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By Don Herron
You can make the argumentwhat the hell, Ill
make it nowthat noir was born in San Francisco. Sure, certain
striking elements of the form may be traced all the way back to
Edgar Allan Poe: the haunted, doomed protagonist; the mysterious
female; dark, shadowy streets; crime and murder; the unreliable
narrator (hey, the nutcase narrator). But noir as we know it pretty
much jumped into the public eye when Dashiell Hammett sat down at
the typewriter in 1928 in his rooms in 891 Post Street and wrote
THE MALTESE FALCON for the pulp magazine BLACK MASK.
World War provided the backdrop for what Hammett was
doing, for the tough attitude. It changed demographics, bringing
more people off the farm and into the mean streets of the cities.
Writing styles got punchier and sharper, reflected in the pulps,
where Hammett and others by 1923 put the modern hard-boiled detective
story underway. But while much noir is hard-boiled, not all hard-boiled
qualifies as noir. You need that elusive combination of just the
right elements and tone, and thats what Hammett finally got
when he created the amoral private eye Sam Spade. The ending of
the novel, which is not the same as the ending of the John Huston
movie, is actually depressing. No question it fulfills the particular
demands of noir, and Hammetts next novel, THE GLASS KEY, is
as bleak a vehicle.
In Hammetts wake came other writers of unquestioned
noir. James M. Cain (who got out of combat in WWI by doing a newsletter
for the Army) wrote THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE in 1934, followed
by DOUBLE INDEMNITY and MILDRED PIERCE. Raymond Chandler (who fought
trench warfare in WWI, sole survivor in his unit of an assault on
a Hun machine gun emplacement) followed his first novel, THE BIG
SLEEP of 1939, with a succession of novels and noir screenplays.
(Hammett didnt fight in WWI, by the way, but in 1918 while
serving in the Ambulance Corps he contracted Spanish Influenza during
the worldwide epidemic, estimated to have killed between 20 to 70
million peoplea little something to darken ones outlook
on life.)
Most fans agree that Fritz Langs M, released
in Germany in 1931, is the first full-fledged noir movie (and what
a boon for cineastes that the great Peter Lorre appears in both
that and the Bogart MALTESE FALCON). Lang was wounded in combat
in the First World War, and as the Second World War loomed, fled
Nazi Germanyone of many émigrés whod bring
noir sensibilities to Hollywood. By the time John Huston directed
Bogart in THE MALTESE FALCON in 1941, cross-pollination between
fiction and film was intense. Hammett had gone to Hollywood in 1930.
Chandler was a frequent presence in the 1940s, working beside the
immigrant Billy Wilder on a quintessential film noir, DOUBLE INDEMNITY.
Following generations of noir writers got a double
whammythe psychological effects of two world wars, plus as
much inspiration from film as from books, from books turned into
movies. You can see this influence in the works of the arch-noir
writers David Goodis and Jim Thompson, who dont portray merely
a world gone wrong, but protagonists with some dark wound at the
core of their own souls adrift on malignant streets. Goodis stepped
into our burg in DARK PASSAGE. Thompson only worked the San Francisco
scene in his late-in-life paperback original based on the IRONSIDE
TV show. The third major noir writer of the 50s, Charles Willeford,
served as a tank platoon commander with Pattons Third Army
during the Battle of the Bulge, and was curious about how the sociopaths
he met during the war would adjust once they were unleashed back
home. He lived here briefly and set his major noir statement, PICK-UP
(1955) in the city.
That so much film noir also features San Francisco
is gratifying, and evident in this program at the Castro. DARK PASSAGE
may be my favorite (yeah, I know the ending isnt truly noir,
but Bogart and Bacall transcend strict definitions, and with elan).
The city where noir was born, captured for all to see. Its
only just.
Don Herron (www.donherron.com)
has led the Dashiell Hammett Tour since 1977. He is the author of
WILLEFORD, a biography of the cult noir and crime writer, Charles
Willeford, and currently is at work on THE SUICIDE CLUB, a book
about San Franciscos most mysterious band of urban adventurers.
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