NOIR CITY comes to your home

Ingmar Zeisberg and Helmut Wildt in BLACK GRAVEL

Here’s a once-in-a-pandemic film noir experience, the opportunity to see classic film noir that you can’t see anywhere else. The Noir City International at the AFI Silver is available to stream through November 29.

Noir City is the annual festival of the Film Noir Foundation, spearheaded by its founder and president, the Czar of Noir, Eddie Muller. The Foundation preserves movies from the traditional noir period that would otherwise be lost. Noir City often plays newly restored films and movies not available on DVD or streaming.

This January, as usual, I attended this year’s festival, sharing the program with a thousand other film fans in a vintage movie palace, San Francisco’s Castro Theatre. In normal years, Eddie Muller then takes the program on the road, but the pandemic eliminated the satellite Noir City mini-fests in other cities. Good news – this year’s festival program is streaming through the AFI Silver so everyone can watch it at home.

This year’s program is Noir City International 2 – l focusing on international film noir, as it did so successfully six years ago. Then I was enthralled by the Argentine Bitter Stems and the Swedish Girl with Hyacinths, and must admit that I had never even imagined that vintage film noir from those nations existed. This year’s fest brings us titles from Argentina, France, Germany, Korea, Japan, Czechoslovakia, Italy, and Poland.

One of best things about Noir City is the opportunity to see films that are not available to stream. This year Noir CIty is outdoing itself by presenting SIX films that can’t found on a streaming platform, most of them impossible to see outside of Noir City in any format.

  • Black Gravel (West Germany 1961)
  • The Black Vampire (Argentina 1953)
  • …And the Fifth Horseman Is Fear (Czechoslovakia 1965)
  • The Devil Strikes at Night (West Germany 1957)
  • Panique (France 1947)
  • Razzia (France 1955)

Pale Flower, Ashes and Diamonds and Any Number Can Win are only available to stream periodically on the Criterion Channel.

“Difficult to find” doesn’t mean “obscure”. The program includes films directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, Jean-Pierre Melville and Roebert Siodmak and starring Ingrid Bergman, Jean Gabin, Alain Delon and Jean-Paul Belmondo.

PALE FLOWER

My personal favorites on the program:

  • Pale Flower: Writer-director Masahiro Shinoda’s masterpiece is a slow burn that erupts into breathtaking set pieces. This is pioneering neo-noir; its look and feel is as different from classic noir as are Elevator to the Gallows and Blast of Silence.
  • Black Gravel: This tragic romance is set in post-war Germany, a Petri dish for hustlers. Rarely has a movie plot swung as rapidly between They’re gonna get caught – No, they’re gonna get away with it – No, They’re gonna get caught – No, they’re gonna get away with it – No, They’re gonna get caught – No, they’re gonna get away with it – No, They’re gonna get caught.
  • Ashes and Diamonds: Auteur Andrzej Wajda‘s filmmaking gifts are on display in this Hit Man Finds Love tale, set as the Polish Resistance battles for a place in post-war Poland. As kinetic and unpredictable as James Dean, Zbigniew Cybulski makes for an irresistibly charismatic leading man.
  • The Black Vampire: In this often trippy 1953 remake of Fritz Lang’s M, Nathán Pinzón is AT LEAST AS GOOD as was Peter Lorre in the original.

The offerings also include Leave Her to Heaven with Gene Tierney as the most disturbing female villain in film noir and Detour with Ann Savage as the grungiest and most predatory. The Korean The Housemaid is so bizarre as to defy description. And the coolest middle-aged guy in cinema, Jean Gabin, stars in Razzia and Any Number Can Win.

DO NOT MISS this rare opportunity. Individual screenings are $12 and the Festival Pass is $125. Explore the program and get your pass or tickets.

Zbigniew Cybulski in ASHES AND DIAMONDS

Movies to See Right Now (at home)

Gemma Arterton and Lucas Bond in SUMMERLAND

This week: three new documentaries, a wonderful essay and the most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE. Plus, a rarely seen film noir is coming up on TCM.

First, I am reminding you about a MUST READ. That most literary of critics, the Bay Area’s own Richard von Busack, writes on the Golden Age and the COVID Era resurgence of drive-in movie theaters in SF Weekly: At the Drive-In: A Remembrance.

