Urban transformations are the burden of Edward Dimendbergs fitfully brilliant study, Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity: the passage of a historical city of old neighborhoods, traditional if often menacing public spaces, and anonymous crowds into the postwar suburbs, highways, shopping malls, and industrial landscapes Dimendbergs animating insight remarks the coincidence of this radical reorganization in American space and the film-noir cyclefrom 1939 to 1959 or, as he slyly glosses, from the New York Worlds Fair, the construction of Rockefeller Center, and publication of The Big Sleep to the NixonKhrushchev Kitchen Debate, Robert Wises Odds Against Tomorrow, and the death of Raymond Chandler. Film noir registers the fears and human toll of all that spatial mutation, yet obliquely, metaphorically, a sort of phantom parallel to everyday enterprise [A] mostly dazzling scholarly investigation. -- Robert Polito * Bookforum *
[A] splendid, groundbreaking book Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity is a book thatas I can vividly attestcompletely changes the way you view movies [It is] one of the most outstanding publications in film studies over the past five years. -- Adrian Martin * Cineaste *
Dimendbergs concern is with the way film noir exploits our sense of anomie and alienation through its representation of the city and its varied spaces, the manner in which we are disturbed by the intrusion of the modern and its practitioners, and our nostalgia for a vanishing past and the sense of community it once represented. He draws on an immense range of professional and speculative thinkers from Le Corbusier to Jean-Paul Sartre There is much of value in Dimendbergs book, including nuggets such as the suggestive notion that the recurrence of figures falling to their deaths from high-rise buildings is an instance of Bernd Jagers assertion that falling entails a loss of lived space. He is at his best when analyzing individual films, as in the extended comparison between the sensational New York photographs by Weegee in his book The Naked City and the realistic film noir of the same name. -- Philip French * Times Literary Supplement *
Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity is the sort of title to get most film lovers fleeing the bookshop for the cinema, but they would be missing something worthwhile. After all, almost everyone loves noir, and anyone who has seen a few will have noted how anxiety and its relation to the modern urban environment seem to be constant themes. Edward Dimendberg noted it too, and has explored the connections with lucidity and thoroughness. -- Christopher Wood * The Times *
Edward Dimendbergs aim in Film Noir and the Spaces of Modernity is to show how closely film noir is associated with 20th-century American urban experience He shows with lucidity and persuasiveness how throughout its life, loosely 1941 to 1959, noir and its doomed heroes provided a filmic map of a period of disconcerting change Dimendbergs book is a fascinating memorial to a film genre and a lost America. It should prove as durable as the urban sites it discusses turned out not to be. -- Christopher Wood * Times Higher Education Supplement *
A detailed and carefully considered reading of film noir and its relationship to civic space and architecture. Dimendberg writes with great clarity about the radical changes of the post-war metropolis and its repercussions on filmmakers, artists, and intellectuals. The book evokes the anxiety and eroticism of this fascinating movement. -- Atom Egoyan, director of Ararat and The Sweet Hereafter
This is an important and boldly original work, not only one of the strongest critical and historical treatments of film noir, but a work which offers an entirely new approach to the relation between this series of films and urban space. As such, it constitutes a major contribution not only to the discussion of film noir, but also to the interrelation of cinema studies with urban studies. This is a ferociously original book, bristling with new ideas and insights. -- Tom Gunning, author of The Films of Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity
This is a remarkable book. American film noir during the 1940s and 50s has been much discussed by critics, but Dimendberg enables us to see these fascinating films in a new and important way. He begins by pointing out the obvious fact that film noir often deals with urban life, but the originality of his approach lies in his reading and understanding of the films in tandem with historical developments in architecture, city planning, and modern communications systems. Dimendberg convincingly demonstrates that Hollywoods dark thrillers of the post-war decades were determined by exactly the same forces that shaped and were beginning to reshape the city itself. -- James Naremore, author of More than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts
For the first time, Ed Dimendbergs lucid and erudite study demonstrates that film noir (with movies such as Killers Kiss, M, or The Naked City) not only responded to Americas evolving urban landscape, but contributed to a broad and complex discourse that ended up profoundly changing the meaning of urban life in America. The strength of Dimendbergs book lies in the sophistication with which it applies the analytical tools of urban history and theory to key films of the noir genre. By revealing the contemporary meaning of particular movie locations (often sites that were destined to change profoundly in the near future, or buildings that would vanish shortly afterwards) Dimendberg offers a deeper layer of understanding of both these urban environments and the films that reflected them. -- Dietrich Neumann, author of Film Architecture
In this unique study of film noir, Dimendberg goes beyond the bounds of the film-studies genre to provide us with a brilliant mapping of the spatial discourses of modernity, in theory, philosophy, architecture, and urbanism, activating the spaces of film as critical interpretations of, and contributors to, debates over the pathology and form of the modern city. -- Anthony Vidler, author of Warped Space