SUMMARY
- Definition & Complexity: Film Noir is a 1940s cinema category featuring psychological crime thrillers with dark, stylized visuals. It defies strict genre classification, sparking ongoing debates.
- Historical Context: Emerging during and after WWII, Film Noir reflects the era’s disillusionment, influenced by German Expressionism, French Poetic Realism, and hardboiled crime fiction.
- Visual & Narrative Style: Known for chiaroscuro lighting, unsettling visuals, and nonlinear storytelling, Film Noir often explores themes of moral ambiguity, corruption, and doomed characters.
- Impact & Legacy: Film Noir’s lasting influence spans global cinema, inspiring subgenres like neo-noir and impacting films across different eras and genres.
Film Noir is 1940s cinema filled with femme fatales, doomed anti-heroes, gray morality, and dangerous, dark streets. It was born from the cracks of war and recession and cloaked in slick visuals, deep shadows, and experimental style. Film Noir expanded the possibilities of Hollywood filmmaking and left an indelible mark on global cinema. Read on to find out the meaning of Film Noir and its importance in the history of cinema.
Film Noir: Meaning of the Cinematic Term
Film Noir is a type of thriller film that focuses on psychological dimensions of crime and uses heightened, stylized mise-en-scène. That is the simple meaning of Film Noir, but things are not so straightforward. Too broad a catalog to have a genre’s constraints, but too narrative-focused to simply be a style, Film Noir is a famously debated category.
Critics, historians, and fans of Film Noir diverge on almost everything: which elements constitute the noir style, what is its exact period, where was it restricted to, which movies classify as noir or proto-noir, and which are quasi-noir, or post-noir, or neo-noir, and did Film Noir ever really end at all? Is it a genre, a style, a movement, or just a set of very stylish coincidences?
Get the latest articles delivered to your inbox
Sign up to our Free Weekly NewsletterThe term Film Noir was coined by French critics in 1946. It translates to dark film. With the ban on American movies lifted after the end of the Second World War, French audiences were at last introduced to Hollywood films of the decade. Between screwball comedies and sweeping epics, came a new, intriguing wave of crime thrillers. Films like The Maltese Falcon (1941) and Murder, My Sweet (1944) are rough detective mysteries depicting the seedy urban underbelly. Double Indemnity, The Woman In The Window, and Laura (all 1944) follow ordinary citizens who get caught on a web of desire, adultery, and murder.
Film Noir Provided a Contrast to Previous Films in Hollywood
In contrast to the usual optimism of Hollywood, these new crime films seemed uncharacteristically bleak and fatalistic. French critics, before anyone else, picked up on this rupture from the norm. These new characters were morally ambiguous, even cruel. They were corruptible men and fatal women spinning towards darker fates. The hopeless, unflinchingly pessimistic worldview of these films seemed almost to indicate an inevitable exhaustion of the American dream. The cinematography, reflecting the somber mood of the films, utilized unbalanced composition, low-key lighting, and stark shadows, in a rare experimental style.
The directors and filmmakers of the time didn’t know they were making Film Noir; they were simply making crime mysteries, psychological thrillers, and violent melodramas. In the dark shadows of this creative period, one can notice a shared sensibility that is morbid, fresh, and intriguing.
The Noir Background: War-Time Cinema
Film Noir was a product of the turbulent early era of the 20th century and an heir to many art movements of the 1920s and 1930s. Born in the 1940s, during the height and aftermath of the Second World War, Film Noir carried the cruelty and disquietude of the conflict, as well as the inherited traumas of the First World War and the Great Depression.
In just two decades, people experienced disillusion with the promises of the American Dream, rapid social changes, the weight of two violent conflicts on the scale of the World Wars, the neuroses of the Cold War witch hunts, and the fear of nuclear war. All of it hangs heavily in Film Noir, even if mostly the psychological aftershocks are shown.
Depression Inheritances of Film Noir
The hardboiled school of crime fiction seems closest to Film Noir. Popular during the 1930s, at the height of the Great Depression, these stories were usually printed in pulp magazines. They criticized the system, explored mounting crime, and looked closely at the social underbelly of American cities. They had an immense influence on the noir tone and environment.
Authors like Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and James M. Cain had many of their works adapted to the screen into Film Noir: Double Indemnity, The Big Sleep, The Postman Always Rings Twice, and The Maltese Falcon, to name a few.
In cinema, Film Noir was something of a successor to the gangster flicks of the 1930s. As popular during the prohibition as the real-life news stories they were based on, these films were, though violent, exhilarating, and upbeat. On the other hand, Film Noir is concerned with private stories, psychological disturbances, and criminals that do not seem heroic at any point.
European Connections: A Cross-Cultural Meeting Point
Noir represents a fascinating meeting point of American and European styles and sensibilities. Many of Film Noir’s most prolific filmmakers were European expats, fleeing nazism and the war. Talents like Fritz Lang, Jules Dassin, Billy Wilder, Otto Preminger, Robert Siodmak, Jacques Tourneur, and many others brought with them different visions of cinema from their experiences with the European cinema d’art movements.
