This book combines film studies with urban theory in a spatial exploration of twentieth century Los Angeles. Configured through the dark lens of noir, the author examines an alternate urban history of Los Angeles forged by the fictional modes of detective fiction, film noir and neo noir. Dark portrayals of the city are analyzed in Raymond Chandler's crime fiction through to key films like Double Indemnity (1944) and The End of Violence (1997). By employing these fictional elements as the basis for historicising the city's unrivalled urban form, the analysis demonstrates an innovative approach to urban historiography. Revealing some of the earliest tendencies of postmodern expression in Hollywood cinema, this book will be of great relevance ...
The American film noir is a cinematic tradition whose represen-tations are thoroughly liminal. What ...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
Film noir has usually been considered to be an autonomous cinematic movement and many critics have f...
Los Angeles and Noir are historically intertwined through Hollywood cinema and hard-boiled detective...
Urban and domestic spaces are at the core of the American film noir developed in the 1940s and 50s. ...
From the beginnings of film history, urban reality has been a focal point of film. Los Angeles, the ...
The central aim of this dissertation is to effectively trace the intersection of race and urban epis...
Modern and Postmodern Los Angeles is examined through the lens of film noir and neo noir. The uniqu...
Accounts of 'filmic' Los Angeles are often pessimistic, focusing upon the geographies of segregation...
This paper aims to investigate how film neo-noir functions as an ideal medium to engage in a postmod...
After World War II, film audiences of American crime dramas, later termed film noirs, witnessed the ...
Noir and the Urban Imaginary is creative practice based PhD research comprising critical analysis (4...
Through a study of the production and rise in popularity of the American film noir in Los Angeles, t...
In film, the construction of Los Angeles as a character has been defined through a series of specifi...
This dissertation uses quantitative data on city cinematography and the morphological study of filmi...
The American film noir is a cinematic tradition whose represen-tations are thoroughly liminal. What ...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
Film noir has usually been considered to be an autonomous cinematic movement and many critics have f...
Los Angeles and Noir are historically intertwined through Hollywood cinema and hard-boiled detective...
Urban and domestic spaces are at the core of the American film noir developed in the 1940s and 50s. ...
From the beginnings of film history, urban reality has been a focal point of film. Los Angeles, the ...
The central aim of this dissertation is to effectively trace the intersection of race and urban epis...
Modern and Postmodern Los Angeles is examined through the lens of film noir and neo noir. The uniqu...
Accounts of 'filmic' Los Angeles are often pessimistic, focusing upon the geographies of segregation...
This paper aims to investigate how film neo-noir functions as an ideal medium to engage in a postmod...
After World War II, film audiences of American crime dramas, later termed film noirs, witnessed the ...
Noir and the Urban Imaginary is creative practice based PhD research comprising critical analysis (4...
Through a study of the production and rise in popularity of the American film noir in Los Angeles, t...
In film, the construction of Los Angeles as a character has been defined through a series of specifi...
This dissertation uses quantitative data on city cinematography and the morphological study of filmi...
The American film noir is a cinematic tradition whose represen-tations are thoroughly liminal. What ...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
Film noir has usually been considered to be an autonomous cinematic movement and many critics have f...