Wednesday, August 21, 2024

A new entry in the pantheon of noir from Michael Amedeo

 

HALLIE EPHRON: Some of us began our enchantment with crime novels the more genteel way with Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Others were hooked by the likes of Dashiell Hammett and George V. Higgins.

Today we’re happy to welcome Michael Amedeo to talk about his debut mystery novel, Past Tense (Level Best Books).

Today Michael ponders whether his hardboiled private dick, Matt Moulton, might find a place among the classics of noir.

Michael Amedeo: Would Matt Moulton bum unfiltered cigarettes from them or kill bottles of bourbon in their company in creative eternity?

These ideas bled my mind when I wrote that first novel, after decades of writing freelance on the arts. But excess drinking didn’t create my worry, as much as I love the “Sweet Smell of Success” martinis from Eddie Muller’s “Noir Bar” book.
The real reason: “Past Tense” not only lurks within the hardboiled genre, but it also threatens to reinvent it, and that may represent a crime to some fans. It’s the literature they grew up with—and the one that birthed film noir.

Like future books in my series, “Past Tense” tells of a private detective in the 1940’s/50’s who risks too much, pokes too far, and antagonizes too many. But the book also becomes a noir that deals with issues such as race, despite taking place when pop culture largely ignored it, or hardboiled literature and film noir certainly did.

The story unfolds in black and white: Moulton’s a tough, cynical white dick who’s carrying on an affair with a smart, beautiful black femme fatale who works for San Francisco’s corrupt police. Their noir romance is torrid, but that promises little in an America uncomfortable with race. After all, it’s only 1949. Only!

She—Gina—gives Moulton information that could help him not only solve his cases but also expose an assassin ring that includes the police and the mayor. Characters of color rarely played significant roles in classic-era hardboiled literature or film noir—but that changes here.

Moulton knows assassination—he served as a hitman for the U.S. Army in occupied France, and that memory still shames him. Sneaking around as an assassin didn’t seem heroic. He was antiwar before it became hip.

His past as a hitman haunts him even more when he gathers that his latest client—an amnesiac—may have been an assassin for the San Francisco ring.

“Past Tense” gives today’s readers/viewers greater access to the era’s hardboiled noir fatalism by intensifying the combined genres, putting a black woman at the plot center, making it seem more relatable—retro but real. It dwells in the past and finds a home in the present. It lives in San Francisco, the birthplace of hardboiled literature and the breeding ground for noir.

Many hardboiled stories inspired the writing of “Past Tense,” but none more so than Dashiell Hammett’s stylishly carefree, black and bleak “The Maltese Falcon,” featuring the coolest private dick in creative eternity, Sam Spade (especially as played by Bogart).

Film noir sparked “Past Tense,” too. Hollywood made several ambitious efforts to revive noir, most notably with the 30’s-set “Chinatown” (1974), directed by Roman Polanski. Private dick J.J. Gittes (Jack Nicholson) practically got lost in the LA dark dealing with such issues as city water corruption and founding-family incest.

And the noir revivals kept coming, especially later from director Quentin Tarantino’s films.

Now that “Past Tense” has taken a hardboiled shot at reviving the private dick, could film noir be next? If Moulton and Gina could be compelling together in the book, how about on the screen—in glorious black and white?

HALLIE: Well I’m quite certain that NOIR isn’t dead though maybe there's a new generation of noir heroes that could be termed nouveau noir. And why not shake up the genre conventions with a male AND female lead, set it in San Francisco, and season it with a bit of romance?

When you look at a book (or movie) labeled “noir” or "hardboiled," what kind of protagonist do you expect to find?

33 comments:

  1. Your book sounds quite intriguing, Michael . . . I'm looking forward to reading it.
    For me, Sam Spade is the epitome of the hardboiled detective, but reinventing [or, perhaps, broadening the definition of] the protagonist with a character like Matt Moulton sounds like a great idea to me . . . .

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    1. JOAN: Thanks for the praise. You're right: Spade epitomizes the private dick. He's the original "anti-hero." That doesn't take anything away from Philip Marlowe, or Lew Harper, or Red Bailey, or (the later) Easy Rawlins. But Spade kind of started the hardboiled American approach to the character. I love Spade, but I wanted to reinvent him, too........Pair him with a strong woman, a strong black woman in the 1940's.

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  2. Your book sounds interesting. I expect to find a somber, moody, vulnerable, yet intriguing protagonist

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    1. Dru Ann: You're right, he has all those qualities. He also loves living, he hates the idea of dying. He's an existentialist.....although he would never use that word.....

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  3. I love what you're doing, Michael, and frankly that's the only way I would read noir, with the roles shaken up.

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    1. Yes, I agree, bits that go against tradition are welcome. Anyone remember Carol O'Connell's Kathy Mallory?

