Posted by Notcot on May 10, 2012 in
Noir
There’s a satisfying sense of closure to the definitive noir kick achieved in The Big Heat: its director, Fritz Lang, had forged early links from German expressionism to the emergence of film noir, so it’s entirely logical that the expatriate director would help codify the genre with this brutal 1953 film. Visually, his scenes exemplify the bold contrasts, deep shadows, and heightened compositions that define the look of noir, and he matches that success with the darkly pessimistic themes of this revenge melodrama.
The story coheres around the suicide of a crooked cop, and the subsequent struggle of an honest detective, Dave Bannion (Glenn Ford), to navigate between a corrupt city government and a ruthless mobster to uncover the truth. Initially, the violence here seems almost timid by comparison to the more explicit carnage now commonplace in films, yet the story accelerates as its plot arcs toward Bannion’s showdown with kingpin Lagana (Alexander Scourby) and his psychotic henchman, the sadistic Vince Stone, given an indelible nastiness by Lee Marvin. When Bannion’s wife is killed by a car bomb intended for the detective, both the hero and the story go ballistic: suspended from the force, he embarks on a crusade of revenge that suggests a template for Charles Bronson’s Death Wish films, each step pushing Lagana and Stone toward a showdown. Bodies drop, dominoes tumbled by the escalating war between the obsessed Bannion and his increasingly vicious adversaries.
Lang’s disciplined visual design and the performances (especially those of Ford, Marvin, Jeanette Nolan as the dead cop’s scheming widow, and Gloria Grahame as Marvin’s girlfriend) enable the film to transcend formula, as do several memorable action scenes–when an enraged Marvin hurls scalding coffee at the feisty Debby (Grahame), we’re both shattered by the violence of his attack, and aware that he’s shifted the balance of power. –Sam Sutherland
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Tags: alexander scourby, CAR, car bomb, carnage, charles bronson, City, codify, Cop, corrupt city, crooked cop, dead cop, deep shadows, detective dave, director fritz, expatriate, fritz lang, Genre, german expressionism, glenn ford, gloria grahame, henchman, jeanette nolan, Lagana, lee marvin, Noir, plot, revenge, showdown, story, truth
Posted by Notcot on May 3, 2012 in
Noir
THREE OF ELLROY’S MOST COMPELLING NOVELS FEATURING DETECTIVE SERGEANT LLOYD HOPKINS IN ONE VOLUME. BLOOD ON THE MOON: 20 random killings of women are unconnected in police files. But Det. Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins sees a pattern. As he is drawn to the murderer, the two men face a confrontation pitting icy intelligence and white-heated madness. . . BECAUSE THE NIGHT: Jacob Herzog, hero cop, has disappeared. A multiple murder committed with a pre-Civil War revolver remains unsolved. Are the two cases interlinked? As Det. Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins pieces the puzzle together he discovers the darker threat of John Haviland, a psychiatrist whose pleasure comes from the manipulation of the weak and lonely. SUICIDE HILL: Duane Rice leaves jail with good news and bad news: Two adulterous bank managers are ripe for squeezing, but Vandy, who he is obsessed with making a rock star, has disappeared. An orgy of violence erupts as Duane’s partner goes beserk and Duane settles scores with knife and bullet. Leading the manhunt Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins stumbles on a horrifying conspiracy of corruption and betrayal- among his own colleagues.THREE OF ELLROY’S MOST COMPELLING NOVELS FEATURING DETECTIVE SERGEANT LLOYD HOPKINS IN ONE VOLUME. BLOOD ON THE MOON: 20 random killings of women are unconnected in police files. But Det. Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins sees a pattern. As he is drawn to the murderer, the two men face a confrontation pitting icy intelligence and white-heated madness. . . BECAUSE THE NIGHT: Jacob Herzog, hero cop, has disappeared. A multiple murder committed with a pre-Civil War revolver remains unsolved. Are the two cases interlinked? As Det. Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins pieces the puzzle together he discovers the darker threat of John Haviland, a psychiatrist whose pleasure comes from the manipulation of the weak and lonely. SUICIDE HILL: Duane Rice leaves jail with good news and bad news: Two adulterous bank managers are ripe for squeezing, but Vandy, who he is obsessed with making a rock star, has disappeared. An orgy of violence erupts as Duane’s partner goes beserk and Duane settles scores with knife and bullet. Leading the manhunt Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins stumbles on a horrifying conspiracy of corruption and betrayal- among his own colleagues.
