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  • Film Gris v. Film Noir : Jon Tuska’s Distinction Revisited Lee, Sander H. 2022 Film and Philosophy , Vol. 26 , S. 123 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1073-0427 | 2643-9239 10.5840/filmphil202110158 Abstract

    In this essay, I argue that the distinction between film gris and film noir, introduced by Jon Tuska in his 1984 book Dark Cinema, enhances our appreciation of the philosophical attributes of such films. For Tuska, there are important differences between a film gris and a film noir. While a film gris may have a number of noir attributes (a shadowy noir visual style, a gritty urban setting, cynical characters, etc.) a genuine film noir is not merely a police procedural and must not have a happy ending, I will also argue that a film’s narrative perspective plays a vital role in determining whether its status is that of a film noir. I will make these arguments by examining a wide variety of films including The Maltese Falcon (1941), Out of the Past (1947), He Walks by Night (1948), The Narrow Margin (1952), Double Indemnity (1944), Repeat Performance (1947), and The Wrong Man (1956).

    Schlagwörter

    Applied Philosophy | Contemporary Philosophy | Semiotics

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