THE CARD COUNTER: on floating through it
by Jo Rempel, Staff Writer
The Card Counter is not an anxious film. Looking at the film through Tell’s eyes, bad odds are taken as a given, so no point in worrying.
by Jo Rempel, Staff Writer
The Card Counter is not an anxious film. Looking at the film through Tell’s eyes, bad odds are taken as a given, so no point in worrying.
by Jo Rempel, Staff Writer
The canon I’m drawing up today are of those essential noirs that keep it car-centric throughout. Each of these pictures builds its own perception of the motor.
by Gary M. Kramer, Staff Writer
The Big Clock, from 1948, opens as a quintessential noir. There is a city skyline seen at night, with black smoke drifting through the frame as the camera pans towards a mid-Century office building.
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
Modern neo-noir—often taking advantage of neon lights, new music, and delving further into perspectives we didn’t get in the original heyday of noir—is such an interesting group of subgenres all on its own.
by Olivia Hunter Willke, Staff Writer
No portrayal of Philip Marlowe, before or since, has been as distinct as Gould and Altman's collaboration.
by Sam Morris, Staff Writer
All of these films explore the choices that men and women make when their backs are up against the wall as well as the societal forces that forced them against that wall in the first place.
by Fiona Underhill, Contributor
While 1940s noirs made stunning use of the shadows, silhouettes and sharp angles that crisp black and white photography provided, the 80s neo-noir had a very different feel.