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Tags: Bank, bank managers, Because, beserk, blood on the moon, civil war revolver, Cop, detective sergeant, ellroy, hero cop, herzog, icy, john haviland, killings, lloyd hopkins, manhunt, Night, orgy, partner, Police, police files, psychiatrist, rock, SERGEANT, Suicide, suicide hill, Threat, Vandy, War
Posted by Notcot on Apr 30, 2012 in
Cult Film
An epidemic of apocalyptic proportions has swept the globe causing the dead to rise and feed on the living. In a matter of months society has crumbled: There is no government no grocery stores no mail delivery no cable TV. Rick Grimes finds himself one of the few survivors in this terrifying future. A couple months ago he was a small town cop who had never fired a shot and only ever saw one dead body. Separated from his family he must now sort through all the death and confusion to try and find his wife and son. In a world ruled by the dead we are forced to finally begin living. It is a reprint edition.
Price : £ 4.99
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Tags: 163, body, cable tv, confusion, Cop, couple, Dead, Edition, epidemic, family, feed, future, globe, government, grocery, grocery stores, mail, mail delivery, proportions, shot, Society, survivors, town cop
Posted by Notcot on Jan 11, 2011 in
Noir
There’s a satisfying sense of closure to the definitive noir kick achieved in The Big Heat: its director, Fritz Lang, had forged early links from German expressionism to the emergence of film noir, so it’s entirely logical that the expatriate director would help codify the genre with this brutal 1953 film. Visually, his scenes exemplify the bold contrasts, deep shadows, and heightened compositions that define the look of noir, and he matches that success with the darkly pessimistic themes of this revenge melodrama.
The story coheres around the suicide of a crooked cop, and the subsequent struggle of an honest detective, Dave Bannion (Glenn Ford), to navigate between a corrupt city government and a ruthless mobster to uncover the truth. Initially, the violence here seems almost timid by comparison to the more explicit carnage now commonplace in films, yet the story accelerates as its plot arcs toward Bannion’s showdown with kingpin Lagana (Alexander Scourby) and his psychotic henchman, the sadistic Vince Stone, given an indelible nastiness by Lee Marvin. When Bannion’s wife is killed by a car bomb intended for the detective, both the hero and the story go ballistic: suspended from the force, he embarks on a crusade of revenge that suggests a template for Charles Bronson’s Death Wish films, each step pushing Lagana and Stone toward a showdown. Bodies drop, dominoes tumbled by the escalating war between the obsessed Bannion and his increasingly vicious adversaries.
Lang’s disciplined visual design and the performances (especially those of Ford, Marvin, Jeanette Nolan as the dead cop’s scheming widow, and Gloria Grahame as Marvin’s girlfriend) enable the film to transcend formula, as do several memorable action scenes–when an enraged Marvin hurls scalding coffee at the feisty Debby (Grahame), we’re both shattered by the violence of his attack, and aware that he’s shifted the balance of power. –Sam Sutherland
<- Read More
Buy Now for [wpramaprice asin=”B000CIWXEQ”] (Best Price)
Tags: alexander scourby, CAR, car bomb, carnage, charles bronson, City, codify, Cop, corrupt city, crooked cop, dead cop, deep shadows, detective dave, director fritz, expatriate, fritz lang, Genre, german expressionism, glenn ford, gloria grahame, henchman, jeanette nolan, Lagana, lee marvin, Noir, plot, revenge, showdown, story, truth
Posted by Notcot on Jan 1, 2011 in
Noir
One of the classics of the noir psychological thriller, In a Lonely Place is one of Humphrey Bogart’s finest performances. He is almost unbearably intense as Dixon Steele, a screenwriter with high standards and a nasty temper who finds himself under suspicion when Mildred, a hat-check girl he knows, is found murdered. Immediately he gets an alibi from a neighbour, Laurel, and equally quickly, he recognises that this is a woman who meets his standards: the question is, as suspicion of his involvement in Mildred’s death continues, can he make himself meet hers?
