
Hello!
It’s a Book Review Day.
A fistful of years ago, we first encountered Chris D.’s movie writing in his encyclopedic look at Japanese crime and Yakuza films, Gun and Sword (scroll down to May 25). Those 900+ pages are still a key item on my reference shelf. It is one of those books that makes one realize that the worldwide volume of film and film art is much bigger than we thought.

At first glance, the title of Chris D.’s new book makes us think he’s taken a dive into film noir commentary. The launch point is a section on the great femme stars of film noir, a series of essays on ‘The Humanity of Femmes Fatales’ through a group of individual noir actresses. That core theme is just the springboard for an expanded body of writing that ranges far and wide. The list of chapter headings promises interesting reading on a wide range of film trends, with a focus on genre studies, taking on directors and individual films from around the world. It’s the kind of book in which one scans the 5-page index and finds a half-dozen items one wants to read.
There is an overarching organization, but our first attention went to individual films Chris chooses to closely profile. Just a quick sampling: Johnny Guitar, Baby Face, End of the Affair, The Camp Followers, The Night Porter, Machine Gun McCain, Adua and her Friends, A History of Violence, The Devils, Deep End, Bi Gan’s 2018 Long Day’s Journey into Night. It’s a fairly eclectic selection,

Chris served for years as a programmer at The American Cinematheque on Hollywood Blvd.. One might think that all that time organizing screenings would have turned him into a movie house zombie. No, he apparently continued to engage with the films themselves, compiling a mental diary of his reactions.
Chris D.’s writing style pulls one in — his concentrated thought process expresses aspects of the film experience not covered by an academic approach. We like scholarly essays, and the book does carry a sub-title worthy of a thesis paper: International Noir/Neo-Noir: Signifiers, Gender & Beyond Genre. But we found it easy to get into Chris’s flow of words and ideas. It’s a very personal account. Chris’s occasional asides are a reminder that our personal histories with films includes the particulars of how we saw them. I identify with that approach. Specific movie experiences are etched in my memory timeline, too … remembering the where, the when and the with whom.
Chris has interesting opinions to impart, and he communicates them well, in short bursts of honesty. A random example is his assessment of John Sturges’ Bad Day at Black Rock. We had internalized the critical praise given the film’s use of CinemaScope. Chris instead sees Sturges’ blocking of a large cast on the wide ‘scope screen as stilted, and relates it to his view of the characterizations as also schematic, superficial. There’s no snark factor to Chris’s observations, none of the attitude of a reviewer trying to be clever. We instead think, ‘oh, maybe Black Rock could use some reassessment.’

The book is not just for readers already familiar with the films he covers. It has potential appeal for film school / film culture newbies searching for new corners of cinematic interest. Some of his categorized overviews are accompanied by lists of films, some annotated and some not. These also carry his personal ratings, that are not a generalized good/bad barometer. He often makes use of detailed movie synopses, which I find helpful in that they emphasize the elements he feels are relevant.

The film writing from across the years includes Chris’s unfiltered interviews with Samuel Fuller and Mary Woronov published long ago when Chris was connected with the L.A. punk scene tabloid Slash. The tome is 826 pages long, and mostly dense text. There is a large section that’s again devoted to Japanese crime pictures, that for a few pages made me think I was back in Gun and Sword again.
That first set of Noir essays collects a group of core noir masterpieces, but the focus is on the femme fatales — each features a key actress illuminating, in Chris’s view, another aspect of gender dynamics. Not political gender dynamics, but perhaps the pondering of ‘how do the sexes get along, in the first place.’ Chris’s occasional asides tend to be choice — we wonder how someone’s love life would fare, if they tried to organize their personal relationships through what most films noir teach us about women.

Again the scope of interest is broad for this compendium of film writing from a special point of view. Chris D. devotes entire sections to non-pantheon Italian and Japanese masters. The choice of screen artists grabbed us right away: Florinda Bolkan, Francesco Rossi, Hideo Gosha, David Cronenberg, Leonard Schrader, Claude Chabrol, Robert Hossein. He looks into the Alain Delon & Romy Schneider affair, the evolution of Twin Peaks and the films of Nicolas Winding Refn.

The book has plenty of B&W photos and other illustrations. The table of contents is inviting but no index is in the back. My copy already has several post-its to mark things to re-read, that I didn’t want to lose track of. (My bookshelves aren’t pretty, but they are practical…) I have not yet read the essays on Alfred Hitchcock, John Cassavetes and Yasuzo Masumura, knowing they’ll be there when I’m ready.
Chris doesn’t hold back — he’s there with an opinion for everything and more than a few value judgments. Reactions to The World According to Chris will of course vary, but I found him level-headed and open minded. I was attracted to his choice of topics, and never disappointed by what he had to say.
We frequently come across $60 film books that can be read in an afternoon, yet still feel insubstantial, padded. Chris D.’s killer softcover is just the opposite. It’s a recommended deep-dive read.
The Humanity of Femmes Fatales and Heartless Villains
International Noir and Beyond Genre
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson