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Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir, by Foster Hirsch (New York: Limelight Editions, 1999), Trade paper, $20.00, 358pp, ISBN 0-87910-288-8.
Detours and Lost Highways goes considerable distance in remedying this situation. Hirsch begins by refuting Paul Schraders dictum that noir ended in 1958 with Welless Touch of Evil, noting that noir itself has always been an elusive entity, claimed by competing camps as a style, a genre, or a movement. His idea that "noir-like lighting, mise-en-scene, characters, and themes appeared long before they coalesced into a 1940s style retroactively called film noir and has continued to circulate long after classic noirs official expiration date" is surely proof that there are pervasive motifs, characters, etc. that underlie and inform noir and transcend it. Too, when Variety refers casually to L.A. Confidential as a "film noir," as if stating a fact, its hard to take seriously Schraders idea that noir is an historical phenomenon that no longer exists. One of Hirschs strategies is to lay out the template of classic noir and then apply it to neo-noir. In the chapter "The Wounds of Desire," he traces the femme fatale from Stanwycks enameled vixen in Double Indemnity to Kathleen Turners sensual double-crosser in Body Heat to Lena Olins hitwoman in Romeo Is Bleeding. Hirsch is eloquent on such characters: "Noirs femmes fatales continued the vamps nefarious campaign against masculine structures of order and power Regardless of the storys point of view and in the high neo period the evil sister is just as likely to be admired as condemned for her craftiness in subduing prey the character type is marked by her monstrous threat to a civilized environment." In "Beyond Noir: The Roads to Ruin," the author is provocative in examining the connections between film noir and horror movies, corralling such examples as de Palmas Dressed to Kill and Robert Rodriguezs From Dusk Til Dawn. Hirschs strong, transparent writing style, too rare in such books, is also colorful and droll: he calls de Palma "a Hitchcock mime" and Robert Rodriguez "a south-of-the-border John Woo whose specialty is succulent violence." The author tellingly cites Lynchs Lost Highway as "the termination point for noir-become-horror" with its "purely uncanny spectacle" and dismantling of "noirs historical dependence on internal logic and consistency." Other chapters thoroughly discuss the "French connection" to noir, the "boys in the back room" whose pulp writings fueled the genre, motifs such as the "innocent" man drawn into a vortex of crime or the hardened criminal whose pursuit of crime becomes the films worldview, and in a surprising touch, the 70s blaxploitation film and later manifestations of the urban black experience such as Boyz N the Hood and Juice. Hirschs persuasiveness in mapping the most far-flung regions of noir and neo-noir makes this book an essential addition to the cineastes shelf. December 1999 | Issue 26 ALSO: More book reviews and film noir |