Film
Noir
is not riding any wave of popularity so it is the perfect time
to anticipate a trend. These movies from the 1940s are not only
brilliant and beautiful but also entertaining in their own right.
They look completely different to us now from what they must
have looked like then, and I don't mean merely to inspire a
sentimentalism for days gone by.
These were
times when Mises's was writing Human
Action in English, Hazlitt
was working at the New York Times, and Ayn Rand was
marketing the Fountainhead
to Hollywood. These authors, writing on manual typewriters and
submitting the results only in hard copy, were the champions
of markets and technological progress. They saw what others
did not, namely, that the innovations of the time, as wonderful
as they seemed, were only the beginning of what was possible
under freedom.
The film
noir of their period beautifully illustrates the strange way
in which the operation of society itself was limited by the
existing technology as compared with our own digital age. Because
none of us can live two lifetimes, we depend on media like this
to provide us insight in this area and many others.
Many of
the plots of these hundreds of films turn on the ability of
people to change identities and get lost in the thick of things,
with tricks and turns that would be completely unimaginable
today in the information age. What is especially interesting
is that the actors in the movies are unaware that they are living
in what seems like prehistoric times to us. For them, the ability
to call house to house, to listen to the radio in the car, to
communicate with others from phone booths might have been dazzling.
For us
watching today, we see a society radically hobbled by the limits
of technology, with people whose decisions and course of life
is determined by this fact, even without their knowing it. The
biggest limit concerns the absence of information about people's
backgrounds and hence core character. Evildoers masquerade as
respectable people, while respectable people turn to evil and
are oddly successful at hiding it even from intimates.
The
Detour, for example, is about a hitchhiker – talk about
an anachronism! – picked up by a driver who hasn't contacted
his parents in many years; nor do they have a way to contact
him. The driver unexpectedly dies and the hitchhiker, fearing
blame, dumps his body, takes his money and clothes, and assumes
a new identity. He even plans to sell the car, since there was
some disconnect between the owner and the car registration.
The girl he picks up turns to him and demands to know where
the body is, a terrifying moment simply because one person knows
something that was previously hidden. The lack of communication
and knowledge is the core of the plot device, so that information
is the source of terror.
There are
other features of this film that turn on technological limits.
Many people seem strangely displaced without a known past, and
they can float around from place to place with anonymity, appearing
and disappearing from the social fabric. The newspapers were
the way you heard the news, but gossip was generally more reliable.
You had to be standing right by the phone to get a call. The
phones were necessarily connected to the wall, so if you wanted
to make a private call, you had to grab the phone and take it
in another room. In Detour, when one person pulls on
the cord to get the phone back, he inadvertently strangles a
girl in the next room.
Not even
credit checks are very efficient, which is why the lead in Quicksand
was able to buy a watch on a borrowed $100 and resell it for
$30 a little while later, so that he could return the $20 that
he borrowed from the cash register at work, which no one would
have noticed was gone until the weekly accountancy check. By
the way, in this particular film, his misdeed is discovered,
and he has to return the $100 the next day, which requires that
he mug a drunk, which then leads to being blackmailed for $500
by someone who saw him do it, and so on until he is on the run
for auto theft and murder. It's like a metaphor for financing
the US government.
Sometimes
the information asymmetry is extreme, as it is in Double
Indemnity. An insurance investigator is checking into
an exorbitant insurance claim with a partner who in fact is
the perpetrator of the very crime he is investigating. The insurance
man is romantically pursuing a woman, who he does not know plans
to kill him once the scheme is complete. She is, in turn, married
to a man who doesn't know that his current wife is the killer
of his previous wife. And the daughter of the woman befriends
the insurance man without knowing that he is the killer of her
father. Meanwhile, the daughter's boyfriend doesn't know that
her stepmother is lying to him and probably setting him up to
take the fall for this grisly mess.
In The
Man Who Cheated Himself, the entire plot turns on a
confusion about whether the car that dumped a body at the airport
is blue or green, a problem that would have been solved with
a color camera at the scene of the crime.
In a personal
favorite of mine, The
Strange Love of Martha Ivers, the details of a murder
some 20 years ago had been forgotten so that a stranger in town
has to go to the deepest archives of the local newspaper to
discover that the heiress who runs the local industry conspired
with her now-district-attorney husband to frame up an innocent
man who went to the chair for a crime he didn't commit. This
plot wouldn't have gone anywhere in an age of Google.
Nor would
the scenario of The
Scar, in which a gangster assumes the identity of a
psychoanalyst by murdering him following a casino robbery gone
bad, be plausible in the slightest today. Our looks are on the
tiniest piece of our identities, and they count for very little
as compared with our digital data trail. Nor would the crook
be surprised to find that the seemingly respectable psychoanalyst
whose identity he assumed was in even deeper trouble with the
law than he was.
