Film & Theater studies

Question:Most neo-noir films seem to end with narrative solutions that comment on the difficulty of reaching the “American dream”. When the story is set in the past, nostalgia itself seems to become the main theme and provide the context for the social paralysis against which the protagonist must struggle (see for instance the clip shown in class from L.A. Confidential, with prostitutes stuck “performing” noir movie stars, or the opening of Devil in a Blue Dress, where the action is prompted by the dream of home-ownership). When the story is set in the present, often the individual is pitted against overwhelming economic, political, and social forces that keep him from rising above his condition. What makes his struggle doomed to failure? Think, for instance of The Grifters or Collateral.

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