The urban fatalism of Film Noir finds a precursor in the short-lived French Poetic Realist cinema of the late 1930s. Though altogether more romantic and nostalgic than Film Noir, Poetic Realism explores the themes of disillusionment, crime, and sordid characters. The beauty and dangers of the city streets and the poetic aestheticization of reality are reflected in Film Noir. There were even a few remakes of Poetic Realist films.
German Expressionism & Film Noir
There is, however, no cinematic movement as blatantly influential on Film Noir as German Expressionism. A product of the exuberant Weimar cinema of the 1920s, German Expressionism was the first cinema of shadows. In turbulent post-war Germany, it sought to explore violent sensibilities and dark narratives in a highly psychological and stylized cinema.
German Expressionism influenced not only Film Noir but the thriller genre as a whole, including the horror and gangster movies of the 1930s. From German Expressionism, Film Noir inherited the chiaroscuro techniques, nightmarish affection, oblique angles, and spaces cut and splintered by oppressive, unrealistic shadows.
The Noir Narrative
Film noir leads, to borrow Paul Schrader’s definition, can be grouped into three families: the investigators—detectives, private eyes, or journalists—whose stories often have a more measured rhythm due to their outsider perspective; the citizens turned criminals, either framed or corrupted, whose lives spiral into freefall; and the psychopaths, unhinged characters driven to the edge of their sanity.
The Femme Fatale Archetype
Across most of these films, we find the archetype of the femme fatale, the fatal woman. These women were shown as duplicitous, seductive, resourceful, and ruthless; those who tempt men into destruction. The archetype of the femme fatale is, however, contradictory. On one hand, it demonizes women, while on the other it gives them power, importance, and complexity that wasn’t so common for women in 1940s cinema. These characters all have a sense of mystery to them. They are disturbed, morally ambiguous, and hard to understand. In this sense, the archetypical noir characters reflect the narrative they are inserted into. Oblique, disordered, and unbalanced, the noir narrative is constructed in deliberately confusing ways.
Film Noir Concerned Itself With the Psychological Dimensions of Crime
Often utilizing framing techniques like flashback and first-person narration, Film Noir shows a sense of impending doom. The characters often seem to know where their story will lead, and it is hardly ever a happy ending. Stories are told out of chronological order, from multiple points of view. The constant twists, betrayals, red herrings, and double and triple crosses aim to constantly disorient the viewer. Film Noir is never as concerned with the reveal of the mystery as it is with the psychological dimensions of crime.
Despite its largely gloomy world, Film Noir has a dynamic and even humorous streak. Visual gags and self-referential humor are less acknowledged but constant features of noir. Humor is also injected through dialogue. Film Noir favors snappy, fast-paced, and witty dialogue, less concerned with sounding realistic than with achieving the right kind of atmosphere.
The Noir Visuals
The world of noir is a dark place, crawling with danger and corruption. The city—noir’s most common backdrop—is empty and alienating. It looks more like an Edward Hopper painting than a real city. Even in the movies that were filmed on location, the urbanscape looks like one from a nightmare, shrouded in darkness. On the streets or in interiors, the environments are designed to be menacing and entrapping, always somewhere just off of reality.
The neurotic noir world is filled with things: space in Film Noir is never free, but rather baroquely decorated. Objects like clocks, stairs, windows, mirrors, paintings, furniture, Venetian blinds, beams, and nets cut the frame. These objects are used as symbols that indicate character traits or the narrative. They could refer to time running out, duplicitousness, fractured spirits, or trapped fates.
Visual Composition in Film Noir
In Film Noir, the visual composition is another device through which the director communicates with the audience. Odd set pieces like the maze-like house of mirrors from The Lady from Shanghai (1947), or the greenhouse in The Big Sleep (1946) populate noir, adding even more visual strangeness to these worlds that seem half real and half nightmarish.
Chiaroscuro has an important place in Noir. Light and shadow borrowed from German expressionism shatter the space in prison-like lines, cut stark silhouettes overtake the frame whenever danger comes to a head. The camera follows the obliqueness of the narrative. Off-center, exaggerated angles throw the world out of balance and maintain the sense of entrapment that pervades every level of Film Noir.
The Impact of Film Noir
Film Noir was one of the most artistically rich, complex, and experimental periods of Hollywood history. Called post-noir, neo-noir, neon noir, teen noir, and a myriad of other names, Film Noir’s sensibilities have proven to be flexible and endlessly influential. Echoes of Film Noir live on. Works like Breathless, L.A. Confidential, Batman, Veronica Mars, and Blade Runner were all influenced by Film Noir and its core meaning. Even 80 years after its golden age, it seems like there is no limit to the dark possibilities of Film Noir.
Originally published: November 7, 2023. Last update: September 8, 2024 by Elizabeth Berry