FILM NOIR–MY TOP 10 (POST-1970)

Okay, film noir lovers. Thanks to a groundswell of demand from all of you out there, I’ve compiled a list of my favorite films noir since 1970. As I’m sure you all know, I’ve done a list of pre-1970 noirs which included such classics as Out Of The Past, Night And The City, and Raw Deal. Now we lurch forward into the more recent past, looking for those films that helped redefine the genre.

Again, they’re in no particular order. He-e-e-e-ere we go.

 

THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE (1973) / Robert Mitchum, Peter Boyle. Director: Peter Yates. This powerful tale of a small-time street guy (Mitchum) facing a prison sentence is the flip side of The Godfather. Shot entirely in the Boston area in the most nondescript locations, totally deglamorizing the criminal life. Dreary autumn scenery adds to the proceedings rather than subtracting from them. Characters kiss their wives goodbye in the morning and then go to “work”, in other words, they hang around grimy coffee shops and bars and parking lots talking endlessly to each other. Based on a novel by George V Higgins, whose ear for dialogue has never been matched (not even by Higgins himself in subsequent books). Director Yates wisely lifted most of the novel’s dialogue verbatim. Without question, this was Mitchum’s finest hour. His muscular performance of a working-stiff street criminal stays with you forever. One of the greatest noirs of all time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BODY HEAT (1981) / William Hurt, Kathleen Turner, Richard Crenna. Director: Lawrence Kasdan. Kasdan’s remake of Double Indemnity hits the bullseye. Hurt is a lawyer who’s going nowhere, and Kathleen is…well, let’s just say the movie was aptly titled. She corrals Hurt into killing husband Crenna in a steamy south Florida town. Amid rustling wind chimes, Hurt throws a chair through a window to get at her in one of the most erotic scenes ever put on film.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEXY BEAST (2000) / Ray Winstone, Ben Kingsley, Ian McShane. Director: Jonathan Glazer. Winstone is a world-class safecracker living the quiet life of retirement in Spain. He lays out in the sun, sips cool drinks with his friends, and loves up his woman. One day, however, Kingsley shows up on behalf of British crime boss McShane, trying to lure Winstone into one more job. Kingsley’s character is a violent sociopath, and his menacing presence throws everything off-kilter. Glazer’s debut feature is a knockout, as he extracts top performances from these three great actors. Winstone is properly nervous throughout, and after watching Kingsley swagger around in his short-sleeved shirts, it’s hard to believe he once played Gandhi!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ACROSS 110th STREET (1972) / Anthony Quinn, Yaphet Kotto, Anthony Franciosa. Director: Barry Shear. Three men rob a numbers bank in Harlem and it’s only a question of who gets to them first, the cops or the mob. Not the cops and robbers movie it appears to be, rather a compelling, noir-drenched tale of desperate men, each driven by different forces. Quinn is the aging tough-guy cop who has outlived his time, Franciosa the Mafia enforcer called upon to retrieve the money and teach the robbers a real lesson. The stickup men just wanted a little money to better their own lives. Film looks like it started off in producer meetings as blaxploitation, but with the addition of Quinn and Franciosa, quickly superseded that genre. Shear shows a real feel for the material. Title song by Bobby Womack is memorable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE GRIFTERS (1990) / John Cusack, Angelica Huston, Annette Bening, Pat Hingle. Director: Stephen Frears. One of the best of the post-1970 noirs. Riveting tale of small-time swindlers and their tangled relationships. Cusack is satisfied with making a few bucks a day on short cons until he meets up with sexy Bening, who has big things cooking. Complicating matters is Cusack’s mother, played with relish by Huston. She works for racketeer Hingle and struts around like she means business, inserting herself between Cusack and Bening at every opportunity. Penetrating look at the underbelly world of the con artist. Donald E Westlake’s script follows Jim Thompson’s 1963 novel virtually scene for scene. Harrowing finale comes out of nowhere.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CITY OF INDUSTRY (1997) / Harvey Keitel, Stephen Dorff, Timothy Hutton. Director: John Irvin. Retired thief Keitel returns for one last score with his brother (Hutton) and getaway driver Dorff. Things go very wrong, and Keitel heads for LA looking for those responsible. Director Irvin provides plenty of sweaty scenes in this hard noir tale. His sense of pacing keeps things moving and lets the viewer know that no matter what happens, no good is going to come from any of it. One of Famke Janssen’s early films. Elliot Gould appears unbilled.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AFTER DARK, MY SWEET (1990) / Jason Patric, Bruce Dern, Rachel Ward. Director: James Foley. Patric escapes from a mental hospital and falls in with Ward. Enter Dern, who urges them to pull a high-profile kidnapping job. Classic noir tale of a guy who’s in way over his head. Set in a California desert town, where no one knows anyone and no one cares. Moody, dark film, even though much of it was shot in blinding sunlight. Patric and Ward are perfect for each other. Dern is remarkably restrained. Based on the 1955 novel by Jim Thompson.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE LAST SEDUCTION (1994) / Linda Fiorentino, Peter Berg, Bill Pullman. Director: John Dahl. Fiorentino rips off her drug dealer husband Pullman to the tune of $700,000 and all hell breaks loose. She flees to a Buffalo suburb, of all places, and attempts to melt into society unnoticed. Pullman, however, is in hot pursuit. She eventually hooks up with Berg, and supposedly becomes involved in a murder plot. Plenty of twists in this one as the walls begin to close in on Fiorentino. Sharp direction and grade A performances make this an outstanding 1990s film noir.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THIEF (1981) / James Caan, Tuesday Weld, James Belushi, Robert Prosky. Director: Michael Mann. Early Mann effort centers around Caan as longtime jewel thief who wants to start a family with Weld. Unfortunately, however, he eventually falls in with Prosky, who forces him into a big job with big promises of milk and honey on the other side. Needless to say, things don’t go exactly as planned. Everything about this film is noir to the max. Story probes deeply into the mindset of a professional thief, with great attention to detail and the tools of the trade. Outstanding score by Tangerine Dream. Film marks the debut of Belushi, Prosky, Dennis Farina, and William Petersen. Caan carries the film in fine fashion.

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE OF GAMES (1987) / Lindsay Crouse, Joe Mantegna, JT Walsh. Director: David Mamet. Psychologist specializing in addictive personalities gets drawn into the personal problems of one of her patients, a compulsive gambler. What follows is a nightmare trek into the demimonde of the grifter. Mamet’s directorial debut. He also wrote the screenplay, but the cast brings his difficult, unorthodox dialogue to life. Performances are top-notch, with Mantegna a standout. Look for William H Macy in a small role.

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10 Responses to FILM NOIR–MY TOP 10 (POST-1970)

  1. Everyone a gem. Nice to see City Of Industry in there.

  2. Great list. I’m all in on EDDIE COYLE, BODY HEAT, SEXY BEAST, THE GRIFTERS, and THIEF. Four more were either on my NetFlix queue, or will be as soon as I’m done here.

    My only quibble is with HOUSE OF GAMES. I’d heard so much good about it for so long, The Beloved Spouse and I watched it about six months ago. She left halfway through, but my OCD made me get through to the end. I hate my OCD. There were things to like, and Mantegna was excellent, but the last couple of twists strained credulity. It’s been a long time since a movie disappointed me as much as this one.

    Now, off to NetFlix to add Across 110th Street and After Dark, My Sweet.

  3. Great list.

    Don’t forget Bound!

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0115736/

  4. Patti Abbott

    Great list although I have never seen CITY OF INDUSTRY.

  5. Mike Dennis

    Jack–I haven’t seen BOUND.

    Patti–You have to check out CITY OF INDUSTRY. It’s a gem! Also check out my previous post of pre-1970 noirs. See what you think.

  6. Thanks for the list. Really liked The Grifters and Boday Heat. How about Blue Velvet with Dennis Hopper and Isabella Rosalinni?

  7. You went through a lot of trouble to write these great reviews of your favorite Noir movies. I have never seen, Sexy Beast. I would love to watch Harvey Kietel’s “City Industry” and any Anthony Quinn movie!.

  8. Sheila

    What about L.A. Confidential?

  9. John Blenkinsopp

    Could I also suggest BOUND? Bound is a 1996 American neo-noir crime thriller film written and directed by The Wachowski Brothers.

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