Showing posts with label film noir encyclopedia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film noir encyclopedia. Show all posts

Friday, May 07, 2010

Turner Classic Movies (TCM) on FILM NOIR: THE ENCYCLOPEDIA

Today's "Movie News" from Turner Classic Movies celebrates the updated version of Film Noir: The Encyclopedia: "Enter the world of film noir, a world of darkness, ambiguity, and moral corruption. Meet the cynical and obsessive heroes of film noir portrayed by actors like Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, James Cagney, Joan Crawford, and Bette Davis. You may encounter a gun-toting gangster, a femme fatale wrapped in fur, a detective with the brim of his hat turned down, or a desperate murderer lurking in the shadows of a doorway. It's a world we all know - the seedy underbelly of the American Dream, and every bit as much a part of our culture.

Film Noir: The Encyclopedia (Overlook Press) by Alain Silver, Elizabeth Ward, James Ursini & Robert Porfirio is a wonderfully exhaustive text, tallying more than three hundred thousand words with hundreds of film stills and photos new to the work; it distills everything about the movement into one volume from movies to stars to themes and motifs, and brings us up to date with contemporary contributions to the movement. Now completely revised, expanded, and redesigned, this classic pioneering work is the final word on a dark subject."

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

New Edition of THE FILM NOIR ENCYCLOPEDIA Coming in May

Film buffs rejoice: A new edition of The Film Noir Encyclopedia will be released on May 13.

The long-awaited, completely revised, expanded, and redesigned edition of Film Noir chronicles the classic noir period of American film with wonderfully exhaustive entries complete with cast, plot, and photos. Part One contains 400 entries that thoroughly explore the classic period of the noir movement, while Part Two of the encyclopedia explores the newer genre “neo-noir.” With 50% more content, insight from leading film industry experts, and 575 photographs and illustrations, this classic pioneering work is the final word on film noir.

"It's what you always want in a film reference book, but rarely find: comprehensive, intelligently organized, voluminously illustrated, and possessed of its own distinctive voice." -Lawrence Kasdan