Historical Dictionary of Film Noir

Author:   Andrew Spicer
Publisher:   Scarecrow Press
Volume:   38
ISBN:  

9780810859609


Pages:   532
Publication Date:   19 March 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Historical Dictionary of Film Noir


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Author:   Andrew Spicer
Publisher:   Scarecrow Press
Imprint:   Scarecrow Press
Volume:   38
Dimensions:   Width: 14.90cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.880kg
ISBN:  

9780810859609


ISBN 10:   0810859602
Pages:   532
Publication Date:   19 March 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

This dictionary by Spicer (Univ. of the West of England) is the latest entry in a series that has featured, in the last few years, volumes on German, Italian, Russian, Middle Eastern, and Spanish cinema, among others...In all, Spicer offers more than 400 concise, cross-referenced entries covering noir from the 1940s to the present, including entries for actors (e.g., John Garfield, Veronica Lake), directors (e.g., the Coen Brothers, Otto Preminger), movies (e.g., The Last Seduction, Scarlet Street), and writers (e.g., Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson), along with those for subgenres (e.g., country noir), foreign films (e.g., French film noir), and noir in other media (e.g., comics/graphic novels). Also included are a chronology, a brief introduction, an extensive, up-to-date bibliography, and a filmography. This work will be of value to those new to the study of film noir. Recommended. CHOICE In the raft of available film noir literature, both popular and scholarly, this represents the first subject lexicon. Each of Spicer's (European Film Noir) 400 alphabetized entries succinctly defines noir's landmark movies, key terms, and broader concepts. Running between a paragraph to two pages in length, the entries occasionally serve as subgenre field guides, describing the characteristics of country noir and neonoir. Others explain the complicated influence of ideas or movements, like the impact of European emigres on American production sets. Still, the bulk of the volume is devoted to professional biographies of the writers, producers, directors, composers, and actors who have shaped and continue to affect the genre significantly. While intended primarily as a lexicon, this work's absorbing introduction to film noir's origins offers a rationale for long-standing classification debates. A chronology locates the genetic material for noir in the 1794 gothic romance The Mysteries of Udolpho and traces this lineage through the 1920s into classic noir, neonoir, and contemporary Hollywood productions. Highly practical for researchers is the last quarter of the volume, which is devoted to a 64-page, thematically organized bibliography and a 70-page filmography, organized by nation. BOTTOM LINE A fitting counterpart to Alain Silver's The Film Noir Encyclopedia. Recommended for collections focusing on cultural and film studies. Library Journal Film noir, which occurred mainly in the 1940s and ,50s, and its current manifestation, neo-noir, continue to attract many filmgoers and aficionados. Cinema expert Spicer has written widely about this genre and gathers information into a volume in the publisher,s Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts series. The core of the content consists of American film noir during and after WWII and includes separate entries for seminal examples, such as The Big Sleep, Body Heat, and Double Indemnity. Other parts of the world are covered in entries such as German film noir, Japanese film noir, and Norwegian film noir. Subgenres (African American film noir, Gangster noir) and styles and themes (Visual style, Men) are also discussed. Representative directors and actors have entries. Spicer also discusses noir in other media, such as Comics/graphic novels, Posters, and Radio. Furthermore, he identifies precursors and other cultural phenomena that have influenced film noir, such as Existentialism, Hard-boiled fiction, and specific authors and painters. The A-Z entries vary in length from a half page to four pages (e.g., French noir) and are heavily crossreferenced. The beginning of the volume contains a chronology of film noir benchmarks and influences, from 1794 (publication of Ann Radcliffe,s The Mysteries of Udolpho) to 2009,s Duplicity (Stieg Larsson just missed the cut.) Eight pages of black-and-white photos of representative films and a poster are included in the middle. After the entries are a 60-page bibliography, divided by major topics, and a country-by-country filmography. Containing a wealth of detail about an intriguing film genre, this book belongs in most film collections. Booklist Film noir conjures a certain image-set in the popular imagination. Typically, the term is associated with certain black-and-white medium or low-budget films produced by the Hollywood studios in the 1940s and 1950s. A crime, often gangland, theme is usual, as is the presence of leading, usually male, players with a penchant for conveying toughness and world-weary cynicism, like Humphrey Bogart or, especially, Robert Mitchum. More illustrations would have been a bonus: there are eight pages of black and white photographs and the absence of pictures to accompany the entry on movie posters is particularly noticeable. This would, though, have inevitably escalated the price. As it is, The Historical Dictionary of Film Noir will be an essential purchase for any researcher in this subject, and for all academic libraries serving the needs of students in film studies. Reference Reviews Overall, this is an extremely useful and well-researched reference work. Spicer's knowledge of the complexities o the subject is evident throughout the work. American Reference Books Annual This complete reference covers everything film noir and is very desirable to anyone interested in cinema. Book News, Inc.