This is a wonderful study in trust and suspicion and the limits of love; Bogart’s performance is impressive simply because he is prepared to go well over the limits of our sympathy in the name of emotional truth. The scene where he explains imaginatively to a cop and his wife how the murder might have happened is a spine-chilling, creepy portrait of amoral artistic brilliance. Gloria Grahame is equally fine as the woman who lets herself love him, for a while.
On the DVD: In a Lonely Place comes with an excellent documentary in which Curtis Hanson (LA Confidential) explains the importance of the film to him and discusses its place in the work of Bogart and the director Nicholas Ray; there is also a quick interesting documentary about the restoration and digitisation of classic films. The film is presented with a visual aspect ratio of 1.33:1 and with restored Dolby Surround sound that does full justice to the film’s snappy dialogue and the moody George Antheil score. –Roz Kaveney
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Tags: alibi, aspect ratio, classic films, Confidential, Cop, curtis hanson, digitisation, Dolby, dolby surround sound, emotional truth, Girl, gloria grahame, hat check girl, humphrey bogart, involvement, lonely place, love, nicholas ray, Noir, psychological thriller, snappy dialogue, Study, Surround, suspicion, temper, thriller, visual aspect, while, woman
Posted by Notcot on Nov 8, 2010 in
Cult Film
Tags: Cop, Demon, DVD
Posted by Notcot on Sep 3, 2010 in
Noir
Average Rating: 2.5 / 5 (2 Reviews)
Product Description
The laconic private eye…the corrupt cop…the heist that goes wrong…the Femme Fatale with the rich husband and dim lover – all are trademark characters of the movement known as film noir, that elusive mixture of stark lighting and even starker emotions. Noir explores the dark side of post-war society – gangsters, hoodlums, prostitutes and killers – and showed how it corrupted the good and the beautiful. Many of these films are now touchstones of what we regard as ‘classic’ Hollywood – The Maltese Falcon(1941), The Big Sleep(1946), Double Indemnity(1944) and The Postman Always Rings Twice(1946). This Pocket Essential charts the progression of the noir style as a vehicle for film-makers who wanted to record the darkness at the heart of American society as it emerged from World War into Cold War. As well as an introductory essay on the origins of Film Noir, this Pocket Essential discusses all the classics from the heyday of the movement in detail and includes a handy reference section for readers who want to know more.
Film Noir – The Pocket Essential Guide
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Tags: classic hollywood, Cop, corrupt cop, DescriptionThe, detail, dim, double indemnity, Essential, Falcon, femme fatale, film makers, Gangsters, Guide, handy reference, heist, heyday, hoodlums, husband, introductory essay, maltese falcon, Noir, Postman, private eye, progression, Style, touchstones, vehicle, war society
Posted by Notcot on Jul 16, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: / 5 ( Reviews)
Product Description
Danish Edition, PAL/Region 2 DVD: Subtitles: Danish. This landmark television program co-created by Patrick Hasburgh and Stephen J. Cannell (The A-Team, The Rockford Files) not only served as the springboard for Johnny Depp’s career, but also dealt with timely social issues including alcoholism, hate crimes, drugs, racism, AIDS, abuse and promiscuity. Each episode resolves with moral lessons being learned and justice being served. 21 Jump Street will forever be regarded as one of the coolest cop shows in TV history!
21 Jump Street – The Complete First Season
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Tags: 21 jump street, abuse, aids, alcoholism, Average, coolest, Cop, DescriptionDanish, episode, Files, Johnny Depp, Justice, landmark, moral lessons, pal region, Product, promiscuity, racism, region, rockford, springboard, stephen j cannell, Subtitles, Television, television program, timely social issues, tv history
Posted by Notcot on Jul 12, 2010 in
Cult Film
Tags: Average, Cop, Demon, rating, Reviews