

And in true noir fashion, Stone appears to play the femme fatale, a gangster's girlfriend who catches Gosling's eye. If Stone and Gosling keep falling into bed together, people are gonna talk.


In recent years, Matthew McConaughey has become the go-to guy for bland romantic-comedy, making impressionable girls go weak at the knees in the likes of Failure to Launch, Ghosts of Girlfriends Part and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days.


Following (1998) directed by Christopher Nolan (starring Jeremy Theobald, Alex Haw and Lucy Russell) - Burglary scene
Chris Nolan’s Following: Fascinating Neo-Noir That Plants Seed For Later Masterpieces: In terms of establishing character, this is a great scene for both Cobb and the film’s protagonist, as it shows their true colours. One is a heartless sociopath who relishes in people’s sadness (rationalizing it as a form of rejuvenation for them), and the other is an ambling loner willing to be led down dangerous roads.


“People with courage and character always seem sinister to the rest.” ―Hermann Hesse
The conventional view of the “hard-boiled” form is that it attempts to uncover truths about American reality, what David Smith calls the “tarnished metal beneath the glittering paint.”

The movie features Linda Fiorentino as the femme fatale, Peter Berg as a small town man whose one night affair turns into more than he wanted, and Bill Pullman as Fiorentino's husband who is chasing her and running from loan sharks at the same time. Fiorentino's performance generated talk of a possible Oscar nomination but she was disqualified because the film was shown on cable television (HBO) before it was released to theatres.





As much as I admire the redefinition of the femme fatale in the modern noir films I feel their neo femme fatales lack the fugacious but inescapable charms of their predecessors. Despite of the physical salvation of modern spider women on the screen (they don't usually die in the end unlike their older sisters), I envisage they cannot beat the indurated delicacy of the classic dames: Claire Trevor (The Queen of Noir), Barbara Stanwyck, Lizabeth Scott, Jane Greer, Audrey Totter, Marie Windsor, Ann Savage, Jean Gillie, Mary-Beth Hughes, etc.


Although Bosley Crowther of The New York Times panned Grahame's performance in "Human Desire", saying her portayal of Vicki Buckley was "as wholly devoid of fascination as a lush on a stool in a saloon", the film's director Fritz Lang took a far different view: "Gloria Grahame is definitely on the way up. Like all stars, she is a personality with her own individuality. She represents today's femme fatale". -"Femme Noir, Bad Girls of Film" (1998) by Karen Burroughs Hannsberry