This dictionary by Spicer (Univ. of the West of England) is the latest entry in a series that has featured, in the last few years, volumes on German, Italian, Russian, Middle Eastern, and Spanish cinema, among others...In all, Spicer offers more than 400 concise, cross-referenced entries covering noir from the 1940s to the present, including entries for actors (e.g., John Garfield, Veronica Lake), directors (e.g., the Coen Brothers, Otto Preminger), movies (e.g., The Last Seduction, Scarlet Street), and writers (e.g., Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson), along with those for subgenres (e.g., country noir), foreign films (e.g., French film noir), and noir in other media (e.g., comics/graphic novels). Also included are a chronology, a brief introduction, an extensive, up-to-date bibliography, and a filmography. This work will be of value to those new to the study of film noir. Recommended. Choice, October 2010 Film noir, which occurred mainly in the 1940s and ?50s, and its current manifestation, neo-noir, continue to attract many filmgoers and aficionados. Cinema expert Spicer has written widely about this genre and gathers information into a volume in the publisher?s Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts series. The core of the content consists of American film noir during and after WWII and includes separate entries for seminal examples, such as The Big Sleep, Body Heat, and Double Indemnity. Other parts of the world are covered in entries such as German film noir, Japanese film noir, and Norwegian film noir. Subgenres (African American film noir, Gangster noir) and styles and themes (Visual style, Men) are also discussed. Representative directors and actors have entries. Spicer also discusses noir in other media, such as Comics/graphic novels, Posters, and Radio. Furthermore, he identifies precursors and other cultural phenomena that have influenced film noir, such as Existentialism, Hard-boiled fiction, and specific authors and painters. The A?Z entries vary in length from a half page to four pages (e.g., French noir) and are heavily crossreferenced. The beginning of the volume contains a chronology of film noir benchmarks and influences, Booklist In the raft of available film noir literature, both popular and scholarly, this represents the first subject lexicon. Each of Spicer's (European Film Noir) 400 alphabetized entries succinctly defines noir's landmark movies, key terms, and broader concepts. Running between a paragraph to two pages in length, the entries occasionally serve as subgenre field guides, describing the characteristics of country noir and neonoir. Others explain the complicated influence of ideas or movements, like the impact of European emigres on American production sets. Still, the bulk of the volume is devoted to professional biographies of the writers, producers, directors, composers, and actors who have shaped and continue to affect the genre significantly. While intended primarily as a lexicon, this work's absorbing introduction to film noir's origins offers a rationale for long-standing classification debates. A chronology locates the genetic material for noir in the 1794 gothic romance The Mysteries of Udolphoand traces this lineage through the 1920s into classic noir, neonoir, and contemporary Hollywood productions. Highly practical for researchers is the last quarter of the volume, which is devoted to a 64-page, thematically organized bibliography and a 70- Library Journal, June 2010 In the raft of available film noir literature, both popular and scholarly, this represents the first subject lexicon. Each of Spicer's (European Film Noir) 400 alphabetized entries succinctly defines noir's landmark movies, key terms, and broader concepts. Running between a paragraph to two pages in length, the entries occasionally serve as subgenre field guides, describing the characteristics of country noir and neonoir. Others explain the complicated influence