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    2. New to me. thank you, Hallie. I will look for the Carol O'Connell novels at the library.

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    3. EDITH: I think that's the only way to do it: Shake the roles up. That's what Dashiell Hammett did with "The Maltese Falcon." Private dick Sam Spade is essentially the devil with charm and restraint and rationality. He was an early anti-hero that Bogart gave cinematic life in 1941. Some say that was the first film noir.......and some say it was the best. But there have been many great films noir, and Roman Polanski tried to revive the private dick film noir with "Chinatown" in the 70's, starring Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, and John Huston (who directed the Bogart noir in 1941.

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    4. HALLIE: I wanted to go back and forward at the same time. Revive the past and yet remake it! I think it would look great in black and white!

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  4. MICHAEL: Congratulations on your debut novel! May I ask about your background research before writing this novel? And I wonder if you grew up in a diverse neighborhood or went to school with children from many different backgrounds. Your novel sounds interesting! Love the idea of female AND male lead characters in a Noir mystery.

    When I think of Noir, I think of the Maltese Falcon with the actor Humphrey Bogart. I think Noir means Dark. And I think of Noir mysteries as Black and White movies.

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    1. the dictionary definition of nor says it calls for " cynicism, fatalism, and moral ambiguity" - far from the light, upbeat world of a cozy.

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    2. DIANA and HALLIE: I've never been a private detective. And I'm not old enough to have lived in the 40's and 50's. But I feel as if I know noir, and its cynicism, fatalism, and moral ambiguity. I spent years researching for the novels (and I hope scripts) in this series. When I bought a kitten a few years ago, it was colored black and white. Of course, I named her Noir. She's still alive today--smart, sweet, and yes (maybe) a little cynical!

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  5. Hank Phillippi RyanAugust 21, 2024 at 9:33 AM

    I always think of the classic noir as the sort of sad sack main character, who gets duped into some scheme by the femme fatale, and everyone does things that will clearly end up as a disaster, and they do.
    But so much depends on how it’s presented! Certainly the Maltese falcon is a treasure, the writing is so great, and the cinematography is so great, and the acting is so great. Even if the story is kind of… Murky :-)
    And Body Heat is certainly a noir, even though it looks different, that’s the set up . And there some wonderful new noirs, particularly Everybody Knows, by Jordan Harper. An absolutely riveting, amazingly written, taught Los Angeles noir about a public relations, fixer in the midst of corruption from all sides. So incredibly good.
    I guess the key of noir to me is that it is bleak, cynical, constantly headed for trouble.
    And the line between wonderful writing, and clichéd almost satire is a very difficult one to walk.
    I love this switched out roles! That could really work— so great to see you here today!

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    1. HANK: Oh yes, hardboiled lit and film noir document and depict failure--both system failure and human failure. That's why I think the best private dick books and noirs create main characters that are sad sacks heading for loss, but they're also cool, stylish people who do their best but know the likely outcome. At the end of "The Maltese Falcon," after several people have died or headed for jail in pursuit of that worthless bird, the police detective asks Sam Spade "what is it?" Spade picks up the bird, which killed his partner to start the story, and says, with distinct resignation, "the stuff that dreams are made of." Another great private dick film noir, "Out of the Past," which features the cool loser Robert Mitchum as the doomed main character was based on a hardboiled book whose title was "Build My Gallows High." That title tells you where we're going......

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    2. Hi Hank and Michael, I write neo-noir with a hardboiled female protagonist. I still make the voices cynical ,and she doesn't win what we expect her to, but she does learn a thing or two at the end like Jake in "Chinatown" which is considered the greatest neo-noir film. You're so right, Hank. Jordan Harper is one of my new faves too. "Body Heat" is my favorite neo-noir film. I studied film noir in college, and that's what inspired me to write noir because it's about the little guy/gal getting mowed down by the moneyed heavy hitters. I also loved how the genre took on big issues, like Chinatown and the water wars. Megan Abbott, Patricia Highsmith and Dennis Lehane inspired me. I decided when writing my trilogy to keep my noir settings international, as Los Angeles has the crown for the best noir setting. Thanks Jungle Reds for introducing me to Michael.

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    3. VALERIE: I sought to reinvent the hardboiled 40's private detective by surrounding him with issues while keeping him cool and stylishly cynical. A white dick with a black femme fatale? Why not? It makes for a potentially interesting novel and a potentially novel film noir!

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  6. Congratulations, Michael. When I think noir I usually think of a loner, someone who is on the edge of society.

