Another Noir Year Begins

Posted on the 06 February 2018 by Lady Eve @TheLaydeeEve

San Francisco's Noir City is the first of several film noir festivals scheduled around the U.S. for 2018


The Film Noir Foundation's 16th annual Noir City festival in San Francisco ran from January 26 through February 4, kicking off a series of nationwide noir festivals, as it traditionally does, for the year.

Inside the Castro Theater, San Francisco

I planned to attend two nights but, because the final Saturday night sold out, was only able to get in one night of deepest, darkest noir so far this year. Wednesday night, January 31, opened with Michael Curtiz's The Unsuspected (1947), introduced by Alan K. Rode, author of the new bio, Michael Curtiz: A Life in Film. The Oscar-winning Curtiz, director of scores of classics, launched the career of Errol Flynn in the '30s with films like Captain Blood (1935) and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938). He won a supremely-deserved Academy Award for Casablanca (1942) and was nominated for Yankee Doodle Dandy in the same year. Oddly, though it brought Oscars to others and was even nominated for best picture, Curtiz's noir masterpiece, Mildred Pierce (1945), did not bring a nod to its director.

Nor City San Francisco, January 31, 2018

The Unsuspected is not in the same league as Mildred PierceWith a sly and villainous radio star (Claude Rains) at its center, the film echoes a bit loudly of Otto Preminger's Laura (1944), but is not in the same league as that film either. According to Rode, Curtiz had hoped to cast Dana Andrews as the leading man opposite Joan Caulfield, and had wanted Ava Gardner in the supporting role of Rains' wayward niece. Gardner's intended part eventually went to Audrey Totter, who all but steals the picture (but who can steal a picture from Claude Rains?), and the leading man role went to a Curtiz discovery, Michael North (also known as Ted North), whose film career ended with The Unsuspected. Constance Bennett, as Rains' Eve Arden-ish assistant,  sashays and cracks wise marvelously throughout. The plot is convoluted, there are few characters too many, and the run-time is overlong, but it's a film worth seeing, mostly for Rains, Totter and Bennett, as well as the cinematography and production design.

Upcoming Noir City fests are slated for Seattle, Feb. 16 - 22; Denver, March 23 - 25; Hollywood, April 13 - 22; Austin, TX, May 18 - 20; Boston, June 8 -10; Chicago, Aug. 17 - 23; Detroit, September dates TBD; Washington, D.C., October dates TBD.


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Back in San Francisco, from March 23 - 26, another noir-leaning series is in the works. The Dark Side of the Dream will feature classic Hollywood films that expose the dark side of the American dream. Veteran programmer Elliot Lavine will co-produce the 12-film event with Don Malcolm's Midcentury Productions at the city's Roxie Theater. Films featured will include Robert Rossen's Body and Soul (1947), John Huston's We Were Strangers (1949) and Elia Kazan's A Face in the Crowd (1957). Films by William Wellman, Frank Capra, Joseph Losey and Sam Fuller will also be screened. More coverage on this series of "subversive cinema for...for subversive times" will be posted here soon.


~But wait, there's more! Also coming up in California, but to the south and east (and dry) is the annual Arthur Lyons Film Noir Festival in Palm Springs. This year the event will run from May 10 - 13 at that city's Camelot Theatres. Tickets go on sale April 1 and more information will be available soon. Click here to go to the festival website.