Here is a summary of his presentation to us.
A SHORT GUIDE
TO HARD-BOILED DETECTIVES
I. General Characteristics
1. Code of Honor: "When a man's partner is killed, he has to do something about it."
2. Urban: City as Decadent Frontier
3. Former soldier and/or police officer
4. No Family (generally)
5. Plain Office
6. Plain Car
7. Plain Apartment
8. Sometimes has a Secretary (secretly in love)
9. Good Cop/Bad Cop Relations
10. Physically Tough
11. Cynical/Sardonic/Ironic
12. Sharp Verbal Patter
13. Investigation More Important Than Solution
II.
Sources
1) The American Western
hero becomes
urbanized. Action moves
from the open range to city streets.
2) Edgar Allen
Poe (1800-1849)- Auguste Dupin eccentric French crimes-solver; see:
"Murders in the Rue Morgue"; "The Purloined Letter"; "The Mystery of Marie Roget."
Arthur Conan Doyle
(1859-1930) -Sherlock Holmes eccentric English
crime-solver
(and Dr. Watson).
III. Hard-Boiled Detective vs. Armchair Detective
Urban Setting..................................Rural or Suburban Setting
Limited Number of Suspects...............Indefinite Number of Suspects
Detective "investigates" a situation.•••.••
Detective "solves" a crime
Detective "may" have colleagues.......... Detective has an assistant
Detective basically "mobile"•....•..•..•.••Detective
basically "static"
Detective/police are antagonists...........Detective/police co-operate
Police often corrupt..........................Police
usually honest
Much violent action..................•....••.Little
violent action until climax
Organized crime common..................Organized crime rare
Sexual situations..............................No sexual situations
Usually 1st person narration...............Usually 3rd person
narration
Hard-Boiled Detectives: A Partial Bibliography
"The myths of the detective novel satisfy the secret nostalgia
of modern man, who, knowing himself to be fallen
and limited, dreams one day of becoming an exceptional character, a hero."- Mircea Eliade
"But you have there the myth of the essential white American. All the
other stuff, the love, the
democracy, the floundering into lust, is a sort of by-play. The essential American
soul is hard, isolate,
stoic, and a killer. It has never melted.- D.H. Lawrence
If you wish to start (or continue) to read hard-boiled
detective novels,
here is a partial list of names to pursue.
First, the obvious choices: Dashiell
Hammett; Raymond Chandler; Ross Macdonald;
Lawrence Block (Matt Scudder); Sara Paretsky
(V.I. Warshawsky); Sue Grafton (Kinsey Milhone); Walter Mosley (Easy Rawlins); and Dennis Lehane (Patrick Kenzie & Angie Gennaro).
Second, other important writers in alphabetical order:
Linda Barnes (Carlotta Carlyle)
James Lee Burke (Dave Robicheaux)
Robert Crais (Elvis Cole)
James Crumley (C.A. Sughrue/Milo Milodragovich)
Lindsay Davis (Marcius Didius Falco [set in the Roman Empire @70 C.E.])
Stephen Dobyns (Charlie Bradshaw)
Loren D. Estleman (Amos Walker)
Janet Evanovich (Stephanie Plum)
Stephen Greenleaf (John Marshall Tanner)
Joseph Hansen (Dave Brandstetter)
Stuart Kiminsky (Toby Peters)
Laura Lippman (Tess Monaghan)
John D, MacDonald (Travis McGee)
Marcia Muller (Sharon McCone)
Robert B. Parker (Spencer)
Bill Pronzini (Nameless)
S.J. Rozan (Lydia Chin)
Mickey Spillane (Mike Hammer)
Andrew Vachss (Burke)
Jonathan Valin (Harry Stoner)
Linda Barnes (Carlotta Carlyle)
James Lee Burke (Dave Robicheaux)
Robert Crais (Elvis Cole)
James Crumley (C.A. Sughrue/Milo Milodragovich)
Lindsay Davis (Marcius Didius Falco [set in the Roman Empire @70 C.E.])
Stephen Dobyns (Charlie Bradshaw)
Loren D. Estleman (Amos Walker)
Janet Evanovich (Stephanie Plum)
Stephen Greenleaf (John Marshall Tanner)
Joseph Hansen (Dave Brandstetter)
Stuart Kiminsky (Toby Peters)
Laura Lippman (Tess Monaghan)
John D, MacDonald (Travis McGee)
Marcia Muller (Sharon McCone)
Robert B. Parker (Spencer)
Bill Pronzini (Nameless)
S.J. Rozan (Lydia Chin)
Mickey Spillane (Mike Hammer)
Andrew Vachss (Burke)
Jonathan Valin (Harry Stoner)
FILMNOIR
FilmNoir (French for "black film" or "dark film") was first applied to Hollywood films
by the French critic Nino Frank in 1946. The term was not applied by American filmmakers, at the time, to anything being made in Hollywood. Before the term was adopted by American film historians, mm critics, and filmmakers, most of the mms now considered
noir were labelled
"melodramas."
Hollywood's "classic" noir period
is generally considered extending from the 1940s to the late 1950s. Many of the stories and attitudes in these mms derive from the bard-boiled detective fiction and the hard-boiled
crime fiction (they are not the same thing)
of the 1930s and
1940s. The decline
of film noir in America in the late 1950s did not see the end of these films. Filmmakers all around the world began to make noir mms of
their own and continue to
do so until the present
day.
In America,
film noir had an influential revival in the 1970s, many of them reflecting the political, social,
cultural, sexual, etc., etc. turbulence of the 1960s and 1970s. Oddly,
even today,fi/m noir is hard to define and the debates continue to rage as to what exactly defines noir. The film historian Mark Bould has written
that noir remains "an elusive
phenomenon....always out of reach."