ON VIDEO

Summerland: Gemma Arterton and two child actors shine in the contrived melodrama Summerland, which finally arrives at its heartwarming conclusion. Available from most streaming services.

The Go-Go’s: The Go-Go’s have been the only all-female band to write their own music and play their own instruments ever to have a number one Billboard record. This is a modest film about a singular moment in popular music. Streaming on Showtime.

The Booksellers: This amiable documentary slips us into the obscure world of antiquarian book collectors and dealers. It’s a passion that few of us share, but, for the few, a passion it is indeed. Streaming from Amazon, Apple TV, YouTube and Google Play.

A Song for You: The Austin City Limits Story: This doc traces the history of TV’s longest-running music performance show. There’s a very heavy dose of the main producer, Terry Lickona, and the doc dives short shrift to the show’s greatest contribution – introducing mainstream American audiences to artists like Joe Ely, Marcia Ball, Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. There are behind-the-stage anecdotes about Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton and Merle Haggard. It streams on Amazon (included with Prime).

Campbell Scott in THE 11TH GREEN

The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:

ON TV

Diana Dors and Victor Mature in THE LONG HAUL

On August 21, Turner Classic Movies airs The Long Haul, one of my Overlooked Noir. In a vehicle for the curvy Diana Dors, a world weary Victor Mature personalizes weariness, disgust, desperation and adherence to a code. The Long Haul isn’t available to stream, so DVR it on TCM this week.

NOIR CITY 2020 is here

PALE FLOWER – in this year’s Noir City

The Noir City film fest, always one of the best Bay Area cinema experiences, opens this weekend in San Francisco. Noir City is the annual festival of the Film Noir Foundation, spearheaded by its founder and president Eddie Muller. The Foundation preserves movies from the traditional noir period that would otherwise be lost. Noir City often plays newly restored films and movies not available on DVD or streaming. And we get to watch them in a vintage movie palace (San Francisco’s Castro Theatre) with a thousand other film fans.

Eddie Muller, whom you should recognize as the host of Turner Classic Movies’ Noir Alley series, has programmed this year’s version as Noir City: International II, with vintage film noir from Argentina, France, Germany, Korea, Japan, Czechoslovakia, Italy, England, West Germany, Sweden and Poland. Noir City’s first intentional foray, six years ago, was one of my favorites, highlighted by the Argentine Bitter Stems and the Swedish Girl with Hyacinths.

The Film Noir Foundation restored the Argentine films The Beast Must Die and The Black Vampire, which open the fest on Friday night. This is your only chance to see these and sixteen other Noir City films, which cannot be streamed.

My personal favorites on the program:

  • Pale Flower: Writer-director Masahiro Shinoda’s masterpiece is a slow burn that erupts into breathtaking set pieces. This is pioneering neo-noir; its look and feel is as different from classic noir as are Elevator to the Gallows and Blast of Silence. I predict that the Thursday night Castro Theatre audience will be THRILLED.
  • Any Number Can Win: In this Perfect Crime flick, Jean Gabin plays a veteran crook who plans One Last Big Job – the heist of a Cannes casino. He trains a raw former cell-mate (Alain Delon) to perform the key role. There’s incredible suspense in the heist, the getaway and the recovery of the loot, with an ending worthy of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
  • The Long Haul: This British noir was a vehicle for the 25-year-old curvy blonde Diana Dors, who could Wear A Dress (and look up her real life!). Victor Mature stars as a GI who stayed in Britain after WW II because his English wife doesn’t want to emigrate; he is stuck in a job as a truck driver and becomes entangled in a hijacking ring. Mature, whose best work was in film noir, was an underrated actor; if acting is reacting, Mature does it all here – his eyes and face reflect his weariness, disgust, desperation and adherence to a code. The snarling villain (Patrick Allen) meets a uniquely fitting fate.
  • Ashes and Diamonds: Auteur Andrzej Wajda ‘s filmmaking gifts are on display in this Hit Man Finds Love tale, set as the Polish Resistance battles for a place in post-war Poland. As kinetic and unpredictable as James Dean, Zbigniew Cybulski makes for an irresistibly charismatic leading man.

Trench coats and fedoras are not required (and no smoking, please), but, other than that, you’ll get the full retro experience in the period-appropriate Castro. Noir City runs from Friday, January 24 through Sunday, February 2. To see the this year’s Noir City program and buy tickets, go here. I’ll be there myself on both weekends.