The naïve
bride in Dangerous
Crossing would not have inadvertently married a man
who planned to murder her to steal her fortune, which he believes
should have been inherited by her father's brother. Nor would
she have lost track of him on the cruise ship they boarded together
on their honeymoon. And surely the doctor examining the sick
passenger would have quickly figured out that this was the same
man who was missing!
There are
a series of strange apartment break-ins in I
Wake Up Screaming. Several times, the plot turns on
the uncanny way in which people can easily break locks on doors
and windows. Not infrequently, people wake in the middle of
the night to find someone standing over them asking questions.
The absence of reliable alarm systems and secure locks gives
the film a strange quality: everyone is vulnerable; no one is
safe from prying eyes, whether they are doing good or evil.
So on the
one hand, the level of privacy is far beyond what we imagine
is possible today. Who today can disappear, sneak away, be out
of touch for any length of time, much less change identities
or travel anonymously? On the other hand, there is no security
against physical invasion of one's home, car, office, or personal
records, none of which are password protected and all of which
exist only in the physical world. As much as people bemoan the
absence of privacy today, the current inversion of the film-noir
world is far to be preferred.
The ability
to disappear and inability to be secure fosters the world of
relentless suspicion and danger that is inherent in the film-noir
genre. Women fall into two general categories: black
widows whose secret pasts lie in hiding as they pursue their
next victim in a nefarious plot, or fallen
angels who pine for stability and get hooked up with bad
men before being rescued from a life of desperation. Surely
we have here a reflection of the deep anxieties of women in
a time when men were being snatched away by the draft and sent
away to foreign lands to kill and be killed.
In many
plots, a moral ambiguity is pervasive, as one small and regrettable
decision turns out to have disproportionately bad results, which
then require an attempt at coverup that involves the further
suppression of conscience and a further trip down the road to
ruin. The viewer is never entirely sure when to stop sympathizing
with the evildoer, who often seems to have bad choices imposed
on him because of the imperfections of the world around him.
The small steps towards dishonesty don't trouble us until we
find ourselves traveling with him to perdition.
What's
more, many of the small steps toward wrongdoing have a rationale
rooted in a distrust of the justice system. The judge will never
believe me if I say that I didn't commit this murder so I'd
better make a break for it! The police will throw me in the
slammer for decades for this petty theft so I'd better cover
it up! and on it goes: no one quite believes that the state's
system really works fairly and accurately. Despite the censor's
attempts to bolster civic mythology in the final scenes of such
movies, a deep distrust of all official institutions is their
underlying political infrastructure.
And this
fact is very striking given the portrayal of police and police
investigators in the film, who don't seem to be entirely on
the other side of the divide from mere civilians in film noir.
They are not jackbooted or heavily armed or otherwise tasing
people for showing the slightest bit of resistance. They seem
like people with different jobs to do, and that's about it.
And they
always have time, as when the poisoned man in D.O.A.
arrives stumbling into the investigations bureau and says, "I'm
here to report a murder. Mine." He then takes a couple of hours
out of the time of five officers to explain how he ended up
being poisoned by a dangerous gang of racketeers.
It can
sometimes be hilarious to our generation when the criminals
are trying to head for the border, where presumably the law
then cannot reach them. We know nothing of this strange assumption
today.
Even if
individual policemen themselves are decent and conscientious,
these films are replete with cynicism toward law – toward the
system, with lies leading to more lies and deceptions and coverups
in all aspects of life. They were made in the 1940s, in a time
we are all taught was defined by the great struggle between
obvious good and obvious evil, embodied in the "greatest generation"
that fought the "good war." How could these themes of deeply
complicated moral ambiguity and official corruption really connect
with audiences?
Well, reading
Riggenbach's Why
American History Is Not What They Say provides a richer
picture of a time when people did not, in fact, trust government.
It was
widely believed (or understood) that there was something fishy
about that whole Pearl Harbor thing and the drive to war, widely
believed that officials in Washington were just improvising
during the Depression, widely believed that the expansion of
the state and its vast new powers were not really about science
but were rather a power grab.
In fact,
one looks in vain for evidence from film noir that any viewers
were predisposed to believe anything from on high.
In other
words, there was a veneer of naïveté but growing distrust beneath
the surface – times, in other words, very much like our own.
It is in the writings of Mises, Hazlitt, and Rand that we discover
the secrets to understanding the strange world of film noir.
It is a feast for the eyes and ears, a look at how dramatically
and sweepingly different our times are in so many ways, and
yet how the themes of corruption, deception, and lies are persistent
wherever public and private violence against person and property
rears its ugly head.
This
article originally appeared on Mises.org.