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    1. LIZ: Matt Moulton always treads on the edge. He was a hit man, an assassin for the U.S. Army in occupied France. When he returned home, he joined the police and then abandoned the force. He fell in love with a woman there, a beautiful African American---and no one accepted that in 1940's San Francisco/America, not even African Americans. He became a private detective--with a college degree, to his parents' chagrin. Without really trying, he threatens the big-city corruption, alienating the mayor, aggravating the police force, putting his life in danger with the Mob. Meanwhile, all he wants to do is survive......It's noir.

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  7. Classic noir reflected the worldview of a generation that had been through unbelievable hardships (the Depression, WWII) and had come back to observe the good guys weren't winning in post-war America. It's always about money, and the power to get money, and even if it's as intimate as a wife trying to cash in on her husband's insurance policy, you can see the first sense that capitalism and consumerism is not, in fact, going to benefit us all. That's become a full blown zeitgeist today, with discussions of "end-stage capitalism" and "rot capitalism." (I encourage you to read author Cory Doctorow on 'enshittification,' a term he coined that perfectly encapsulates what's happening.)

    This is a VERY long way to say the stage is set for a revival of noir, because we have a generation that's lived through deeply disruptive hardships (the Great Recession, the pandemic) and have emerged to find themselves locked out of the American dream.

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    1. JULIA: We could best revive noir if we could better accept limits, failure, and ending. That's a big part of the best noir. There is no insurance in life. If we could better recognize that, you're right: This would be a perfect time for the revival of noir. That's why, though It's not a private detective story, "Double Indemnity" may be the perfect hardboiled novel/film noir. However, the wonderfully edgy movie script WAS written by Raymond Chandler, the creator of the private dick Philip Marlowe.

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    2. That is the motor of noir, Julia, and it's a perfect time for a noir revival. Michael, you nailed it. Accepting limits and failure is not easy for Americans. I'm not into writing fairytales and continuing the myth of how successful we are.

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    3. VALERIE: I agree. I went back to the 40's, but not to create a fairy tale! Matt Moulton feels that he's succeeding just by staying alive. He's a high-styled existentialist......

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  8. Congratulations on your book, Michael, and that's a fabulous cover! Genre fiction is always evolving, and I love that you're adding diversity and a romance to your noir novel. And bravo for your educational adventures! Like you, I dropped out of highschool at 16, got a GED, and eventually graduated with a bachelor's degree from a fine college.

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    1. Deborah: Congrats on your educational adventures as well! Past noir needs some diversity, although let me alert you to the excellent "Odds Against Tomorrow," with Harry Belafonte and Robert Ryan. They planned a heist that seemed like easy money, but they let racist feelings sabotage the whole thing. The film was made in the late 50's, and we even got a chance to hear Harry's great voice doing a couple of jazz/blues songs. We could use a little more romance in past noir, without sacrificing our cynicism/realism. After all, we're only human--we keep falling in love, and that's what happens to Moulton and Gina in "Past Tense," despite the dangers of interracial dating in the 40's in America! As Nat King Cole once sang in the film noir "Kiss Me Deadly": "I'd Rather Have the Blues Than What I've Got."

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    2. DEBORAH: Yes, I agree. Level Best Books did a wonderful cover. It captured the place, the time, and the mood! It's noir......

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  9. I have read "Past Tense" and I cannot recommend it highly enough! Amedeo's style is so smooth and witty and just pulls you through right through to the end.

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  10. What Julia said! I think Past Tense might just be what readers are looking for, Michael. My husband is a huge noir reader and I can't wait to add this one to his TBR!

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    1. JENN: I hope your husband loves "Past Tense." And I hope he sees its possibilities for a film noir version! The story's interracial romance, in the 1940's, revives and reignites and perhaps reinvents the noir fatalism........

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  11. I think noir can be reborn for the modern sensibilities. Last year I read The Golden Gate by Amy Chua. Her hero is a mixed race police detective in the Bay area who is an Army veteran. Needless to say he sees corruption and discrimination all around him. Past Tense sounds like a noir-ish treat!

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  12. PAT D: The unique hilly geography, the cool, misty environment, and the philosophical social fatalism of the Bay Area seem to invite hardboiled literature and film noir. I wrote "Past Tense" for there, you mentioned "The Golden Gate," and everybody referred to Hammett's "The Maltese Falcon." Many films noir came out of there as well, including "Dark Passage" with Bogart and "Vertigo" with James Stewart as the would-be private dick. That film, from Alfred Hitchcock, must feature the darkest, most sudden ending in commercial cinema. Hitchcock really took a chance with that ending, despite the fact the film was a noir. If a scriptwriter proposed such a movie ending today, he or she might get an argument--today! But it's San Francisco and it's noir, and it became possible......

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  13. San Francisco, the fog capital of the world, is a mostly cold dark place. It is not representative of the majority of the Bsy Area. San Francisco is not the largest city in the nine counties of the Bay Area. San Jose, is the largest city, which is bright, sunny and hot, not dark and misty.

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