Geek Syndicate Issue 8 | Page 20

Geek Syndicate Of course, this being noir, things don’t stay ordinary or healthy for very long. After an idea from out of the blue and a subsequent hitchhiking trip and then... there is the coincidence... and then as some conversation from the film explains... “Not much luck?” “Sure, all bad!’ Then there was a woman, a scheme and a murder. All the tropes are present: Fog drenched street lights and murky shadows; night-time driving (probably shot at daytime with a filter); razor-sharp dialogue and slang; feisty femme-fatale; plenty of smoking and the drinking of shorts; cash; ambitious plots; cops; rain; greed; and of course, murder. The acting can’t be 20 described as top notch and the directing will never win awards, but you don’t notice. You’re hooked to the poor schmuck’s story. Detour is not a long film but it does contain all the essential elements for a film-noir. Small but perfectly formed. The (Other) Ten Greatest Film Noirs • The Maltese Falcon, 1941 Starring: Tom Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor, Dir: John Huston 100 mins. Sam Spade, private eye, is hired to protect a woman but after his partner is shot, everything gets dicey. Everyone is after the little black bird and seductive conversations are everywhere. Is Spade in love? This film features incredible dialogue, an almost pointless plot, moral am- biguity, loneliness and an untrustworthy dame. • Double Indemnity, 1944 starring: Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck and Edward G. Robinson, Dir: Billy Wilder 107 mins. An ordinary insurance man meets a seductive blonde, falls in love and plots to kill her husband. But does his boss suspect him? Has he been taken for a ride? Is there no way out of this fix? This features a man whose life is spiraling out of control, a doomed romance, murder, loose morals and an untrustworthy dame. • The Killers, 1946 Starring: Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner, Dir: Robert Siodmak 103 mins. Two mysterious killers turn up in a run of the mill town.