance (1947)
On New Year’s Eve a woman murders her husband then suddenly wishes she hadn’t. Inexplicably, she’s given her wish and now finds she has the entire year to live over again. But will anything change? This provocative and scintillating noir gem will linger in your dreams. Starring Joan Leslie, Louis Hayward, Richard Basehart, Virginia Field.

Hollow Triumph aka: The Scar (1948)
After a carefully planned heist goes haywire, a gangster goes on the lam. When he encounters a prominent psychologist who is his exact double, an insidious plan is hatched. A top-notch B noir, sizzling with unexpected plot twists and the sumptuous cinematography of John Alton! Starring Paul Henreid, Joan Bennett, Edward Franz.

Monday, May 25

Women In The Night (l948)
One of the rarest of 40s B noirs, this lurid exploitation shocker tells the grim story of women captured by the Nazis and forced to serve as “hostesses” at the Shanghai Officer’s Club! Photographed by the celebrated Eugene Shufftan, the film has a look not often associated with obscurity. Starring Tara Birell, Virginia Christine, Philip Ahn, Iris Flores.

Under Age (1941)
An astonishingly frank B oddity about young wayward girls who are lured into the dangerous world of prostitution by sinister pimps and racketeers! The Hollywood censors were clearly asleep at the wheel when this steamy little noir slipped into unsuspecting neighborhood theaters! Directed by Edward Dmytryk.

Tuesday, May 26

Suspense (1946)
One of the classiest of all poverty row films, a nightclub noir about a deadly romantic quadrangle that threatens to destroy the lives of everyone involved. A thoroughly unusual and visually rich thriller that is all but forgotten today. Starring Barry Sullivan, Belita, Albert Dekker, Bonita Granville, Eugene Pallette.

The Pretender (1947)
This remarkably timely noir oddity about a financier who has been plundering the assets of a wealthy client mixes equal measures of suspense with “Twilight Zone”-style elements of the supernatural. One of the first Hollywood films to feature a theramin-dominated score. Brilliantly shot by John Alton!

Wednesday, May 27

Allotment Wives (1945)
Former Hollywood superstar Kay Francis made a final stop at poverty row to star in (and produce) this sadly neglected B noir! She plays a socialite who secretly heads a nasty gang of women who prey on returning WWII servicemen. Violence, blackmail and murder highlight this sordid tale of shame!

Wife Wanted (1946)
Kay Francis returns to poverty row as a faded former movie star who unwittingly becomes involved with nefarious conmen who operate a sleazy “lonely hearts” racket! Things go from bad to worse when murder steps in! Co-starring in this unusual noir melodrama are Paul Cavanaugh, Robert Shayne, Veda Ann Borg. Directed by Phil Karlson.

Thursday, May 28

City of Fear (1959)
Upon escaping from prison, a desperate criminal mistakes a container of radioactive material for heroin! Will the cops be able to bring him down before an entire city becomes infected with radioactive poisoning!?! A seldom seen noir thriller from the director of the incredible “Murder By Contract.”

Shack Out On 101 (1955)
At a lonely seaside beanery north of San Diego, assorted oddballs mingle with atomic spies! Time his not diminished the utter strangeness of this bizarre cold war psychodrama. The absolute zenith in cult trash noir, the stellar cast of stalwart superstars includes Keenan Wynn, Lee Marvin, Terry Moore, Frank Lovejoy and Whit Bissell.