of ideas or movements, like the impact of European emigres on American production sets. Still, the bulk of the volume is devoted to professional biographies of the writers, producers, directors, composers, and actors who have shaped and continue to affect the genre significantly. While intended primarily as a lexicon, this work's absorbing introduction to film noir's origins offers a rationale for long-standing classification debates. A chronology locates the genetic material for noir in the 1794 gothic romance The Mysteries of Udolpho and traces this lineage through the 1920s into classic noir, neonoir, and contemporary Hollywood productions. Highly practical for researchers is the last quarter of the volume, which is devoted to a 64-page, thematically organized bibliography and a 70-page filmography, organized by nation. BOTTOM LINE A fitting counterpart to Alain Silver's The Film Noir Encyclopedia. Recommended for collections focusing on cultural and film studies. Library Journal, June 2010 Film noir, which occurred mainly in the 1940s and '50s, and its current manifestation, neo-noir, continue to attract many filmgoers and aficionados. Cinema expert Spicer has written widely about this genre and gathers information into a volume in the publisher's Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts series. The core of the content consists of American film noir during and after WWII and includes separate entries for seminal examples, such as The Big Sleep, Body Heat, and Double Indemnity. Other parts of the world are covered in entries such as German film noir, Japanese film noir, and Norwegian film noir. Subgenres (African American film noir, Gangster noir) and styles and themes (Visual style, Men) are also discussed. Representative directors and actors have entries. Spicer also discusses noir in other media, such as Comics/graphic novels, Posters, and Radio. Furthermore, he identifies precursors and other cultural phenomena that have influenced film noir, such as Existentialism, Hard-boiled fiction, and specific authors and painters. The A--Z entries vary in length from a half page to four pages (e.g., French noir) and are heavily crossreferenced. The beginning of the volume contains a chronology of film noir benchmarks and influences, from 1794 (publication of Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho) to 2009's Duplicity (Stieg Larsson just missed the cut.) Eight pages of black-and-white photos of representative films and a poster are included in the middle. After the entries are a 60-page bibliography, divided by major topics, and a country-by-country filmography. Containing a wealth of detail about an intriguing film genre, this book belongs in most film collections. Booklist Film noir conjures a certain image-set in the popular imagination. Typically, the term is associated with certain black-and-white medium or low-budget films produced by the Hollywood studios in the 1940s and 1950s. A crime, often gangland, theme is usual, as is the presence of leading, usually male, players with a penchant for conveying toughness and world-weary cynicism, like Humphrey Bogart or, especially, Robert Mitchum. More illustrations would have been a bonus: there are eight pages of black and white photographs and the absence of pictures to accompany the entry on movie posters is particularly noticeable. This would, though, have inevitably escalated the price. As it is, The Historical Dictionary of Film Noir will be an essential purchase for any researcher in this subject, and for all academic libraries serving the needs of students in film studies. Emerald Reference Reviews Overall, this is an extremely useful and well-researched reference work. Spicer's knowledge of the complexities o the subject is evident throughout the work. American Reference Books Annual, May-August 2010 This complete reference covers everything film noir and is very desirable to anyone interested in cinema. Book News Inc


