How to Write Film Noir

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/SoYouWantTo/WriteAFilmNoir

Essential Characters:

  • Anti-Hero
    • Not the stereotypical brave and powerful hero– more like a protagonist that is in it for himself and is an outlaw
    • Not the most brave or heroic
    • “amoral misfit”
    • Shouldn’t be portrayed as any kind of crime fighter– just an ordinary guy
  • Femme Fatale
    • Woman to die for
    • Manipulates and confuses the protagonist
    • “Exploits with everything she’s got to wrap men around her finger”
    • Protagonist knows she’s trouble but he can’t resist
    • Very unlike the “damsel in distress”
    • Generally pretty villainous– gets the protagonist into all kinds of trouble
    • Always out to fulfill her own agenda and will eliminate anyone in her way

Stylistic Elements:

  • “Private Eye” Monologue
    • Voiceover describing encounters/events
    • Short, simple words with a lot of metaphors to show intellect but to avoid geekiness
    • References to pop culture = good
    • References to religion (Judeo-Christian) = even better as long as it’s not overused

Plot:

  • Classic = murder mystery
    • Heist/con = common too
  • Has a MacGuffin
    • Motivating element that drives the plot along
    • Does nothing but drive the plot along then serves no further purpose
    • Won’t pop up again, won’t explain the ending
    • Has extreme value, but is pretty useless nonetheless
  • Easily Complicated
    • Don’t overcomplicate the mystery
    • Ends with a lot of plot holes

Costuming:

  • Men = suits and fedoras
  • Women = black dress & stockings, trench coat

Steps:

  1. The Outsider
  • Protagonist = outcast
  • Traditionally male
  • Sense of alienation– not many people care about them
  1. No Heroes
  • Protagonist is NOT a hero
  • Driven by revenge, greed, lust, etc.
  • Cross moral lines to get what they want
  • Even so we empathize with them and their situation
  • Important to show that protagonist has some hope to succeed
    • Makes the audience hope for him and then you get to tear away that hope in the end
  1. Fatalism and Nihilism
  • The world is one that resembles the American Dream gone wrong
  • A world without hope where the bad guys win and everyone suffers
  • From the beginning the protagonist is doomed on a fatal path
    • Suffering of the protagonist is of his own creation
  • “The joy of noir is watching the moral breakdown of a character as they desperately try to escape their fate”
  1. The Femme or Homme Fatale
  • Sex and lust
  • Attractive stranger APPEARS vulnerable and there to help the protagonist
  • Traditionally a woman who manipulated the protagonist to kill her husband or lead him on a wild goose chase
  • Uses feminine wiles to get protagonist to do what she wants
  1. Creatures of the Night
  • Commonly associated with the night– certain aura of darkness only the night can bring
  • Night helps add the noir atmosphere and mood
  1. First-Person
  • First person narration by protagonist (usually detective)
  • Helps put the reader into protagonist’s head
    • Adds to the aura of claustrophobia needed to create noir
  • Unreliable narrator technique: is the protagonist telling it as it really happened, or are they deluded, confused, or lying?
  1. The Mystery
  • Classics generally start with a dead body or missing person
  • Generally a murder mystery or about murder in some way
  • Murder adds to the nihilistic nature of film noir
  1. City Streets
  • Classics are generally in an urban setting
  • Lots of tall buildings and cramped downtown areas
  • However it can take place pretty much anywhere
  1. Broken Noses
  • Violence is essential to noir
  • “Symbolic darkness of the world made real”
  • Fights between villain and anti-hero
  • “That’s just the way it is because life is shitty and noir is telling us how it really is”
  1. No Happy Ending
  • No happy ending
  • “boulevard of broken dreams”
  • Protagonist can die (physically or metaphorically)
  • Protagonist can lose everything (money, family, job, grip on sanity, etc.)
  • Protagonist might just lose the object of their desire
  • Protagonist is either at the same place or behind where he started– CANNOT be further ahead
  1. Pared Back Prose
  • Simple, direct, and hard prose
  • No flowery descriptions
  • “Just get to the point and make it snappy”

Noir Film Language

Share