MikeKardec
One Too Many
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Edward is correct: the exodus of Jewish creatives from Germany to Hollywood when Hitler came to power is one of the major reasons for what we consider the film noir look and its doomed fatalist approach. - people like Freund, Billy Wilder, Fritz Lang, Curt and Robert Siodmak, Franz Waxman, Edgar G. Ulmer, Fred Zinnemann, etc. - who fled the European film industry for Hollywood in the thirties and became major contributors to film noir, horror films, psychological dramas, and other genres that flowered soon after.
And as Lizzie pointed out, the influence of the German Expressionist films of the twenties on all the future comics creators who saw them as kids cannot be overstated. For example, Finger and Kane freely admitted that the appearance of the Joker was based on Conrad Veidt in The Man Who Laughs.
This is very true, I've always thought that the Noir look was an echo ... Americans picked it up from European silents, bounced it back across the pond as 1930s gangster films, caught the ball from the post war French and then made the great American Noirs of the late '40s and early '50s. But all art works like that film is just a bit faster in it's hand off because of the numbers of people involved in each project and the fact that the same people actually refined their product as they moved from one continent to another. Each bounce refined the aesthetic until it became iconic short hand in the 1980s. That's the way good storytelling works and why children's stories have some of the most refined structure and thematic elements in literature; they have been told rather than written and, because the storyteller wants to please his or her audience, the tale is improved as it's passed along.
In earlier posts, Lizzie explained that Technicolor basically had a monopoly on color film in the '40s and into the '50s and that the company opposed "desaturation" as it wanted its color to be super bright, "to pop" (in truth, over stylized). Okay, I just watched "Meet Me in St. Louis" (I have no idea why) and there is no way film noir was taking off with that kind of color.
It's very hard to look dark and brooding / for life to look angry and oppressive when everything looks like it was colored in from a box of Crayola crayons. No doubt, there have been some outstanding noir films done in color and more will be, but could noir have been fully birthed and flourished in '40s Technicolor - I doubt it.
Technically, Technicolor could have lent itself wonderfully to dark and moody and possibly very saturated color. It offered a level of control in the color timing that was hard to achieve prior to the digital processes. That's not the "Technicolor Look" but to do Noir in color I personally wouldn't desaturate -- that's just pretending to be black and white-ish -- I'd ramp up the garish color and use the process to buy myself a lot of shadow detail while still letting things be dark.
At the time, however, color was disliked by many directors and cameramen because it was a giant pain in the ass. Different types of film stock and filters had to be used depending on indoor or outdoor lighting (what we now call white balance), make up issues, colors in costumes had to be complimentary, in night or dark shots unwanted things could be hidden under black drapes, shadows easily could be painted into sets (though I saw this still being done in color on the sets to One From The Heart in the '80s), weather and cloud cover had trouble matching and post was also more expensive and complicated. Color slowed production down dramatically. Of course there were plenty who, just like sound, thought it was simply going to be a fad or gimmick.
Here's a one.... Rebel Without a Cause has a noir feel for me. No detectives, but it has that darkness, the anti-hero, the meaningless death, the slightly risque (for the times) element (implied homosexuality).... and yet not only is it in colour, but the biggest visual impact in it is that very red of Jim Stark's jacket....
I completely agree. If one can accept many of James M Cain's novels as Noir then RWAC fits the bill. color or not.