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Night Moves
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Directed by Arthur Penn.
Private eye Harry Moseby (Gene Hackman) is dedicated to his job, but his dedication does not make him happy or powerful in his personal life, and his wife (Susan Clark) is cheating on him. Aging actress Arlene Iverson (Janet Ward) hires Harry to find her trust-funded daughter Delly (Melanie Griffith), distracting Harry from his marital problems as he tracks the lascivious runaway teen to Florida. In the Keys, Harry has an affair of his own with Paula (Jennifer Warren), and he succeeds in locating Delly, even as he learns that finding her is only the beginning of a much larger case. As the "accidental" deaths multiply, Harry discovers that everyone has his or her own motives and that he cannot do much to stem the tide of deep-seated depravity. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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JymkataJymkata Re: Top Neo-Noir
by Jymkata in Top 5
is neutral about it.
"Jim, I've seen all four - loved The Long Goodbye and After Hours, Sea of Love was OK, and I did not care for Night Moves very much (but I should preface it by saying I hate Melanie Griffith and I thought it was really dated). A lot of people think of The Long Goodbye as one of Robert Altman's most underrated films. It's not just a Marlowe movie and a neo noir, it's a satire on the 70s California culture. I don't see After Hours as a noir film, besides the existential nature of the plot and the effect on its protagonist. I love its quirky humor though and I've never seen anything quite like it. Sea of Love is really just an 80s crazy killer/thriller movie a lot like Basic Instinct. Like I said, Night Moves was kind of disappointing, dated (in a bad way unlike The Long Goodbye) and I hated the ending " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Re: Top Neo-Noir
by Puhnner in Top 5
loved it.
"I picked up a library book this weekend and while admittedly, I have made only minimal progress through it, the opening preface sounds thoroughly intriguing; ( I don't know why I had not thought of 'Romeo is Bleeding ' before, for I think it fantastic...) The opening sentence seems to set the mood and tone and I will post more from the book after I get my collective anxieties and dark places in order.Mean Streets and Raging Bulls: the legacy of Film Noir in Contemporary American CinemaRichard Martin From the preface 'Classic film noir was Hollywood's "dark cinema" of crime and corruption, a genre underpinned by a tone of existential cynicism, which stripped bare the myth of the American dream and offered a bleak nightmare vision of a fragmented society that rhymed with many of the social realities of postwar America. Mean Streets and Raging Bulls explores how since its apparent demise in the late 50s, the noir genre has been revitalized in the post-studio era, ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Like Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye (1973) and Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974), Arthur Penn's Night Moves rethinks the conventions of 1940s film noir with a 1970s sensibility. In the noir world, the L.A. lifestyles of the rich and famous masked an amoral core over which the detective could momentarily assert his ethical power; in Penn's 1970s version (as in those of Altman and Polanski), the detective cannot even manage that small a victory. The noir shadows that swathe Harry Moseby's Florida trip in Night Moves only emphasize how little he can see of what is really happening; and even what action Harry (Gene Hackman) can see is blocked by clear water and glass barriers. Increasingly less receptive to films that delved into the unethical morass of contemporary America, the audience did not embrace Night Moves as earlier ones had Penn's previous revisionist genre movies, Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and Little Big Man (1970). Still, the final image of this Penn outing indelibly sums up the quandary of a detective with some grasp of how to do the right thing, faced with a society that couldn't care less. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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Puhnner
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