Death On The Cheap: The Lost B Movies Of Film Noir

Death On The Cheap: The Lost B Movies Of Film Noir

by Arthur Lyons (Author)

Synopsis

Robert Mitchum once commented to Arthur Lyons about his movies of the 1940s and 1950s: Hell, we didn't know what film noir was in those days. We were just making movies. Cary Grant and all the big stars at RKO got all the lights. We lit our sets with cigarette butts. Film noir was made to order for the B, or low-budget, part of the movie double bill. It was cheaper to produce because it made do with less lighting, smaller casts, limited sets, and compact story lines,about con men, killers, cigarette girls, crooked cops, down-and-out boxers, and calculating, scheming, very deadly women. In Death on the Cheap , Arthur Lyons entertainingly looks at the history of the B movie and how it led to the genre that would come to be called noir, a genre that decades later would be transformed in such neo-noir films as Pulp Fiction, Fargo , and L.A. Confidential . The book, loaded with movie stills, also features a witty and informative filmography (including video sources) of B films that have largely been ignored or neglected, lost to the general public but now restored to their rightful place in movie history thanks to Death on the Cheap .

$21.63

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Published: 12 Oct 2000

ISBN 10: 0306809966
ISBN 13: 9780306809965

Author Bio
Arthur Lyons is the author of eighteen books of fiction and nonfiction, including The Dead Are Discreet and other mysteries featuring private eye Jacob Asch. He lives in Palm Springs, California.