Film noir didn't emerge from postwar prosperity—it was born during the war itself, carrying the anxiety of a culture already in dislocation. Andy and film historian and Professor of Film at Brooklyn College Foster Hirsch move chronologically through ten essential noirs, tracing how an elastic, style-driven cycle turned ordinary middle-class characters into criminals and made desire, bad luck, and the past feel like inescapable traps.
Listeners will come away with a practical framework for what actually defines noir—crime at the center, moral complicity in the audience, and the ever-present gap between the law-abiding citizen and the criminal whirlpool—along with a clear sense of how the style evolved from German expressionist shadow to Cold War paranoia to the operatic self-destruction that closed out the classic cycle in 1958.
Essential films include Double Indemnity, Scarlet Street, Out of the Past, Kiss Me Deadly, and Touch of Evil.
Members get the full ten-film arc, including Detour, In a Lonely Place, Sudden Fear, The Steel Trap, and Sweet Smell of Success—with Foster naming both Sudden Fear and The Steel Trap as personal all-time favorites.
This episode is built for deep listening. Feel free to pause, return, and follow the threads over time—like a great book you can pick up again.
🎬 Deep Dive- 👤 Meet Foster Hirsch: Professor of Film at Brooklyn College, film historian & author
- 🎥 Full Discussion on YouTube
- 🍿 Essential Films: