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FLM 170 — Film Noir: The Primacy of the Visual, 1940–49

Quarter: Summer
Instructor(s): Elliot Lavine
Duration: 10 weeks
Location: Online
Date(s): Jun 24—Aug 26
Class Recording Available: Yes
Class Meeting Day: Wednesdays
 
Class Meeting Time: 7:00—8:50 pm (PT)
Tuition: $500
   
Refund Deadline: Jun 26
 
Unit(s): 2
   
Status: Registration opens May 18, 8:30 am (PT)
 
Quarter: Summer
Day: Wednesdays
Duration: 10 weeks
Time: 7:00—8:50 pm (PT)
Date(s): Jun 24—Aug 26
Unit(s): 2
Location: Online
 
Tuition: $500
 
Refund Deadline: Jun 26
 
Instructor(s): Elliot Lavine
 
Recording Available: Yes
 
Status: Registration opens May 18, 8:30 am (PT)
 
 
Film noir first exploded across American movie screens in 1940. Hollywood studios seized upon this exciting new direction in crime films—a dramatically startling combination of German Expressionist cinema of the '20s and French poetic realism films of the '30s, blended into a modern cocktail of chiaroscuro lighting, psychologically aberrant behavior, and the unmistakable feeling that nothing ever is exactly as it seems.

From the musty shadow factories of Poverty Row to the opulent excesses of big-budget Hollywood studios, film noir in the 1940s captured the fatalistic mood of mid-20th-century America better than anything else being produced at that time.

We will view and discuss more than 20 films from the decade, including works by Orson Welles (The Lady from Shanghai), Nicholas Ray (They Live by Night), Robert Siodmak (Phantom Lady), Jacques Tourneur (Out of the Past), and Edgar G. Ulmer (Detour). Together, these films reveal how noir became one of the most enduring and unsettling expressions of the American imagination.

This course is Part I of a two-part series. Part II, "Film Noir: The Glamour and the Grit, 1950–65," will be offered in the fall. Each course may be taken independently as well. All films are available through major streaming platforms; the instructor will provide free viewing links when available.

ELLIOT LAVINE
Film Historian and Filmmaker

Elliot Lavine has been an active participant in both film production and film exhibition since the late 1970s. In the early 1980s, he directed a pair of short films in the film noir tradition and has been cited as among the nation’s leading film programmers, beginning his career at the Roxie Theater in San Francisco in 1990. In 2010, he received the Marlon Riggs Award from the San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle for his revival of rare archival titles and his role in the renewed popularity of film noir.