Or, simply, as r.Im analyst
Eddie Muller put it:
"If a private eye is hired by an old geezer to prove his wife's
cheating on him and the shamus discovers
long-buried family
secrets and solves
a couple of murders before returning to his lonely office-
that's [hard-boiled] detective fiction.
"If the same private eye gets seduced by the geezer’s wife, kills the old coot for her, gets
double-crossed by his lover and ends up shot to death
by his old partner from the police force- I can say with complete
assurance: you are wallowing in NOIR."
The Best of Classic Film Noir (selected by the staff of FACETS VIDEO in Chicago)
The Asphalt
Jungle (1950)
The Big Clock (1952)
The Big Heat (1953)
The Big Sleep (1946)
The Blue Dahlia 1945)
Cape Fear (1962)
Caught (1949)
Cornered (1945)
The City That Never Sleeps (1953)
Clash by Night (1952)
Conflict (1945)
Criss Cross (1949)
Crossfire (1947) D.O.A. (1949) Dead End (1937)
Dead Lucky (1960)
Detour (1946)
Double Indemnity (1944)
Force of Evil (1949)
Gilda (1946)
Gun Crazy (1950)
He Walked by Night (1948)
High Sie"a (1941)
Hitchhiker (1953)
In a Lonely
Place (1950)
Killer's Kiss
(1955)
The Killers (1964)
The Killing (1956)
Addendum
"Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."
Kiss Me, Deadly (1955)
Kiss of Death (1947)
The Lady from Shanghai
(1948)
Laura (1944)
Leave Her to Heaven (1945)
The Maltese
Falcon (1941)
Moonrise (1948)
Murder, My Sweet (1944)
The Naked City (1948)
Niagara (1953)
Odds Against Tomorrow (1959)
On Dangerous Ground
(1951)
Out of the Past (1947)
Pick Up on South Street (1953)
The Postman
Always Rings Twice
(1946)
Raw Deal (1948)
Road House (1948)
Scarlet Street (1945)
The Set Up (1949)
Strangers on a Train (1951)
Sudden Fear (1952)
Sunset Boulevard (1950)
Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
T-Men (1947)
Touch of Evil (1958)
Try and Get Me (1950) Underworld U.S.A. (1961)
White Heat (1949)
If you haven't seen it (and even if you have long ago) one of the greatest American
films - and certainly one of the greatest noirs and, as such, possibly
the most pessimistic film ever made
by a Hollywood studio- is Chinatown (1974), a diabolically clever
film that is
actually a film noir pretending to
be a hard-boiled detective film.
FYI
Dickos, Andrew: Street with No Name: A History of Classic
American Film Noir
Kaplan, E. Ann: Women in Film Noir
Naremore, James:
More Than Night: FilmNoir in its Contexts
Osteen, Mark: Nightmare Alley: Film Noir and the American Dream
Silver, Alain & Elizabeth Ward: The FilmNoir Encyclopedia
Mode: "Compressed Present in conjunction with a Long Past"
"A Traditional man of virtue in an immoral
and corrupt world. His toughness and cynicism form a protective coloration protecting the essence of his character which is honorable and noble. Honor and integrity
mean
more than fame and fortune."
"But down these mean streets
a man must go who is not himself
mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid. The detective
in this kind of story must be such a man.
He is the hero, he is everything. He must be a complete man and a common man and yet an unusual
man. He must be, to use a rather weathered phrase, a man of honor, by instinct, by inevitability, without thought of
it, and certainly without saying it. He must be the best man in his world and a good enough
man for any world. I do not care much about his private life; he is neither a eunuch nor a satyr. I think he might seduce a duchess
and I am quite sure he would not spoil a virgin;
if
he is a man of honor in one thing, he is that in all things. He is a relatively poor man, or he would not be a detective
at all. He is a common man or he could not go among common people.
He has a sense of character, or be would not know his job. He will take no man's money dishonestly and no man's insolence without
a due and dispassionate revenge. He is a lonely man and his pride is that
you will treat him as a proud man
or be very sorry you ever saw him. He talks as
a man of his age talks, that is with rude wit, a lively sense of the grotesque, a disgust for sham, and a contempt
for pettiness. The story is his adventure in search of truth, and it would be no adventure if it did not happen to a man fir for adventure. He has a range of awareness
that startles
you, but it belongs to him by right,
because it belongs to the world he lives in."
Raymond Chandler: The Simple
Art of Murder
"I would have stayed
in the town where I was born and worked
in the hardware store and married the
boss's daughter and had five kids and read them the funny paper on Sunday morning and smacked
their heads when they got out of line and squabbled with the wife about
how much spending money they were to get and what programs they could have on the radio or TV set. I might even have got rich- small town rich, an eight-room house, two cars
in the garage, chicken every Sunday
and the Reader's
Digest on the living room table, the
wife with a cast-iron
permanent and me with a brain like a sack of Portland cement. You take it, friend. I’ll
take the big sordid dirty crowded city."
Raymond Chandler: The Long Goodbye
"But….a fellow of Marlowe's type shouldn't get married because he is a lonely man, a poor man,
a dangerous man, yet a sympathetic man, and somehow none of this goes with marriage. I think
he will always have a fairly shabby office, a lonely house, a number of affairs but no permanent connection. I think he will always be awakened at some inconvenient hour by some inconvenient person to do some inconvenient job. It seems to me that that is his destiny- possibly not the best destiny in the world, but it belongs
to him. No one will ever make him rich, because he is destined
to be poor. But somehow,
I think
he would not have it otherwise, and therefore I feel [the] idea be should be married, even to a very nice girl, is quite out of character. I see him always in a lonely street, in lonely rooms, puzzled but never quite
defeated.•."
Raymond Chandler: Letter of
February 21, 1959(Chandler died on March 26, 1959)