Now Playing! Noir City Visits Illicit Ports of Call at the Castro – KQED

Most film noirs involve a crime; in the best noirs, the crime was inspired, instigated or initiated by a woman. Whoit hardly needs to be saidtakes a sap or two for a ride. See, as motives go, lust has a stronger gravitational pull than greed. Hows that for a topic for a masters thesis, or a rye-soaked afternoon discussion-slash-tryst?

One thing we can agree on is that crimes borne of passion are universal. It follows, therefore, that film noir isnt limited to the boundaries of the continental U.S. Not for the first time, Noir Citys Eddie Muller casts his jaundiced eye overseas for his annual festival of betrayal, amorality and 50s fashion, unspooling Jan. 24 through Feb. 2 at the Castro.

Argentina is the point of departure for the globe-trotting travelogue of the depths of hell known hereabouts as Noir City: International II. The opening night double feature pairs restored prints of The Beast Must Die, an inexorably plotted revenge yarn, and The Black Vampire, a baroquely stylized reimagining of Fritz Langs child-murderer drama M.

France is often viewed as noirs second home, thanks to a raft of deliciously bitter and smokily stylish movies. Jean Gabin, stoic, world weary and monumental, is a welcome presence in several of these soft-shelled, hardboiled dramas. The great Gabin graces the Castro screen in a Jan. 25 matinee of Razzia (1955) and an evening screening of Any Number Can Win (made eight years later).

South Korea has a dark side, too, dont you know. Kim Ki-youngs astonishing The Housemaid (1960) takes a solid, stable family of four and pushes it off the rails, down the stairs and into the wood chipper. (Figuratively speaking.) It plays Jan. 26 with Black Hair (1964), showcasing the prolific Jeong-suk Moon (who married director Lee Man-hui) as a yakuzas moll who embarks on a dizzying revenge tour of sleazy Seoul after shes raped by an underling and discarded by her lover.

Come to think of it, perhaps there are more powerful drivers than sex and money, after all.

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Now Playing! Noir City Visits Illicit Ports of Call at the Castro - KQED

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Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
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