This dictionary by Spicer (Univ. of the West of England) is the latest entry in a series that has featured, in the last few years, volumes on German, Italian, Russian, Middle Eastern, and Spanish cinema, among others...In all, Spicer offers more than 400 concise, cross-referenced entries covering noir from the 1940s to the present, including entries for actors (e.g., John Garfield, Veronica Lake), directors (e.g., the Coen Brothers, Otto Preminger), movies (e.g., The Last Seduction, Scarlet Street), and writers (e.g., Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson), along with those for subgenres (e.g., country noir), foreign films (e.g., French film noir), and noir in other media (e.g., comics/graphic novels). Also included are a chronology, a brief introduction, an extensive, up-to-date bibliography, and a filmography. This work will be of value to those new to the study of film noir. Recommended. CHOICE In the raft of available film noir literature, both popular and scholarly, this represents the first subject lexicon. Each of Spicer's (European Film Noir) 400 alphabetized entries succinctly defines noir's landmark movies, key terms, and broader concepts. Running between a paragraph to two pages in length, the entries occasionally serve as subgenre field guides, describing the characteristics of country noir and neonoir. Others explain the complicated influence of ideas or movements, like the impact of European emigres on American production sets. Still, the bulk of the volume is devoted to professional biographies of the writers, producers, directors, composers, and actors who have shaped and continue to affect the genre significantly. While intended primarily as a lexicon, this work's absorbing introduction to film noir's origins offers a rationale for long-standing classification debates. A chronology locates the genetic material for noir in the 1794 gothic romance The Mysteries of Udolpho and traces this lineage through the 1920s into classic noir, neonoir, and contemporary Hollywood productions. Highly practical for researchers is the last quarter of the volume, which is devoted to a 64-page, thematically organized bibliography and a 70-page filmography, organized by nation. BOTTOM LINE A fitting counterpart to Alain Silver's The Film Noir Encyclopedia. Recommended for collections focusing on cultural and film studies. Library Journal Film noir, which occurred mainly in the 1940s and '50s, and its current manifestation, neo-noir, continue to attract many filmgoers and aficionados. Cinema expert Spicer has written widely about this genre and gathers information into a volume in the publisher's Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts series. The core of the content consists of American film noir during and after WWII and includes separate entries for seminal examples, such as The Big Sleep, Body Heat, and Double Indemnity. Other parts of the world are covered in entries such as German film noir, Japanese film noir, and Norwegian film noir. Subgenres (African American film noir, Gangster noir) and styles and themes (Visual style, Men) are also discussed. Representative directors and actors have entries. Spicer also discusses noir in other media, such as Comics/graphic novels, Posters, and Radio. Furthermore, he identifies precursors and other cultural phenomena that have influenced film noir, such as Existentialism, Hard-boiled fiction, and specific authors and painters. The A-Z entries vary in length from a half page to four pages (e.g., French noir) and are heavily crossreferenced. The beginning of the volume contains a chronology of film noir benchmarks and influences, from 1794 (publication of Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho) to 2009's Duplicity (Stieg Larsson just missed the cut.) Eight pages of black-and-white photos of representative films and a poster are included in the middle. After the entries are a 60-page bibliography, divided by major topics, and a country-by-country filmography. Containing a wealth of detail about an intriguing film genre, this book belongs in most film collections. Booklist Film noir conjures a certain image-set in the popular imagination. Typically, the term is associated with certain black-and-white medium or low-budget films produced by the Hollywood studios in the 1940s and 1950s. A crime, often gangland, theme is usual, as is the presence of leading, usually male, players with a penchant for conveying toughness and world-weary cynicism, like Humphrey Bogart or, especially, Robert Mitchum. More illustrations would have been a bonus: there are eight pages of black and white photographs and the absence of pictures to accompany the entry on movie posters is particularly noticeable. This would, though, have inevitably escalated the price. As it is, The Historical Dictionary of Film Noir will be an essential purchase for any researcher in this subject, and for all academic libraries serving the needs of students in film studies. Reference Reviews Overall, this is an extremely useful and well-researched reference work. Spicer's knowledge of the complexities o the subject is evident throughout the work. American Reference Books Annual This complete reference covers everything film noir and is very desirable to anyone interested in cinema. Book News, Inc.


This dictionary by Spicer (Univ. of the West of England) is the latest entry in a series that has featured, in the last few years, volumes on German, Italian, Russian, Middle Eastern, and Spanish cinema, among others...In all, Spicer offers more than 400 concise, cross-referenced entries covering noir from the 1940s to the present, including entries for actors (e.g., John Garfield, Veronica Lake), directors (e.g., the Coen Brothers, Otto Preminger), movies (e.g., The Last Seduction, Scarlet Street), and writers (e.g., Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson), along with those for subgenres (e.g., country noir), foreign films (e.g., French film noir), and noir in other media (e.g., comics/graphic novels). Also included are a chronology, a brief introduction, an extensive, up-to-date bibliography, and a filmography. This work will be of value to those new to the study of film noir. Recommended. Choice In the raft of available film noir literature, both popular and scholarly, this represents the first subject lexicon. Each of Spicer's (European Film Noir) 400 alphabetized entries succinctly defines noir's landmark movies, key terms, and broader concepts. Running between a paragraph to two pages in length, the entries occasionally serve as subgenre field guides, describing the characteristics of country noir and neonoir. Others explain the complicated influence of ideas or movements, like the impact of European emigres on American production sets. Still, the bulk of the volume is devoted to professional biographies of the writers, producers, directors, composers, and actors who have shaped and continue to affect the genre significantly. While intended primarily as a lexicon, this work's absorbing introduction to film noir's origins offers a rationale for long-standing classification debates. A chronology locates the genetic material for noir in the 1794 gothic romance The Mysteries of Udolpho and traces this lineage through the 1920s into classic noir, neonoir, and contemporary Hollywood productions. Highly practical for researchers is the last quarter of the volume, which is devoted to a 64-page, thematically organized bibliography and a 70-page filmography, organized by nation. BOTTOM LINE A fitting counterpart to Alain Silver's The Film Noir Encyclopedia. Recommended for collections focusing on cultural and film studies. Library Journal Film noir, which occurred mainly in the 1940s and '50s, and its current manifestation, neo-noir, continue to attract many filmgoers and aficionados. Cinema expert Spicer has written widely about this genre and gathers information into a volume in the publisher's Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts series. The core of the content consists of American film noir during and after WWII and includes separate entries for seminal examples, such as The Big Sleep, Body Heat, and Double Indemnity. Other parts of the world are covered in entries such as German film noir, Japanese film noir, and Norwegian film noir. Subgenres (African American film noir, Gangster noir) and styles and themes (Visual style, Men) are also discussed. Representative directors and actors have entries. Spicer also discusses noir in other media, such as Comics/graphic novels, Posters, and Radio. Furthermore, he identifies precursors and other cultural phenomena that have influenced film noir, such as Existentialism, Hard-boiled fiction, and specific authors and painters. The A--Z entries vary in length from a half page to four pages (e.g., French noir) and are heavily crossreferenced. The beginning of the volume contains a chronology of film noir benchmarks and influences, from 1794 (publication of Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho) to 2009's Duplicity (Stieg Larsson just missed the cut.) Eight pages of black-and-white photos of representative films and a poster are included in the middle. After the entries are a 60-page bibliography, divided by major topics, and a country-by-country filmography. Containing a wealth of detail about an intriguing film genre, this book belongs in most film collections. Booklist Film noir conjures a certain image-set in the popular imagination. Typically, the term is associated with certain black-and-white medium or low-budget films produced by the Hollywood studios in the 1940s and 1950s. A crime, often gangland, theme is usual, as is the presence of leading, usually male, players with a penchant for conveying toughness and world-weary cynicism, like Humphrey Bogart or, especially, Robert Mitchum. More illustrations would have been a bonus: there are eight pages of black and white photographs and the absence of pictures to accompany the entry on movie posters is particularly noticeable. This would, though, have inevitably escalated the price. As it is, The Historical Dictionary of Film Noir will be an essential purchase for any researcher in this subject, and for all academic libraries serving the needs of students in film studies. Emerald Reference Reviews Overall, this is an extremely useful and well-researched reference work. Spicer's knowledge of the complexities o the subject is evident throughout the work. American Reference Books Annual This complete reference covers everything film noir and is very desirable to anyone interested in cinema. Book News, Inc.


Author Information

Andrew Spicer is reader in Cultural History at the University of the West of England. He has published widely on British Cinema and on Film Noir.

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